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.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: In this paper, a 2D plane strain unit cell with one and two cylindrical voids was employed using three-dimensional 12 potentially active slip systems to study void growth and coalescence in fcc single crystals.
136 citations
••
TL;DR: It is shown that weak random interactions among thePEs can make this spread nondivergent, and the PEs then progress at a nonzero, near-uniform rate without requiring global synchronizations.
Abstract: In a parallel discrete-event simulation (PDES) scheme, tasks are distributed among processing elements (PEs) whose progress is controlled by a synchronization scheme. For lattice systems with short-range interactions, the progress of the conservative PDES scheme is governed by the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equation from the theory of nonequilibrium surface growth. Although the simulated (virtual) times of the PEs progress at a nonzero rate, their standard deviation (spread) diverges with the number of PEs, hindering efficient data collection. We show that weak random interactions among the PEs can make this spread nondivergent. The PEs then progress at a nonzero, near-uniform rate without requiring global synchronizations.
136 citations
••
TL;DR: This article found that younger, more educated farmers who operated larger farms and were optimistic about the future of precision farming were most likely to adopt site-specific information technology, while computer use was not important, possibly because custom hiring shifts the burden of computer use to agribusiness firms.
Abstract: Probit analysis identified factors that influence the adoption of precision farming technologies by Southeastern cotton farmers. Younger, more educated farmers who operated larger farms and were optimistic about the future of precision farming were most likely to adopt site-specific information technology. The probability of adopting variable-rate input application technology was higher for younger farmers who operated larger farms, owned more of the land they farmed, were more informed about the costs and benefits of precision farming, and were optimistic about the future of precision farming. Computer use was not important, possibly because custom hiring shifts the burden of computer use to agribusiness firms.
136 citations
••
University of Western Ontario1, University of California, Berkeley2, University of Texas at Dallas3, Middle East Technical University4, University of Würzburg5, University of California, Santa Barbara6, Hope College7, Stony Brook University8, University of Salamanca9, Simon Fraser University10, Loyola University Maryland11, Mississippi State University12, University of Cantabria13, University of North Florida14, University of Victoria15, University of Economics, Prague16, Lesley University17, Fort Lewis College18, Singapore Management University19, University of Manitoba20, Charles University in Prague21
TL;DR: This Registered Replication Report (RRR) meta-analytically combines the results of 16 new direct replications of the original study, all of which followed a standardized, vetted, and preregistered protocol and showed little effect of the priming manipulation on the forgiveness outcome measures.
Abstract: Finkel, Rusbult, Kumashiro, and Hannon (2002, Study 1) demonstrated a causal link between subjective commitment to a relationship and how people responded to hypothetical betrayals of that relation...
136 citations
••
TL;DR: This article examined how participative decision-making and generational ownership dispersion affect conflict in a sample of privately held U.S. family firms and used a hierarchical linear model to evaluate the effect of generational ownership on conflict.
Abstract: This study examines how participative decision‐making and generational ownership dispersion affect conflict in a sample of privately held U.S. family firms. Our study utilizes a hierarchical linear...
135 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 |