Institution
Kent State University
Education•Kent, Ohio, United States•
About: Kent State University is a education organization based out in Kent, Ohio, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Liquid crystal & Population. The organization has 10897 authors who have published 24607 publications receiving 720309 citations. The organization is also known as: Kent State & KSU.
Papers published on a yearly basis
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Université Paris-Saclay1, University of Savoy2, CERN3, Czech Technical University in Prague4, Technische Universität München5, University of Belgrade6, University of Santiago de Compostela7, University of Tokyo8, École des mines de Nantes9, Nanjing University of Science and Technology10, University of Cape Town11, Saint Petersburg State University12, Federico Santa María Technical University13, Utrecht University14, Duke University15, University of Bergen16, University of Auvergne17, Texas A&M University18, Iowa State University19, Bielefeld University20, Heidelberg University21, University of Grenoble22, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research23, Kent State University24, University of Lyon25, Goethe University Frankfurt26, Los Alamos National Laboratory27, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory28, University of California, Davis29, Central China Normal University30, Tsinghua University31
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review the study of open heavy-flavour and quarkonium production in high-energy hadronic collisions, as tools to investigate fundamental aspects of Quantum Chromodynamics, from the proton and nucleus structure at high energy to deconfinement and the properties of the Quark-Gluon Plasma.
Abstract: This report reviews the study of open heavy-flavour and quarkonium production in high-energy hadronic collisions, as tools to investigate fundamental aspects of Quantum Chromodynamics, from the proton and nucleus structure at high energy to deconfinement and the properties of the Quark–Gluon Plasma. Emphasis is given to the lessons learnt from LHC Run 1 results, which are reviewed in a global picture with the results from SPS and RHIC at lower energies, as well as to the questions to be addressed in the future. The report covers heavy flavour and quarkonium production in proton–proton, proton–nucleus and nucleus–nucleus collisions. This includes discussion of the effects of hot and cold strongly interacting matter, quarkonium photoproduction in nucleus–nucleus collisions and perspectives on the study of heavy flavour and quarkonium with upgrades of existing experiments and new experiments. The report results from the activity of the SaporeGravis network of the I3 Hadron Physics programme of the European Union 7
$$\mathrm{th}$$
Framework Programme.
535 citations
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TL;DR: These findings support a new explanation for the cross-race (CR) recognition deficit based on feature coding differences between CR and SR faces, and appear incompatible with similarity-based models of face categories.
Abstract: One of the most familiar empirical phenomena associated with face recognition is the cross-race (CR) recognition deficit whereby people have difficulty recognizing members of a race different from their own. Most researchers assume that the CR deficit is caused by failure to generalize perceptual encoding expertise from same-race (SR) faces to CR faces. However, this explanation ignores critical differences in the social cognitions and feature coding priorities associated with SR and CR faces. On the basis of data from visual search and perceptual discrimination tasks, it appears that the deficit occurs because people emphasize visual information specifying race at the expense of individuating information when recognizing CR faces. In particular, it is possible to observe a paradoxical improvement in both detection and perceptual discrimination accuracy for CR faces that is limited to those who recognize them poorly. These findings support a new explanation for the CR recognition deficit based on feature coding differences between CR and SR faces, and appear incompatible with similarity-based models of face categories.
533 citations
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TL;DR: The vast majority of sexually victimized women (75-91%) could not be differentiated from nonvictims, and the concept of traumatic sexualization was used to explain this finding.
Abstract: Examined the accuracy with which rape and lesser sexual assaults were predicted among a representative national sample of 2,723 college women. A total of 14 risk variables operationalized three vulnerability hypotheses: (a) vulnerability-creating traumatic experiences, (b) social-psychological vulnerability, and (c) vulnerability-enhancing situations. Each hypothesis was tested individually, and a composite model was developed via discriminant analysis. Only the traumatic experiences variables clearly improved over the base rates in identifying rape victims, but risk variables from each vulnerability hypothesis met criteria for inclusion in the composite model. A risk profile emerged that characterized only 10% of the women, but among them the risk of rape was twice the rate of women without the profile. The concept of traumatic sexualization was used to explain this finding. However, the vast majority of sexually victimized women (75-91%) could not be differentiated from nonvictims.
532 citations
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TL;DR: The nitrogen adsorption isotherm measured at 77 K in the relative pressure range from about 5 × 10-7 to 0.988 for a macroporous silica is reported in a tabular form as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: The nitrogen adsorption isotherm measured at 77 K in the relative pressure range from about 5 × 10-7 to 0.988 for a macroporous silica is reported in a tabular form. The isotherm data are in good agreement in the high-pressure range with the reference data published by Gregg and Sing and by Kiselev and Aristov and provide an extension of the latter data to the low-pressure region, for which a reliable reference isotherm was not availalable in the literature. Application of the currently reported reference adsorption isotherm is discussed. The data can be used in comparative analysis (αs-plot or t-plot) to evaluate the external surface area, micropore volume, primary mesopore volume, and total surface area as well as to analyze surface properties of silica-based materials. The adsorption isotherm can also be applied as a statistical film thickness curve in the calculation of the mesopore size distribution.
526 citations
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TL;DR: The phylogenetic relationships of the newly discovered fossil hominids are assessed and a new taxon, Australopithecus afarensis, is created to accommodate these Pliocene hominid fossils.
Abstract: A large sample of Pliocene fossil hominid remains has been recovered from the African sites of Hadar in Ethiopia and Laetolil in Tanzania. These collections, dating approximately between 2.9 and 3.8 million years ago, constitute the earliest substantial record of the family Hominidae. This article assesses the phylogenetic relationships of the newly discovered fossil hominids and provides a taxonomy consistent with that assessment. A new taxon, Australopithecus afarensis, has been created to accommodate these Pliocene hominid fossils.
525 citations
Authors
Showing all 11015 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Russel J. Reiter | 169 | 1646 | 121010 |
Marco Costa | 146 | 1458 | 105096 |
Jong-Sung Yu | 124 | 1051 | 72637 |
Mietek Jaroniec | 123 | 571 | 79561 |
M. Cherney | 118 | 572 | 49933 |
Qiang Xu | 117 | 585 | 50151 |
Lee Stuart Barnby | 116 | 494 | 43490 |
Martin Knapp | 106 | 1067 | 48518 |
Christopher Shaw | 97 | 771 | 52181 |
B. V.K.S. Potukuchi | 96 | 190 | 30763 |
Vahram Haroutunian | 94 | 424 | 38954 |
W. E. Moerner | 92 | 478 | 35121 |
Luciano Rezzolla | 90 | 394 | 26159 |
Bruce A. Roe | 89 | 295 | 76365 |
Susan L. Brantley | 88 | 358 | 25582 |