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Institution

Concordia University

EducationMontreal, 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
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper adapted Pierre Bourdieu's sociological theory of symbolic goods to translation by highlighting points of convergence between the reflections of the sociologist and questions, and demonstrated the convergence between these reflections and questions.
Abstract: This article attempts to adapt Pierre Bourdieu’s sociological theory of symbolic goods to translation by highlighting points of convergence between the reflections of the sociologist and questions

161 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper presents an approach to automatically identify design and requirement self-admitted technical debt using Natural Language Processing (NLP), and shows that the proposed approach can achieve a good accuracy even with a relatively small training dataset.
Abstract: The metaphor of technical debt was introduced to express the trade off between productivity and quality, i.e., when developers take shortcuts or perform quick hacks. More recently, our work has shown that it is possible to detect technical debt using source code comments (i.e., self-admitted technical debt), and that the most common types of self-admitted technical debt are design and requirement debt. However, all approaches thus far heavily depend on the manual classification of source code comments. In this paper, we present an approach to automatically identify design and requirement self-admitted technical debt using Natural Language Processing (NLP). We study 10 open source projects: Ant, ArgoUML, Columba, EMF, Hibernate, JEdit, JFreeChart, JMeter, JRuby and SQuirrel SQL and find that 1) we are able to accurately identify self-admitted technical debt, significantly outperforming the current state-of-the-art based on fixed keywords and phrases; 2) words related to sloppy code or mediocre source code quality are the best indicators of design debt, whereas words related to the need to complete a partially implemented requirement in the future are the best indicators of requirement debt; and 3) we can achieve 90 percent of the best classification performance, using as little as 23 percent of the comments for both design and requirement self-admitted technical debt, and 80 percent of the best performance, using as little as 9 and 5 percent of the comments for design and requirement self-admitted technical debt, respectively. The last finding shows that the proposed approach can achieve a good accuracy even with a relatively small training dataset.

161 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors found that consumers' perceived linkages significantly influence the weight given to the country of origin in product evaluations, and that subcultural differences exist in the evaluation of culturally affiliated countries and their products.
Abstract: Most cross-cultural studies on country of origin or product-country image (PCI) effects have implicitly assumed that national markets are composed of homogeneous consumers. Although many investigations in this field are described as cross-cultural, most are in fact cross-national. The overarching hypothesis of the present research is that PCI effects may vary across subcultures within a country. The results indicate that subcultural differences exist in the evaluation of culturally affiliated countries and their products. Cognitive responses converged to show that consumers' perceived linkages significantly influence the weight given to the country of origin in product evaluations. Several implications for managers and academic researchers are discussed. Copyright © 2003 Henry Stewart Publications.

161 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a model of external environmental locus of control (i.e., external-ELOC) is tested, consisting of two superordinate dimensions: powerful-others (encapping corporate and government responsibility facets) and chance/fate (incorporating God/higher-power and natural earth-cycle facets).

161 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: To assess the usefulness of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment total score and Memory Index Score in predicting conversion to Alzheimer's disease (AD) in individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), an apples-to- apples comparison study is conducted.
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To assess the usefulness of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) total score (MoCA-TS) and Memory Index Score (MoCA-MIS) in predicting conversion to Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI). DESIGN: Retrospective chart review. SETTING: Community-based memory clinic. PARTICIPANTS: Individuals meeting Petersen’s MCI criteria (N = 165). MEASUREMENTS: Baseline MoCA scores at MCI diagnosis were collected from charts of eligible individuals with MCI, and MoCA-TS, MoCA-MIS, and a cognitive domain index score were calculated to assess their prognostic value in predicting conversion to AD. RESULTS: One hundred fourteen participants progressed to AD (MCI-AD), and 51 did not (nonconverters; MCINC); 90.5% of participants with MCI with a MoCA-TS less than 20/30 and a MoCA-MIS less than 7/15 at baseline converted to AD within the average follow-up period of 18 months, compared with 52.7% of participants with MCI above the cutoffs on both scores. Individuals with multiple-domain amnestic MCI had the highest AD conversion rates (73.9%). CONCLUSION: Identifying individuals with MCI at high risk of conversion to AD is important clinically and for selecting appropriate subjects for therapeutic trials. Individuals with MCI with a low MoCA-TS and a low newly devised memory index score (MoCA-MIS) are at greater risk of short-term conversion to AD. J Am Geriatr Soc 62:679–684, 2014.

160 citations


Authors

Showing all 13754 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Alan C. Evans183866134642
Michael J. Meaney13660481128
Chao Zhang127311984711
Charles Spence11194951159
Angappa Gunasekaran10158640633
Kaushik Roy97140242661
Muthiah Manoharan9649744464
Stephen J. Simpson9549030226
Roy A. Wise9525239509
Dario Farina9483232786
Yavin Shaham9423929596
Elazer R. Edelman8959329980
Fikret Berkes8827149585
Ke Wu87124233226
Nick Serpone8547430532
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202375
2022343
20211,859
20201,861
20191,734
20181,680