Institution
Mississippi State University
Education•Starkville, Mississippi, United States•
About: Mississippi State University is a education organization based out in Starkville, Mississippi, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Catfish. The organization has 14115 authors who have published 28594 publications receiving 700030 citations. The organization is also known as: The Mississippi State University of Agriculture and Applied Science & Mississippi State University of Agriculture and Applied Science.
Topics: Population, Catfish, Hyperspectral imaging, Ictalurus, Poison control
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of twinning on plasticity using an extruded rod-textured magnesium alloy was investigated and it was shown that the absence of Regime II hardening along the extrusion direction (ED) was due to a non-Schmid effect by multivariant “stopped” twinning.
158 citations
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TL;DR: The influence of cyclic compressive loading of chick limb bud mesenchymal cells to a constant peak stress of 9.25 kPa suggests that cells may be sensitive to the level of cumulative (nonrecoverable) compressive strain, as well as to the dynamic strain history.
Abstract: As part of a program of research aimed at determining the role of mechanical forces in connective tissue differentiation, we have developed a model for investigating the effects of dynamic compressive loading on chondrocyte differentiation in vitro. In the current study, we examined the influence of cyclic compressive loading of chick limb bud mesenchymal cells to a constant peak stress of 9.25 kPa during each of the first 3 days in culture. Cells embedded in agarose gel were subjected to uniaxial, cyclic compression at 0.03, 0.15, or 0.33 Hz for 2 h. In addition, load durations of 12, 54, or 120 min were evaluated while holding frequency constant at 0.33 Hz. For a 2 h duration, there was no response to loading at 0.03 Hz. A significant increase in chondrocyte differentiation was associated with loading at 0.15 Hz, and an even greater increase with loading at 0.33 Hz. Holding frequency constant at 0.33 Hz, a loading duration of 12 min elicited no response, whereas chondrocyte differentiation was enhanced by loading for either 54 or 120 min. Although not statistically significant from the 120 min response, average cartilage nodule density and glycosaminoglycan synthesis rate were highest in the 54 min duration group. This result suggests that cells may be sensitive to the level of cumulative (nonrecoverable) compressive strain, as well as to the dynamic strain history.
158 citations
01 Dec 1983
TL;DR: In this paper, a method for numerically solving the three dimensional unsteady Euler equations using flux vector splitting is developed, where the equations are cast in curvilinear coordinates and a finite volume discretization is used.
Abstract: A method for numerically solving the three dimensional unsteady Euler equations using flux vector splitting is developed. The equations are cast in curvilinear coordinates and a finite volume discretization is used. An explicit upwind second-order predictor-corrector scheme is used to solve the discretized equations. The scheme is stable for a CFL number of two and local time stepping is used to accelerate convergence for steady-state problems. Characteristic variable boundary conditions are developed and used in the far field and at surfaces. No additional dissipation terms are included in the scheme. Numerical results are compared with results from an existing three dimensional Euler code and experimental data.
158 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, Douglas fir biochar (NBC) was used to remove Pb2+ and Cd2+ from water by treating an aqueous Fe3+/Fe2+ solution with NaOH induced Fe3O4 to nucleate and deposit on NBC.
158 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors adapted the six-item perceived cohesion scale (PCS) to small groups and provided support for the validity and reliability of the adapted measure for use within the small group.
Abstract: The six-item Perceived Cohesion Scale (PCS) was created to measure perceived cohesion in groups. However, only large groups were used to assess the validity and reliability of the measure, leaving in question the use of the PCS with small groups. This study adapts the measure of cohesion to the small-group arena. Results provide support for the validity and reliability of the adapted measure for use within the small group.
158 citations
Authors
Showing all 14277 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Naomi J. Halas | 140 | 435 | 82040 |
Bin Liu | 138 | 2181 | 87085 |
Shuai Liu | 129 | 1095 | 80823 |
Vijay P. Singh | 106 | 1699 | 55831 |
Liangpei Zhang | 97 | 839 | 35163 |
K. L. Dooley | 95 | 320 | 63579 |
Feng Chen | 95 | 2138 | 53881 |
Marco Cavaglia | 93 | 372 | 60157 |
Tuan Vo-Dinh | 86 | 698 | 24690 |
Nicholas H. Barton | 84 | 267 | 32707 |
S. Kandhasamy | 81 | 235 | 50363 |
Michael S. Sacks | 80 | 386 | 20510 |
Dinesh Mohan | 79 | 283 | 35775 |
James Mallet | 78 | 209 | 21349 |
George D. Kuh | 77 | 248 | 30346 |