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, Context (language use), Stars, Mental health
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The procedures and results obtained in developing a scale to measure the multi-dimensional construct of country image imply that constructs used in international marketing research are scalable and that they can meet precise measurement criteria.
661 citations
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TL;DR: The M-CHAT-R/F detects many cases of ASD in toddlers; physicians using the 2-stage screener can be confident that most screen-positive cases warrant evaluation and referral for early intervention.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: This study validates the Modified Checklist for Autism in Toddlers, Revised with Follow-up (M-CHAT-R/F), a screening tool for low-risk toddlers, and demonstrates improved utility compared with the original M-CHAT. METHODS: Toddlers ( N = 16 071) were screened during 18- and 24-month well-child care visits in metropolitan Atlanta and Connecticut. Parents of toddlers at risk on M-CHAT-R completed follow-up; those who continued to show risk were evaluated. RESULTS: The reliability and validity of the M-CHAT-R/F were demonstrated, and optimal scoring was determined by using receiver operating characteristic curves. Children whose total score was ≥3 initially and ≥2 after follow-up had a 47.5% risk of being diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD; confidence interval [95% CI]: 0.41–0.54) and a 94.6% risk of any developmental delay or concern (95% CI: 0.92–0.98). Total score was more effective than alternative scores. An algorithm based on 3 risk levels is recommended to maximize clinical utility and to reduce age of diagnosis and onset of early intervention. The M-CHAT-R detects ASD at a higher rate compared with the M-CHAT while also reducing the number of children needing the follow-up. Children in the current study were diagnosed 2 years younger than the national median age of diagnosis. CONCLUSIONS: The M-CHAT-R/F detects many cases of ASD in toddlers; physicians using the 2-stage screener can be confident that most screen-positive cases warrant evaluation and referral for early intervention. Widespread implementation of universal screening can lower the age of ASD diagnosis by 2 years compared with recent surveillance findings, increasing time available for early intervention.
657 citations
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TL;DR: In 4 studies, evidence is provided for the estimated reliability and construct validity of a client-rated measure of a therapist's cultural humility, and it is demonstrated that client perceptions of their therapist'scultural humility are positively associated with developing a strong working alliance.
Abstract: Building on recent theory stressing multicultural orientation, as well as the development of virtues and dispositions associated with multicultural values, we introduce the construct of cultural humility, defined as having an interpersonal stance that is other-oriented rather than self-focused, characterized by respect and lack of superiority toward an individual's cultural background and experience. In 4 studies, we provide evidence for the estimated reliability and construct validity of a client-rated measure of a therapist's cultural humility, and we demonstrate that client perceptions of their therapist's cultural humility are positively associated with developing a strong working alliance. Furthermore, client perceptions of their therapist's cultural humility were positively associated with improvement in therapy, and this relationship was mediated by a strong working alliance. We consider implications for research, practice, and training.
657 citations
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TL;DR: For outcomes associated with HIV infection, disparities were greatest for US black MSM versus other MSM for structural barriers, sex partner demographics, and HIV care outcomes, whereas disparities were least for sexual risk outcomes.
656 citations
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TL;DR: Results indicate a role for attentional processing, perhaps inhibitory in nature, at encoding and retrieval, and are discussed with respect to theories of WM and prefrontal cortex function.
Abstract: Two experiments examined how individual differences in working-memory capacity (WM) relate to proactive interference (PI) susceptibility We tested high and low WM-span participants in a PI-buildup task under single-task or dual-task ("load") conditions In Experiment 1, a finger-tapping task was imposed during encoding and retrieval of each list; in Experiment 2, tapping was required during encoding or retrieval In both experiments, low spans showed greater PI than did high spans under no load, but groups showed equivalent PI under divided attention Load increased PI only for high spans, suggesting they use attention at encoding and retrieval to combat PI In Experiment 2, only low spans showed a dual-task cost on List 1 memory, before PI built up Results indicate a role for attentional processing, perhaps inhibitory in nature, at encoding and retrieval, and are discussed with respect to theories of WM and prefrontal cortex function
656 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 |