scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
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
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results from this study provide evidence for a newly identified, but possibly long-existing pathway, in which the metabolisms and growth of non-phototrophic bacteria can be stimulated by solar light through photocatalysis of semiconducting minerals.
Abstract: Phototrophy and chemotrophy are two dominant modes of microbial metabolism. To date, non-phototrophic microorganisms have been excluded from the solar light-centered phototrophic metabolism. Here we report a pathway that demonstrates a role of light in non-phototrophic microbial activity. In lab simulations, visible light-excited photoelectrons from metal oxide, metal sulfide, and iron oxide stimulated the growth of chemoautotrophic and heterotrophic bacteria. The measured bacterial growth was dependent on light wavelength and intensity, and the growth pattern matched the light absorption spectra of the minerals. The photon-to-biomass conversion efficiency was in the range of 0.13-1.90‰. Similar observations were obtained in a natural soil sample containing both bacteria and semiconducting minerals. Results from this study provide evidence for a newly identified, but possibly long-existing pathway, in which the metabolisms and growth of non-phototrophic bacteria can be stimulated by solar light through photocatalysis of semiconducting minerals.

119 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The effects of small-scale habitat fragmentation were detectable at the level of community, guild, and individual species, and changes in species richness, guild structure and species distributions were likely due to differential effects of habitat alteration on individual movements and patch selection rather than dispersal or demographic change.
Abstract: We examined the effects of habitat fragmentation on the species distributions, guild membership, and community structure of old-field insects using a fine-scale experimental approach. A continuous 1-ha goldenrod field was fragmented into four treatments that varied in both patch size and degree of isolation. Each treatment was replicated four times and arranged in a Latin square design. Canopy insects in fragmented patches were sampled with sweep nets during early and late summer 1995. The species richness of insects was significantly lower in fragmented than in unfragmented treatments during July, but was similar among treatments in September. Overall community abundance showed no treatment effect during either month. We also found significant row and column effects, suggesting there was spatial heterogeneity in species richness and abundance apart from treatment effects. Differences in species richness during July were primarily due to the loss of rare species in highly fragmented plots. Overall abundance was less responsive to community change because deletions of rare species in fragmented areas were not detected in abundance analyses. Four feeding guilds showed different responses to fragmentation: the species richness of sucking herbivores and the abundance of parasitoids were significantly reduced by fragmentation but predators and chewing herbivores were largely unaffected. Analyses of a subset of individual species within guilds suggest that the greater effects of fragmentation on sucking herbivores and parasitoids may be due to the degree of habitat specificity of guild members. The effects of small-scale habitat fragmentation were therefore detectable at the level of community, guild, and individual species. Changes in species richness, guild structure and species distributions were likely due to differential effects of habitat alteration on individual movements and patch selection rather than dispersal or demographic change. Nonetheless, the selective loss of rare species, differential guild effects and changes in species occupancy that we found in this small-scale experiment are also factors that are likely to operate in fragmented habitats over broader spatial scales.

119 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Robin S. Vealey1
TL;DR: It is concluded that the effectiveness of sport psychology interventions is supported in the literature and future directions for sport psychology are suggested, including a science-practice integration, the use of idiographic assessment methods, and the contextualization of interventions within the unique environment of sport.
Abstract: The prospect of human psycho-behavioral change has fueled the development and growth of applied sport psychology and psychological intervention with athletes. The purpose of this review is to examine the current status of sport psychology interventions and identify issues related to psychological intervention in sport. The development of sport psychology in North America is overviewed and issues arising from the emergence of applied sport psychology are identified. Sport psychology intervention research is reviewed and it is concluded that the effectiveness of sport psychology interventions is supported in the literature. Problems in intervention research are identified and future directions for sport psychology are suggested. These suggestions include a science-practice integration, the use of idiographic assessment methods, the identification and control of moderator variables, and the contextualization of interventions within the unique environment of sport.

119 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors found that participants most often chose to maximize their chance of reaching reference points even when that decision was riskier, resulted in lower expected value or lower expected utility, or ran contrary to the predictions of prospect theory, and salience and uncertainty moderated the use of goals and minimum requirements as reference points.
Abstract: Among psychologists and economists, prospect theory continues to be one of the most popular models of decision making. The theory’s key property is reference dependence; specifically, how an individual’s perception of loss or gain is dependent upon their starting point (i.e., the status quo). Although prospect theory is widely accepted, other authors have sought the inclusion of reference points besides the status quo. Initially these extensions focused on the importance of single reference points such as goals. More recently, authors have explained choice data by including multiple reference points within the value function. Multiple-reference-point theories generally assume that many choice situations possess an implicit or explicit goal, or point an individual will strive to obtain, and/or a minimum requirement (i.e., a ‘‘lower bound’’) above which an individual will strive to stay. In two experiments, we present evidence that individuals can utilize the minimum requirement, status quo, and goal within a single risky decision task. Participants most often chose to maximize their chance of reaching reference points even when that decision was riskier, resulted in lower expected value, resulted in lower expected utility, or ran contrary to the predictions of prospect theory. Furthermore, salience and uncertainty moderated the use of goals and minimum requirements as reference points. Copyright # 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

119 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
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
Arizona State University
109.6K papers, 4.4M citations

94% related

University of Georgia
93.6K papers, 3.7M citations

93% related

Pennsylvania State University
196.8K papers, 8.3M citations

93% related

Michigan State University
137K papers, 5.6M citations

93% related

Virginia Tech
95.2K papers, 2.9M citations

92% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202341
2022129
2021902
2020904
2019820
2018772