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Institution

Georgia College & State University

EducationMilledgeville, Georgia, United States
About: Georgia College & State University is a education organization based out in Milledgeville, Georgia, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Higher education. The organization has 950 authors who have published 1591 publications receiving 37027 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
15 Aug 2013
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the social implications of urban policy that draws from festive planning practices to redevelop cities, and show that redesign processes aimed at creating festive components must seriously consider these unanticipated effects.
Abstract: This article focuses on the social implications of urban policy that draws from festive planning practices to redevelop cities. In the last few decades, municipal and business leaders have turned their attention to the renewal of their city core through the use of tourism. These urban festive policies, however, prove to have significant social and related distributional consequences by impacting community residents and by injecting varied urban identities. Data drawn from four cities shows that redesign processes aimed at creating festive components must seriously consider these unanticipated effects.

7 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: 28 male Long-Evans rats prepared with lesions of the middle cerebral artery displayed deficits in spatial navigational learning in a simple version of the Morris Water Maze task not seen in animals prepared with the same injury but administered 4 treatments with topiramate after surgery.
Abstract: 28 male Long-Evans rats prepared with lesions of the middle cerebral artery displayed deficits in spatial navigational learning in a simple version of the Morris Water Maze task not seen in animals prepared with the same injury but administered 4 treatments with topiramate after surgery.

7 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the Farsi version of the Clinical Impairment Assessment (F-CIA) among Iranian adolescents and found that adolescents with higher zBMI reported higher scores on the F-CIA relative to those with lower zBMIs.
Abstract: Although some studies have been conducted to examine general psychosocial impairment in Iran, there is no research to date on clinical impairment secondary to disordered eating in Iranian adolescents. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the Farsi version of the Clinical Impairment Assessment (F-CIA) among Iranian adolescents. A total of 1112 adolescents (ageM [SD] = 15.55 [1.59], body mass index [zBMI] M [SD] = – 0.00 [1.0]; 54.6% girls) were recruited from four cities (Tehran [Capital], Tabriz [North-Western], Kurdistan [West], and Rasht [North]) in Iran. After translation and back-translation procedures, the F-CIA, Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire (EDE-Q), and Beck Depression Inventory-Second Edition (BDI-II) were administered to adolescents. We used confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), measurement invariance, independent samples t tests, Pearson correlation, chi-square tests, and internal consistency to test validity and reliability. CFA indicated that F-CIA demonstrated good fit to the data and supported a three-factor model. The scale was invariant across gender and zBMI. The F-CIA had good internal consistency (αs = 0.76–0.93) and positive associations (rs = 0.13–0.62; p < 0.001) with zBMI, disordered eating symptoms, and binge/purge symptoms. We found no gender differences across mean scores on the F-CIA, but adolescents with higher zBMI reported higher scores on the F-CIA relative to those with lower zBMIs. Finally, adolescents scoring above CIA cutoffs reported higher zBMI, disordered eating outcomes, and depression. Findings suggested that the F-CIA is a reliable and valid measure of clinical eating disorder-related impairment in Iranian adolescents. III; Evidence obtained from well-designed observational study, including case–control design for relevant aspects of the study.

7 citations


Authors

Showing all 957 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Gene H. Brody9341827515
Mark D. Hunter5617310921
James E. Payne5220112824
Arash Bodaghee301222729
Derek H. Alderman291213281
Christian Kuehn252063233
Ashok N. Hegde25482907
Stephen Olejnik25674677
Timothy A. Brusseau231391734
Arne Dietrich21443510
Douglas M. Walker21762389
Agnès Bischoff-Kim2146885
Uma M. Singh20401829
David Weese20461920
Angeline G. Close20351718
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20233
20225
202168
202061
201972
201861