Institution
California State University, Long Beach
Education•Long Beach, California, United States•
About: California State University, Long Beach is a education organization based out in Long Beach, California, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 10036 authors who have published 13933 publications receiving 377394 citations. The organization is also known as: Cal State Long Beach & Long Beach State.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Findings lend support to the suggestion that neuropsychological test batteries should include assessment for depression and suggest that even relatively mild depression may affect WCST scores.
Abstract: Despite awareness that depression may affect performance on commonly used neuropsychological tests, little research has been conducted on the relative impact of severity and type of depression on higher problem-solving ability. Major depressives (n = 13), dysthymics (n = 17), and non-psychiatric comparison subjects (n = 18) were administered the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST). Although diagnostic category was related only marginally to some WCST measures after controlling for intellectual function, depressive symptom severity emerged as an independent predictor of Total Errors, Perseverative Responses, and Failure to Maintain Set. These findings lend support to the suggestion that neuropsychological test batteries should include assessment for depression and suggest that even relatively mild depression may affect WCST scores.
86 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, an observability test for existence of a dynamic feedback controller and relations for its dynamic order are presented for linear systems with unknown disturbances, where the disturbances satisfy differential equations with arbitrary characteristic roots and where the state is not directly available for measurement.
Abstract: Known results on dynamic feedback controllers for linear systems with unknown disturbances are extended to cases where the disturbances satisfy differential equations with arbitrary characteristic roots and where the state is not directly available for measurement. An observability test for existence of the controller and relations for its dynamic order are presented.
86 citations
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TL;DR: In patients with mixed dyslipidemia, combination therapy with ABT-335+rosuvastatin resulted in more effective control of multiple lipid parameters than either monotherapy alone, with a safety profile similar to both monotherapies.
86 citations
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TL;DR: The sequences and metadata of characterized sequences derived from GH families associated with the deconstruction of cellulose, xylan, and chitin were collected and discussed and the taxonomic distribution of characterized GH mirrors the distribution of identified sequences in sequenced genomes.
Abstract: The enzymatic deconstruction of structural polysaccharides, which relies on the production of specific glycoside hydrolases (GHs), is an essential process across environments. Over the past few decades, researchers studying the diversity and evolution of these enzymes have isolated and biochemically characterized thousands of these proteins. The carbohydrate-active enzymes database (CAZy) lists these proteins and provides some metadata. Here, the sequences and metadata of characterized sequences derived from GH families associated with the deconstruction of cellulose, xylan, and chitin were collected and discussed. First, although few polyspecific enzymes are identified, characterized GH families are mostly monospecific. Next, the taxonomic distribution of characterized GH mirrors the distribution of identified sequences in sequenced genomes. This provides a rationale for connecting the identification of GH sequences to specific reactions or lineages. Finally, we tested the annotation of the characterized GHs using HMM scan and the protein families database (Pfam). The vast majority of GHs targeting cellulose, xylan, and chitin can be identified using this publicly accessible approach.
86 citations
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TL;DR: The hypothesis that stuttering may be a linguistic segmentation dysfunction is presented and the findings are discussed in terms of possible variables affecting hemispheric processing in normal males, females, and stutterers.
Abstract: The alpha hemispheric asymmetries of normal-speaking males, normal-speaking females and male stutterers were examined with electroencephalographic (EEG) techniques during exposure to connected spee...
86 citations
Authors
Showing all 10093 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
David A. Weitz | 178 | 1038 | 114182 |
Menachem Elimelech | 157 | 547 | 95285 |
Josh Moss | 139 | 1019 | 89255 |
Ron D. Hays | 135 | 781 | 82285 |
Matthew J. Budoff | 125 | 1449 | 68115 |
Harinder Singh Bawa | 120 | 798 | 66120 |
Kamyar Kalantar-Zadeh | 118 | 1025 | 56187 |
Dionysios D. Dionysiou | 116 | 675 | 48449 |
Kathryn Grimm | 110 | 618 | 47814 |
Richard B. Kaner | 106 | 557 | 66862 |
William Oh | 100 | 867 | 48760 |
Nosratola D. Vaziri | 98 | 708 | 34586 |
Jagat Narula | 98 | 978 | 47745 |
Qichun Zhang | 94 | 540 | 28367 |
Muhammad Shahbaz | 92 | 1001 | 34170 |