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 & Poison control. The organization has 5658 authors who have published 11562 publications receiving 295257 citations.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Chronic fatigue syndrome, Recommender system, Context (language use)
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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159 citations
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TL;DR: It is delineated that an increase in proliferation occurs in the dorsal-most aspect of the ipsilateral SVZ following impact and that proliferating cells migrate from the SVZ to cortical and subcortical structures affected by the injury and that some of these cells are migrating neuroblasts.
159 citations
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TL;DR: This article examined the socialization of a "potentially empowered" beginning teacher as a means for better understanding the socialisation process and the implications for teacher education more generally, and suggested that some form of organizational literacy be integrated into the curriculum of teacher education programs as one means for empowering teachers.
158 citations
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TL;DR: The authors introduce a conceptual history of knowledge expansion in the entrepreneurship field based on a logical mechanism of conjecture and refutation, and explain the emergence, rise, re-emergence, and decline of key problem situations and theories through prehistoric, economic, and multidisciplinary movements in entrepreneurial thought.
Abstract: We introduce a conceptual history of knowledge expansion in the entrepreneurship field based on a logical mechanism of conjecture and refutation. Our undertaking interprets and explains the emergence, rise, re-emergence, and decline of key problem situations and theories through prehistoric, economic, and multidisciplinary movements in entrepreneurial thought.
158 citations
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TL;DR: Although evidence of a population-level left-handed bias for prosimians and Old World monkeys supports P. F. MacNeilage et al.'s proposal that something other than primate handedness may have been the evolutionary precursor of the right bias in hand-use distribution among hominids, the data from apes, New World monkeys, and individual species of prosimian and New World monkey do not.
Abstract: P. F. MacNeilage, M. G. Studdert-Kennedy, and B. Lindblom (1987) proposed a progression for handedness in primates that was supposed to account for the evolution of a right bias in human handedness. To test this proposal, the authors performed meta-analyses on 62 studies that provided individual data (representing 31 species: 9 prosimians, 6 New World monkeys, 10 Old World monkeys, 2 lesser apes, and 4 greater apes), of the 118 studies of primate handedness published since 1987. Although evidence of a population-level left-handed bias for prosimians and Old World monkeys supports P. F. MacNeilage et al., the data from apes, New World monkeys, and individual species of prosimians and New World monkeys do not. Something other than primate handedness may have been the evolutionary precursor of the right bias in hand-use distribution among hominids.
158 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 |