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Institution

Miami University

EducationOxford, Ohio, United States
About: Miami University is a education organization based out in Oxford, Ohio, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 9949 authors who have published 19598 publications receiving 568410 citations. The organization is also known as: Miami of Ohio & Miami-Ohio.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an examination of soil gypsum from the Atacama Desert, Chile, the Mojave Desert, United States, and Al-Jafr Basin, Jordan, revealed endolithic cyanobacteria communities just below the surface of soil Gypsum samples.
Abstract: [1] Soil sulfates are present in arid and hyperarid environments on Earth and have been found to be abundant in soils on Mars. Examination of soil gypsum from the Atacama Desert, Chile, the Mojave Desert, United States, and Al-Jafr Basin, Jordan, revealed endolithic cyanobacteria communities just below the surface of soil gypsum samples. Optical and scanning electron microscope observations of the colonized layers indicated that the unicellular Chroococcidiopsis is the dominant cyanobacterium in all studied communities. 16S rRNA gene analysis revealed that in addition to Chroococcidiopsis, a few other cyanobacteria are present. Heterotrophic bacteria are also abundant in the colonized zones of the fine-grained gypsum from the Atacama and Mojave Desert, but insignificant in the fibrous gypsum from the Jordan Desert. Endolithic life forms similar to these described here may exist or have existed on Mars and should be targeted by the Mars Science Laboratory and future in situ missions.

122 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a chronology was derived from satellite thermal imagery to describe the formation and life history of the Gulf Stream warm core ring 82B, and the existence of vortex-vortex interactions is shown to be a significant cause of local water advection through streamer activity.
Abstract: The chronology presently derived from satellite thermal imagery to describe the formation and life history of the warm core ring 82B furnishes insight into a classification of features and discrete events associated with Gulf Stream warm core rings; these events are thereby put in a broader spatial and temporal context. The interactions of the ring with surrounding waters are noteworthy, and the existence of vortex-vortex interactions is shown to be a significant cause of local water advection through streamer activity. Acoustic velocity profiling and drifter trajectories have been used to corroborate hydrographic features of the ring and its environs.

122 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The behavioral differences across populations of these apes are cultural and not environmentally dictated, leaving by exclusion the likelihood that Lopé's chimpanzees lack the technology—knowledge of appropriate technique—to exploit this resource.
Abstract: Some populations of wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) use hammers and anvils of stone or wood to crack open nuts for food. Others do not. The aim of this study was to ask why one non-nut-cracking population, in the Lope Reserve, Gabon, lacks this useful form of tool use. We tested 10 hypotheses: (1) nuts are absent; (2) nuts are few; (3) nuts are unsuitable; (4) hammers are absent; (5) hammers are unsuitable; (6) anvils are absent; (7) anvils are unsuitable; (8) nuts are displaced by better food items; (9) intelligence is insufficient; and (10) knowledge is insufficient. All but the last are clearly falsified, leaving by exclusion the likelihood that Lope's chimpanzees lack the technology—knowledge of appropriate technique—to exploit this resource. Thus, the behavioral differences across populations of these apes are cultural and not environmentally dictated. This explanation is congruent with the distribution of chimpanzee nut-cracking across Africa.

122 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Comparisons of successful and unsuccessful college foreign language learners on measures of intelligence, foreign language aptitude, native oral and written language, and math suggest that students with foreign language learning difficulties may have underlying native language problems manifested especially in the areas of syntax and phonology.
Abstract: The present study compared successful and unsuccessful college foreign language learners on measures of intelligence, foreign language aptitude, native oral and written language, and math. Unsuccessful students had received petitions to waive the foreign language requirement. No significant differences between groups were found on intelligence and reading comprehension. Significant differences were found on the Modern Language Aptitude Test, on tests of written and oral language in the syntactic and phonological domains, and on math calculation. Authors suggest that students with foreign language learning difficulties may have underlying native language problems manifested especially in the areas of syntax and phonology. Suggestions for diagnosing a foreign language disability are made.

122 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that theta-contingent training has a dramatic facilitory effect on trace conditioning but also implicate theta activity in enhancing the plasticity of hippocampal neurons.
Abstract: Hippocampal theta activity has been established as a key predictor of acquisition rate in rabbit (Orcytolagus cuniculus) classical conditioning. The current study used an online brain--computer interface to administer conditioning trials only in the explicit presence or absence of spontaneous theta activity in the hippocampus-dependent task of trace conditioning. The findings indicate that animals given theta-contingent training learned significantly faster than those given nontheta-contingent training. In parallel with the behavioral results, the theta-triggered group, and not the nontheta-triggered group, exhibited profound increases in hippocampal conditioned unit responses early in training. The results not only suggest that theta-contingent training has a dramatic facilitory effect on trace conditioning but also implicate theta activity in enhancing the plasticity of hippocampal neurons.

122 citations


Authors

Showing all 10040 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Krzysztof Matyjaszewski1691431128585
James H. Brown12542372040
Mark D. Griffiths124123861335
Hong-Cai Zhou11448966320
Donald E. Canfield10529843270
Michael L. Klein10474578805
Heikki V. Huikuri10362045404
Jun Liu100116573692
Joseph M. Prospero9822937172
Camillo Ricordi9484540848
Thomas A. Widiger9342030003
James C. Coyne9337838775
Henry A. Giroux9051636191
Martin Wikelski8942025821
Robert J. Myerburg8761432765
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202341
2022129
2021902
2020904
2019820
2018772