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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 & Context (language use). The organization has 5658 authors who have published 11562 publications receiving 295257 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that readers often form impressions of or speculate about unknown authors' identities in the manuscript review task, and that blind manuscript review has been shown to increase the likelihood of false positives.
Abstract: Studies of blind manuscript review have illustrated that readers often form impressions of or speculate about unknown authors' identities in the manuscript review task. In this article, the authors...

80 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present ethnographic data of how strippers discursively negotiate the ambivalence and contradictions they experience during their interactions with customers, management, and their families.
Abstract: Much of past research on female exotic dance has characterized strippers as deviant workers who are either passive, objectified victims of a sexploitation system that trades on their bodies for financial gain or as active subjects who work the exchange for their own benefit. Drawing on theories of power, performance, and communication, this work complicates the subject-object tension, showing how power circulates through a system of competing discursive relationships forming a dialectic of agency and constraint in which strippers are simultaneously subjects and objects. The author presents ethnographic data of how strippers discursively negotiate the ambivalence and contradictions they experience during their interactions with customers, management, and their families. Finally, this work concludes that given the need for all women to perform their prescribed gender in the course of their everyday lives, the occupation of the exotic dancer may not be as deviant as previously defined.

80 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An in-depth empirical analyses of the relationship between IS leadership behavior and BPR outcomes for 30 BPR projects found that successful BPR leaders use leadership styles that fit the type of task that needs to be done and the needs of the people that will perform the tasks.

80 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
05 Dec 2007-Infancy
TL;DR: In this article, European American, Chinese, and Japanese 11-month-olds were videotaped during procedures designed to elicit mild anger or frustration and fear, and facial behavior was coded using Baby FACS, an anatomically based scoring system.
Abstract: Do infants show distinct negative facial expressions for different negative emotions? To address this question, European American, Chinese, and Japanese 11-month-olds were videotaped during procedures designed to elicit mild anger or frustration and fear. Facial behavior was coded using Baby FACS, an anatomically based scoring system. Infants’ nonfacial behavior differed across procedures, suggesting that the target emotions were successfully elicited. However evidence for distinct emotion-specific facial configurations corresponding to fear versus anger was not obtained. Although facial responses were largely similar across cultures, some differences also were observed. Results are discussed in terms of functionalist and dynamical systems approaches to emotion and emotional expression.

79 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors used information from the television game show with the highest guaranteed average payoff in the United States, Hoosier Millionaire, to analyze risktaking in a high-stakes experiment.
Abstract: We use information from the television game show with the highest guaranteed average payoff in the United States, Hoosier Millionaire, to analyze risktaking in a high-stakes experiment. We characterize gambling decisions under alternative assumptions about contestant behavior and preferences, and derive testable restrictions on individual risk attitudes based on this characterization. We then use an extensive sample of gambling decisions to estimate distributions of risk-aversion parameters consistent with the theoretical restrictions and revealed preferences. We find that although most contestants display risk-averse preferences, the extent of the risk aversion implied by our estimates varies substantially with the stakes involved in the different decisions.

79 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