Institution
DePaul University
Education•Chicago, 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 & Context (language use). The organization has 5658 authors who have published 11562 publications receiving 295257 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the distinct affective experiences of shame and guilt and their relationship to self-blame (characterological vs. behavioral), blame of others, self-derogation, and fear of intimacy were investigated.
81 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the behavioral processes by which individual differences in indecision may be reflected in decision-making situations and found that indecisives compared to decisives searched less information and shifted less often among dimensions under a high cognitive load condition.
81 citations
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TL;DR: A random community sample was interviewed by telephone in order to identify and comprehensively evaluate individuals with symptoms of CFS and those who self-report having CFS.
Abstract: Most of the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) epidemiological studies have relied on physicians who refer patients having at least 6 months of chronic fatigue and other symptoms. However, there are a number of potential problems when using this method to derive prevalence statistics. For example, some individuals with CFS might not have the economic resources to access medical care. Other individuals with CFS might be reluctant to use medical personnel, particularly if they have encountered physicians skeptical of the authenticity of their illness. In addition, physicians that are skeptical of the existence of CFS might not identify cases. In the present pilot study, a random community sample (N=1,031) was interviewed by telephone in order to identify and comprehensively evaluate individuals with symptoms of CFS and those who self-report having CFS. Different definitions of CFS were employed, and higher rates (0.2%) of CFS were found than in previous studies. Methodological benefits in using more rigorous epidemiological methods when estimating CFS prevalence rates are discussed.
81 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a conceptual framework and method for determining the extent of service product and process attribute standardization versus customization in these settings is presented. And the authors evaluate the effects of competitors adopting their revenue maximizing strategy both independently of each other and simultaneously while assuming the size of the market is viewed as a zero sum game.
81 citations
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DePaul University1, National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis2, University of Mississippi3, Northern Arizona University4, University of Kansas5, Colorado State University6, Indiana University7, Escuela Politécnica del Ejército8, United States Environmental Protection Agency9, University of Toulouse10, University of British Columbia11, Beijing Forestry University12, King Mongkut's University of Technology Thonburi13, University of Alberta14, Brigham Young University15, Michigan Technological University16, University of Oregon17, Montana State University18, New Mexico State University19, University of Georgia20, Winston-Salem State University21, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill22, Maastricht University23, Oklahoma State University–Stillwater24, California State University, Northridge25
TL;DR: MycoDB as mentioned in this paper is a database of 4,010 studies from 438 unique publications to aid in multi-factor meta-analyses elucidating the ecological and evolutionary context in which mycorrhizal fungi alter plant productivity.
Abstract: Plants form belowground associations with mycorrhizal fungi in one of the most common symbioses on Earth. However, few large-scale generalizations exist for the structure and function of mycorrhizal symbioses, as the nature of this relationship varies from mutualistic to parasitic and is largely context-dependent. We announce the public release of MycoDB, a database of 4,010 studies (from 438 unique publications) to aid in multi-factor meta-analyses elucidating the ecological and evolutionary context in which mycorrhizal fungi alter plant productivity. Over 10 years with nearly 80 collaborators, we compiled data on the response of plant biomass to mycorrhizal fungal inoculation, including meta-analysis metrics and 24 additional explanatory variables that describe the biotic and abiotic context of each study. We also include phylogenetic trees for all plants and fungi in the database. To our knowledge, MycoDB is the largest ecological meta-analysis database. We aim to share these data to highlight significant gaps in mycorrhizal research and encourage synthesis to explore the ecological and evolutionary generalities that govern mycorrhizal functioning in ecosystems.
81 citations
Authors
Showing all 5724 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
C. N. R. Rao | 133 | 1646 | 86718 |
Mark T. Greenberg | 107 | 529 | 49878 |
Stanford T. Shulman | 85 | 502 | 34248 |
Paul Erdös | 85 | 640 | 34773 |
T. M. Crawford | 85 | 270 | 23805 |
Michael H. Dickinson | 79 | 196 | 23094 |
Hanan Samet | 75 | 369 | 25388 |
Stevan E. Hobfoll | 74 | 271 | 35870 |
Elias M. Stein | 69 | 189 | 44787 |
Julie A. Mennella | 68 | 178 | 13215 |
Raouf Boutaba | 67 | 519 | 23936 |
Paul C. Kuo | 64 | 389 | 13445 |
Gary L. Miller | 63 | 306 | 13010 |
Bamshad Mobasher | 63 | 243 | 18867 |
Gail McKoon | 62 | 125 | 14952 |