Institution
Hampshire College
Education•Amherst Center, Massachusetts, United States•
About: Hampshire College is a education organization based out in Amherst Center, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Genetic programming & Population. The organization has 461 authors who have published 998 publications receiving 40827 citations.
Topics: Genetic programming, Population, Politics, Evolutionary computation, Selection (genetic algorithm)
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: A survey of the literature on costs and benefits of South-South versus North-South economic exchanges can be found in this article, with a focus on China in Africa and the blurring of the lines between heterodox and mainstream analysis of South−South relations.
Abstract: This paper surveys the literature on costs and benefits of South–South versus North–South economic exchanges. Unlike the case for North–South exchanges, academic work on South–South economic relations has been historically limited given their marginal importance in the global economy. After the 1990s, the literature has changed in two main ways. First, South–South trade and finance since then has increased dramatically, leading to a bourgeoning literature on the topic. Second, the rise of the Emerging South has opened up new lines of inquiry to include not just the traditional topics of trade and preferential trading agreements, but also cover technology transfer, capital flows, labor migration, institutions, and environment. We discuss how this literature has evolved to take into account the greater complexity of South–South relations with a focus on China in Africa as well as the blurring of the lines between heterodox and mainstream analysis of South–South relations. We end the review by showing how the empirical and theoretical literature is exploring the increasing divergence within the global South between what we refer to as the Emerging South and the Rest of South.
14 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a study using in situ temperature sensors to examine the annual thermal regime of Stroubles Creek, a small stream in Blacksburg, VA, across three land cover regions; urbanized, agricultural, and forested.
14 citations
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TL;DR: It was found that seeds from the XKS mine region in China had higher overall concentration of all elements analyzed due to metal(loids) absorbed from contaminated mine soils, and element concentrations were highest in the embryo and pericarp compared with the endosperm of corn seeds.
14 citations
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TL;DR: It is my conviction that I have drawn a quite clear general skeleton, but one still full of gaps of such a kind that, in filling them, one will be lead to differentiate its connections, in various ways, without at the same time altering the main line of the system as discussed by the authors.
14 citations
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National Center for Atmospheric Research1, University of Oklahoma2, University of Colorado Denver3, Colorado School of Mines4, East Carolina University5, Columbia University6, Hampshire College7, University of Colorado Boulder8, San Francisco State University9, Colorado State University10, University of Nevada, Reno11, San Jose State University12, Rutgers University13, University of Hawaii at Manoa14, University of Exeter15, Humboldt State University16, University of California, Davis17
TL;DR: McNeeley et al. as mentioned in this paper presented a study of the role of social and environmental change in the evolution of the human brain and its role in the development of artificial neural networks.
Abstract: AMEriCAN METEOrOlOGiCAl SOCiETY | 477 AffiliAtions: McNeeley, TesseNdorf, aNd lazrus—NCAR, Boulder, Colorado; lazrus—University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma; Heikkila—University of Colorado, Denver, Colorado; fergusoN—Colorado School of Mines, Golden, Colorado; arrigo—East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina; aTTari—Columbia University, New York, New York; ciaNfraNi— Hampshire College, Amherst, Massachusetts; dilliNg aNd kircHoff—University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado; gurdak— San Francisco State University, San Francisco, California; kaMpf—Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado; kauNeckis—University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada; lee—San Jose State University, San Jose, California; liNTNer—Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, New Jersey; MaHoNey—UCAR, Boulder, Colorado; opiTz-sTapleToN— Institute for Social and Environmental Transition, Boulder, Colorado; ray—University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii; souTH—University of Exeter, Exeter, United Kingdom; sTubblefield—Humboldt State University, Arcata, California; brugger—University of California—Davis, Davis, California CoRREsPonDinG AUtHoR: Shannon M. McNeeley, Advanced Study Program, Research Applications Laboratory/Integrated Science Program, NCAR, P.O. Box 3000, Boulder, CO 80307 E-mail: smcneele@ucar.edu
14 citations
Authors
Showing all 467 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Anton Zeilinger | 125 | 631 | 71013 |
Peter K. Hepler | 90 | 207 | 21245 |
William H. Warren | 76 | 349 | 22765 |
James Paul Gee | 70 | 210 | 40526 |
Eric J. Steig | 69 | 223 | 17999 |
Raymond W. Gibbs | 62 | 188 | 17136 |
David A. Rosenbaum | 51 | 198 | 10834 |
Lee Jussim | 44 | 115 | 9101 |
Miriam E. Nelson | 44 | 122 | 16581 |
Stacia A. Sower | 43 | 178 | 6555 |
Howard Barnum | 41 | 109 | 6510 |
Lee Spector | 39 | 165 | 4692 |
Eric C. Anderson | 38 | 106 | 5627 |
Alan H. Goodman | 34 | 104 | 5795 |
Babetta L. Marrone | 33 | 95 | 3584 |