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 authors empirically tested a model that proposes that the atmospheric cues of the online store influence shoppers' emotional and cognitive states, which then affect their shopping outcomes, and showed a significant effect of site atmospherics on shopper attitudes, satisfaction, and various approach/avoidance behaviors as a result of the emotions experienced during the shopping episode.
Abstract: This study empirically tests a model that proposes that the atmospheric cues of the online store influence shoppers' emotional and cognitive states, which then affect their shopping outcomes. The results support the model propositions and show a significant effect of site atmospherics on shopper attitudes, satisfaction, and various approach/avoidance behaviors as a result of the emotions experienced during the shopping episode. In addition, the findings confirm the hypothesized moderating effects of two individual traits, namely, involvement and atmospheric responsiveness. The results underscore the role that online store atmospherics play in creating positive reactions from shoppers and demonstrate that these positive reactions will be more pronounced under certain conditions. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
1,057 citations
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TL;DR: Fundamental theoretical ideas in nanoplasmonics are reviewed and selected experimental developments are reviewed, including fundamentals, nanolocalization of optical energy and hot spots, ultrafast nanoplAsmonics and control of the spatiotemporal Nanolocalized fields.
Abstract: A review of nanoplasmonics is given. This includes fundamentals, nanolocalization of optical energy and hot spots, ultrafast nanoplasmonics and control of the spatiotemporal nanolocalization of optical fields, and quantum nanoplasmonics (spaser and gain-assisted plasmonics). This article reviews both fundamental theoretical ideas in nanoplasmonics and selected experimental developments. It is designed both for specialists in the field and general physics readership.
1,054 citations
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Stanford University1, Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit2, The Mind Research Network3, Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research4, Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital5, University of Oxford6, Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging7, Dartmouth College8, National Institutes of Health9, Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg10, University of California, Irvine11, Shandong University12, University of Warwick13, MIND Institute14, Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute15, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory16, University of Washington17, Georgia State University18, California Institute of Technology19
TL;DR: The Brain Imaging Data Structure (BIDS) is developed, a standard for organizing and describing MRI datasets that uses file formats compatible with existing software, unifies the majority of practices already common in the field, and captures the metadata necessary for most common data processing operations.
Abstract: The development of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques has defined modern neuroimaging. Since its inception, tens of thousands of studies using techniques such as functional MRI and diffusion weighted imaging have allowed for the non-invasive study of the brain. Despite the fact that MRI is routinely used to obtain data for neuroscience research, there has been no widely adopted standard for organizing and describing the data collected in an imaging experiment. This renders sharing and reusing data (within or between labs) difficult if not impossible and unnecessarily complicates the application of automatic pipelines and quality assurance protocols. To solve this problem, we have developed the Brain Imaging Data Structure (BIDS), a standard for organizing and describing MRI datasets. The BIDS standard uses file formats compatible with existing software, unifies the majority of practices already common in the field, and captures the metadata necessary for most common data processing operations.
1,037 citations
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TL;DR: This paper reviewed past research on the topic of financial institution efficiency, surveys the contributions in this special issue, and suggests how future research on this important topic might proceed, and suggest how future studies on financial institutions efficiency might proceed.
Abstract: This introductory article reviews past research on the topic of financial institution efficiency, surveys the contributions in this special issue, and suggests how future research on this important topic might proceed.
1,016 citations
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TL;DR: This paper found that female board representation is positively related to accounting returns and that this relationship is more positive in countries with stronger shareholder protections, perhaps because shareholders motivate boards to use the different knowledge, experience, and values that each member brings.
Abstract: Despite a large body of literature examining the relationship between women on boards and firm financial performance, the evidence is mixed. To reconcile the conflicting results, we statistically combine the results from 140 studies and examine whether these results vary by firms' legal/regulatory and socio-cultural contexts. We find that female board representation is positively related to accounting returns and that this relationship is more positive in countries with stronger shareholder protections--perhaps because shareholder protections motivate boards to use the different knowledge, experience, and values that each member brings. We also find that, although the relationship between female board representation and market performance is near zero the relationship is positive in countries with greater gender parity (and negative in countries with low gender parity)--perhaps because societal gender differences in human capital may influence investors' evaluations of the future earning potential of firms that have more female directors. Lastly, we find that female board representation is positively related to boards' two primary responsibilities: monitoring and strategy involvement. For both firm financial performance and board activities, we find mean effect sizes comparable to those found in meta-analyses of other aspects of board composition. We discuss the theoretical and practical implications of our findings
1,013 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 |