Institution
Georgia State University
Education•Atlanta, Georgia, United States•
About: Georgia State University is a education organization based out in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 13988 authors who have published 35895 publications receiving 1164332 citations. The organization is also known as: GSU & Georgia State.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Mental health, Stars, Health care
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the effects of age and the calendar year when individuals first self-identified as gay, lesbian, or bisexual on their sexual orientation identity development were examined in a large community sample (N=767, 47% female, 18-74 years old).
Abstract: Effects of age and the calendar year when individuals first self-identified as gay, lesbian, or bisexual on their sexual orientation identity development were examined in a large community sample (N=767, 47% female, 18-74-years-old). These 2 variables were used to examine the timing and sequencing of 7 coming-out experiences: first awareness of same-sex attraction; first sexual experiences with opposite-sex partners; first sexual experiences with same-sex partners; self-identification as gay, lesbian, or bisexual; disclosure to someone other than a parent; disclosure to mother; and disclosure to father. The significant effects of age revealed that self-identification in adolescence as opposed to adulthood was associated with an overall young coming-out trajectory for all milestone experiences, which occurred in both earlier and recent historical contexts. Adolescents as opposed to adult self-identifiers were also more likely to demonstrate identity-centered sequences in which self-identification preceded same-sex sexual experiences, and fewer of these individuals had any heterosexual experience. Significant historical context effects indicated recent trends toward younger disclosure of orientation to others and to parents, greater likelihood of an identity-centered sequence, and younger ages for first heterosexual but not same-sex, sexual experiences. Among women, there was a recent trend toward greater likelihood of having a bisexual identity milestone. In general, the maturational effects were independent of historical context, with the exception that only adolescent self-identifiers who came out recently disclosed to others and to parents at an average age younger than 18 years. These developmental and historical trends expand on the stage-sequential framework to show how the process of sexual orientation identity development is driven by maturational factors as well as social changes.
268 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a list of actionable guidelines for strategy development based on present knowledge about the mature market, and the effectiveness of the recommended strategies is likely to vary across situations and subsegments, it is hoped that they would be effective in most settings.
Abstract: The changing demographics and the aging of the population are affecting the age composition of consumer markets. This, in turn, creates opportunities and challenges for organizations serving consumer markets. This article reviews some corporate challenges and opportunities facing the corporate American due to the aging marketplace. A list of actionable guidelines suggested for strategy development. These guidelines are based on present knowledge about the mature market. While the effectiveness of the recommended strategies is likely to vary across situations and sub‐segments, it is hoped that they would be effective in most settings.
268 citations
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TL;DR: The authors examined variations in "coming out" for gay, lesbian, and bisexual youths (N= 72), ages 16 to 27, and identified five patterns of experiences: self-awareness, sexual experiences, disclosure to others, current immersion in gay/lesbian/bisexual social networks.
Abstract: This study examined variations in “coming out” for gay, lesbian, and bisexual youths (N= 72), ages 16 to 27. To indicate the timing and sequence of developmental stages, the respondents reported the ages at which they had completed 10 milestone events involving self-awareness, sexual experiences, and disclosure to others, and also reported on current immersion in gay/lesbian/bisexual social networks. Cluster analysis identified five patterns of experiences. Three groups had generally early trajectories, two of which had specific delays in either sexual activity or disclosure. Two other clusters had relatively late trajectories, one of which also reported the lowest levels of gay/lesbian/bisexual social immersion. Comfort with sexual orientation was greatest in persons with early patterns and lowest within the group with late trajectories and limited gay/lesbian/bisexual social immersion.
267 citations
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TL;DR: This article conducted a multidimensional analysis of register variation in the TOEFL 2000 Spoken and Written Academic Language Corpus and found that spoken registers are fundamentally different from written ones in university contexts, regardless of purpose.
Abstract: The dozens of studies on academic discourse carried out over the past 20 years have mostly focused on written academic prose (usually the technical research article in science or medicine) or on academic lectures. Other registers that may be more important for students adjusting to university life, such as textbooks, have received surprisingly little attention, and spoken registers such as study groups or on-campus service encounters have been virtually ignored. To explain more fully the nature of the tasks that incoming international students encounter, this article undertakes a comprehensive linguistic description of the range of spoken and written registers at U.S. universities. Specifically, the article describes a multidimensional analysis of register variation in the TOEFL 2000 Spoken and Written Academic Language Corpus. The analysis shows that spoken registers are fundamentally different from written ones in university contexts, regardless of purpose. Some of the register characterizations are particularly surprising. For example, classroom teaching was similar to the conversational registers in many respects, and departmental brochures and Web pages were as informationally dense as textbooks. The article discusses the implications of these findings for pedagogy and future research.
267 citations
Authors
Showing all 14161 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Paul M. Thompson | 183 | 2271 | 146736 |
Michael Tomasello | 155 | 797 | 93361 |
Han Zhang | 130 | 970 | 58863 |
David B. Audretsch | 126 | 671 | 72456 |
Ian O. Ellis | 126 | 1051 | 75435 |
John R. Perfect | 119 | 573 | 52325 |
Vince D. Calhoun | 117 | 1234 | 62205 |
Timothy E. Hewett | 116 | 531 | 49310 |
Kenta Shigaki | 113 | 570 | 42914 |
Eric Courchesne | 107 | 240 | 41200 |
Cynthia M. Bulik | 107 | 714 | 41562 |
Shaker A. Zahra | 104 | 293 | 63532 |
Robin G. Morris | 98 | 519 | 32080 |
Richard H. Myers | 97 | 316 | 54203 |
Walter H. Kaye | 96 | 403 | 30915 |