Institution
Bowling Green State University
Education•Bowling Green, Ohio, United States•
About: Bowling Green State University is a education organization based out in Bowling Green, Ohio, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 8315 authors who have published 16042 publications receiving 482564 citations. The organization is also known as: BGSU.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The results suggest that tickle evoked 50-kHz USVs may be a useful behavioral marker of positive social affect in rats.
324 citations
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TL;DR: Considering the reliability estimates reported for the Frequency, Attitudinal, and Time Lost indices, the Time Lost Index was found to be the most reliable and factor analyses of intercorrelations among absence measures provided tentative support for a voluntary-involuntary absenteeism distinction.
323 citations
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TL;DR: HRT appeared to be effective in reducing depressed mood among menopausal women, and most studies used adequate sample sizes, controlled research designs, random assignment, double-blind treatment manipulations, and valid and reliable measures of depression.
322 citations
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TL;DR: The idea of organizational climate is ambiguous; one can not be sure whether it implies an attribute of the organization or of the perceiving individual as discussed by the authors, and if it refers to the organization, then measures of perceived organizational climate should be evaluated in terms of the accuracy of the perceptions.
321 citations
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TL;DR: The hypothesis that an endorphin-based addiction-like process may underlie the maintenance of social attachments, and that separation distress may reflect a state of endogenous "endorphin withdrawal", is supported.
Abstract: In order to determine the relationship between endorphins and social attachment, the effects of morphine (an opiate agonist) and naloxone (an opiate antagonist) on various indices of attachment in guinea pigs were studied. In infants, crying or separation-induced distress vocalizations were significantly decreased by single injections of low morphine doses (0.25, .050 and 0.75 mg/kg) in a dose-dependent manner. Naloxone (1 mg/kg) reliably increased separation distress vocalizations in both juvenile and adult guinea pigs. Therefore, similar to opiate withdrawal symptoms, separation distress appeared to be alleviated by morphine and potentiated by naloxone. As for approach attachment, offspring/maternal proximity-maintenance time was significantly decreased by morphine (1.0, 2.5 and 5.0 mg/kg), suggesting that opiates may be capable of replacing a function normally subserved by endorphins in reinforcing attachments. These data support the hypothesis that an endorphin-based addiction-like process may underlie the maintenance of social attachments, and that separation distress may reflect a state of endogenous “endorphin withdrawal”.
320 citations
Authors
Showing all 8365 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Eduardo Salas | 129 | 711 | 62259 |
Russell A. Barkley | 119 | 355 | 60109 |
Hong Liu | 100 | 1905 | 57561 |
Jaak Panksepp | 99 | 446 | 40748 |
Kenneth I. Pargament | 96 | 372 | 41752 |
Robert C. Green | 91 | 526 | 40414 |
Robert W. Motl | 85 | 712 | 27961 |
Evert Jan Baerends | 85 | 318 | 52440 |
Hugh Garavan | 84 | 419 | 28773 |
Janet Shibley Hyde | 83 | 227 | 38440 |
Michael L. Gross | 82 | 701 | 27140 |
Jerry Silver | 78 | 201 | 25837 |
Michael E. Robinson | 74 | 366 | 19990 |
Abraham Clearfield | 74 | 513 | 19006 |
Kirk S. Schanze | 73 | 512 | 19118 |