Institution
Concordia University
Education•Montreal, Quebec, Canada•
About: Concordia University is a education organization based out in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Control theory & Population. The organization has 13565 authors who have published 31084 publications receiving 783525 citations. The organization is also known as: Sir George Williams University & Loyola College, Montreal.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the importance of perceived fit in extension evaluations is moderated by construal level theory, which posits that individuals can construe stimuli in their environments in terms of abstract and generalized features (high-level construals) or in terms with concrete and contextualized features (low-level contruals), and consumers who construe their environment at higher level place more importance on perceived extension fit in evaluating brand extensions.
175 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the problem of determining the economic order quantity under conditions of permissible delay in payments is considered, and an algorithm to determine the order quantity is developed to minimize the total variable cost per unit of time.
175 citations
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TL;DR: Analysis of multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO) systems with antenna selection over quasi-static fading channels shows that the diversity order of the underlying space-time code is maintained, whereas the coding gain deteriorates by a value upper bounded by 10log/sub 10/(M/L) dB.
Abstract: We analyze the performance of multiple-input-multiple-output (MIMO) systems with antenna selection over quasi-static fading channels. The basic idea is that, for a given number of receive antennas, M, the receiver uses the best L out of the available M antennas where, typically, L
175 citations
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TL;DR: Examination of the relationship between harmonious and obsessive passionate activities and subjective well-being in older adults showed that harmonious passion, through its influence on positive affect experienced during activity engagement, is associated with increases in SWB, whereas obsessive passion is associatedWith decreases in SWBs.
Abstract: Activity engagement has long been linked to improved subjective well-being (SWB) in old age. However, recent studies testing Vallerand et al.'s (2003) Dualistic Model of Passion suggest that the type of passionate activity that underlies activity engagement might influence the extent to which individuals benefit from an active lifestyle. In the present article we examined the relationship between harmonious and obsessive passionate activities and subjective well-being in older adults. Results showed that harmonious passion, through its influence on positive affect experienced during activity engagement, is associated with increases in SWB, whereas obsessive passion is associated with decreases in SWB. Engagement in passionate activities might be beneficial for older adults when a passionate activity is harmonious, but detrimental when a passionate activity is obsessive.
174 citations
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TL;DR: This study addresses the issue of little consensus on many aspects of Wikipedia's content as an encyclopedic collection of human knowledge by systematically reviewing 110 peer‐reviewed publications on Wikipedia content, summarizing the current findings, and highlighting the major research trends.
Abstract: Wikipedia might possibly be the best-developed attempt thus far of the enduring quest to gather all human knowledge in one place. Its accomplishments in this regard have made it an irresistible point of inquiry for researchers from various fields of knowledge. A decade of research has thrown light on many aspects of the Wikipedia community, its processes, and content. However, due to the variety of the fields inquiring about Wikipedia and the limited synthesis of the extensive research, there is little consensus on many aspects of Wikipedia’s content as an encyclopedic collection of human knowledge. This study addresses the issue by systematically reviewing 110 peer-reviewed publications on Wikipedia content, summarizing the current findings, and highlighting the major research trends. Two major streams of research are identified: the quality of Wikipedia content (including comprehensiveness, currency, readability and reliability) and the size of Wikipedia. Moreover, we present the key research trends in terms of the domains of inquiry, research design, data source, and data gathering methods. This review synthesizes scholarly understanding of Wikipedia content and paves the way for future studies.
174 citations
Authors
Showing all 13754 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Alan C. Evans | 183 | 866 | 134642 |
Michael J. Meaney | 136 | 604 | 81128 |
Chao Zhang | 127 | 3119 | 84711 |
Charles Spence | 111 | 949 | 51159 |
Angappa Gunasekaran | 101 | 586 | 40633 |
Kaushik Roy | 97 | 1402 | 42661 |
Muthiah Manoharan | 96 | 497 | 44464 |
Stephen J. Simpson | 95 | 490 | 30226 |
Roy A. Wise | 95 | 252 | 39509 |
Dario Farina | 94 | 832 | 32786 |
Yavin Shaham | 94 | 239 | 29596 |
Elazer R. Edelman | 89 | 593 | 29980 |
Fikret Berkes | 88 | 271 | 49585 |
Ke Wu | 87 | 1242 | 33226 |
Nick Serpone | 85 | 474 | 30532 |