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Institution

DePaul University

EducationChicago, Illinois, United States
About: DePaul University is a education organization based out in Chicago, Illinois, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 5658 authors who have published 11562 publications receiving 295257 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A computational model of information navigation that simulates users navigating through a Web site finds that the optimal structure depends on the quality of the link labels and is able to account for the results in the previous studies.
Abstract: Previous studies for menu and Web search tasks have suggested differing advice on the optimal number of selections per page. In this article, we examine this discrepancy through the use of a computational model of information navigation that simulates users navigating through a Web site. By varying the quality of the link labels in our simulations, we find that the optimal structure depends on the quality of the labels and are thus able to account for the results in the previous studies. We present additional empirical results to further validate the model and corroborate our findings. Finally we discuss our findings' implications for the information architecture of Web sites.

125 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Gary W. Harper1
TL;DR: Researchers and interventionists need to be creative and innovative in their HIV prevention approaches and ensure that programs are grounded in the lives and realities of gay and bisexual adolescents and young adults.
Abstract: Gay and bisexual male adolescents and young adults in the United States have been disproportionately impacted by the HIV pandemic. Despite the steadily increasing rise in their HIV infection rates, there has not been a commensurate increase in HIV prevention programs targeted to the unique social and sexual lives of these youths. Programs that address cultural and contextual factors that influence sexual risk and protective behaviors need to be developed, implemented, and rigorously evaluated. These interventions should address the potential influences of sexual and gay culture on the HIV risk/protective behaviors of gay and bisexual adolescents, as well as the influence of more traditional cultural factors related to ethnicity. The influence of contextual developmental factors should also be addressed. This may include an incorporation into prevention programs of the societal-level influences of heterosexism and masculinity ideology and the individual-level influences of sexual identity and ethnic identity development. Researchers and interventionists need to be creative and innovative in their HIV prevention approaches and ensure that programs are grounded in the lives and realities of gay and bisexual adolescents and young adults.

125 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the relationship between the empathy model of forgiveness and the attribution model of behavioral stability in interpersonal romantic relationships, and find that perceived remorse influences attributions of behavioural stability, which in turn influences forgiveness both directly and indirectly via empathy.

125 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Support is found for a conceptual model in which poverty is linked with adolescent psychological symptoms through economic stressors and impaired parenting and exposure to community violence mediates the relation between poverty and psychological symptoms in urban youth.

125 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Whether explicit information assists acquisition in a way that has not been measured in previous processing instruction (PI) studies is observed and the results suggest that the benefits of explicit information might depend on the nature of the task and the processing problem.
Abstract: The present study sought to observe, through online treatments, whether explicit information assists acquisition in a way that has not been measured in previous processing instruction (PI) studies. Two experiments examined learners' behavior while they processed Spanish sentences with object-verb-subject (OVS) word order and Spanish subjunctive under two treatments: with explicit information (the PI group) and without explicit information (the structured input [SI] group). Participants in both groups worked individually with a computer and processed a series of 30 SI items. They received feedback right after each response, and both accuracy and response time were recorded. It was expected that learners in the PI group would start to process both of the linguistic targets sooner in the sequence of input items and would submit their responses faster than learners in the SI group, because explicit information in the PI treatment would help learners notice the target items early in the series. The results showed no difference between the SI group and the PI group when processing OVS sentences, but the PI group processed subjunctive forms sooner and faster than the SI group. The results suggest that the benefits of explicit information might depend on the nature of the task and the processing problem.

124 citations


Authors

Showing all 5724 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
C. N. R. Rao133164686718
Mark T. Greenberg10752949878
Stanford T. Shulman8550234248
Paul Erdös8564034773
T. M. Crawford8527023805
Michael H. Dickinson7919623094
Hanan Samet7536925388
Stevan E. Hobfoll7427135870
Elias M. Stein6918944787
Julie A. Mennella6817813215
Raouf Boutaba6751923936
Paul C. Kuo6438913445
Gary L. Miller6330613010
Bamshad Mobasher6324318867
Gail McKoon6212514952
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202326
2022100
2021518
2020498
2019452
2018463