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Institution

Clemson University

EducationClemson, South Carolina, United States
About: Clemson University is a education organization based out in Clemson, South Carolina, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Control theory. The organization has 20556 authors who have published 42518 publications receiving 1170779 citations. The organization is also known as: Clemson Agricultural College of South Carolina.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that psychological safety increases with the frequency of communication among coworkers and that the confidence of employees in their knowledge is related to the codifiability of the knowledge involved.
Abstract: This research empirically examines the influence of psychological safety on knowledge sharing among coworkers in manufacturing and service operations contexts. Reconciling conflicting findings in the literature, we demonstrate that whereas psychological safety is an important antecedent of knowledge sharing, the relationship between psychological safety and knowledge sharing is moderated by the level of confidence that employees have in what they know. The greater this confidence, the lesser is the importance of psychological safety in facilitating knowledge sharing. Linking this result to social network theory, we find that psychological safety increases with the frequency of communication among coworkers and that the confidence of employees in their knowledge is related to the codifiability of the knowledge involved. We further investigate direct and indirect antecedents of psychological safety. This research offers insights into actions that managers can take to enhance psychological safety and, consequently, motivate their employees to share knowledge.

227 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of gender on ethical decision-making is largely attenuated once social desirability is included in the analysis, which suggests that the social desireability response bias appears to be driving a significant portion of the relationship between gender and ethical decision making.
Abstract: Gender is one of the most frequently studied variables within the ethics literature. In prior studies that find gender differences, females consistently report more ethical responses than males. However, prior research also indicates that females are more prone to responding in a socially desirable fashion. Consequently, it is uncertain whether gender differences in ethical decision-making exist because females are more ethical or perhaps because females are more prone to the social desirability response bias. Using a sample of 30 scenarios from prior studies that find gender differences, we examine whether these gender differences remain robust once social desirability is controlled for in the analysis. Our data suggest that the effect of gender on ethical decision-making is largely attenuated once social desirability is included in the analysis. In essence, the social desirability response bias appears to be driving a significant portion of the relationship between gender and ethical decision-making. We discuss several important research implications of this study.

227 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There is a need to better understand the interplay between trauma, PTSD, and severe forms of mental illness and to further develop and disseminate evidence-based PTSD treatments in this population.

227 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: New accelerated test models are developed based on a generalized cumulative damage approach with a stochastic process characterizing a degradation phenomenon that motivates the need for developing general accelerated test Models with several accelerating variables for inference based on both observed failure values, and degradation measurements.
Abstract: Many products & systems age, wear, or degrade over time before they fail or break down. Thus, in many engineering reliability experiments, measures of degradation or wear toward failure can often be observed over a period of time before failure occurs. Because the degradation values provide additional information beyond that provided by the failure observations, both sets of observations need to be considered when doing inference on the statistical parameters of the product or system lifetime distributions. For highly-reliable modern products, it often takes much more time to obtain lifetime & degradation data under usual use conditions, and this requires one to use accelerated tests. Accelerated tests expose the products to greater environmental stress levels so that we can obtain lifetime & degradation measurements in a more timely fashion. In addition, many products are exposed to several environmental variables in some manufacturing processes, or under some operating conditions. This motivates the need for developing general accelerated test models with several accelerating variables for inference based on both observed failure values, and degradation measurements. In this paper, new accelerated test models are developed based on a generalized cumulative damage approach with a stochastic process characterizing a degradation phenomenon.

226 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review evaluates the evidence that relates carboxysome structure to function in the carbon metabolism of autotrophic prokaryotes and examines similarities to newly discovered particles found in heterotrophs.
Abstract: All cyanobacteria and many chemoautotrophs contain polyhedral inclusion bodies that are bound by a unilamellar protein shell (15, 63). Isolation and enzymatic analysis of the bodies from Halothiobacillus neapolitanus (previously Thiobacillus neapolitanus) revealed that they are filled with ribulose 1,5bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO); therefore they were given the name “carboxysomes” (59). Subsequent studies of both cyanobacteria and chemoautotrophic bacteria have led to the well-accepted conclusion that the “organelles” or microcompartments function to enhance the catalytic properties of the RuBisCO they contain, although the mechanism of this catalytic enhancement is unclear (51, 65). Localization and characterization of the genes encoding carboxysome components has underscored the apparent common function of these bodies in carboxysome-containing autotrophic bacteria. More surprising is the finding that a number of heterotrophic prokaryotes harbor genes homologous to those for carboxysome shell proteins (9, 32, 62). Under proper growth conditions, these bacteria produce polyhedral inclusion bodies that are morphologically similar to carboxysomes, although the cells expressing these bodies contain no RuBisCO and do not fix CO 2 via the Calvin-Benson-Bassham cycle as a major part of their carbon metabolism. This review evaluates the evidence that relates carboxysome structure to function in the carbon metabolism of autotrophic prokaryotes and examines similarities to newly discovered particles found in heterotrophs. The possibility is explored that microcompartmentalization of key metabolic enzymes by carboxysomes and their relatives is a more widely utilized regulatory mechanism in prokaryotes than was previously envisioned.

226 citations


Authors

Showing all 20718 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Yury Gogotsi171956144520
Philip S. Yu1481914107374
Aaron Dominguez1471968113224
Danny Miller13351271238
Marco Ajello13153558714
David C. Montefiori12992070049
Frank L. Lewis114104560497
Jianqing Fan10448858039
Wei Chen103143844994
Ken A. Dill9940141289
Gerald Schubert9861434505
Rod A. Wing9833347696
Feng Chen95213853881
Jimin George9433162684
François Diederich9384346906
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202363
2022253
20212,407
20202,362
20192,080
20181,978