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Institution

Mississippi State University

EducationStarkville, 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.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A group of experts convened to examine scientific questions using the organophosphorus (OP) pesticides as the case study concluded that OP pesticides act by a common mechanism of toxicity if they inhibit acetylcholinesterase by phosphorylation and elicit any spectrum of cholinergic effects.

440 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, an animated pedagogical agent is used to provide a model for solving a particular type of problem by presenting the solution in a step-by-step fashion.
Abstract: This study attempted to optimize a computer-based learning environment designed to teach learners how to solve word problems by incorporating an animated pedagogical agent. The agent was programmed to deliver instructional explanations either textually or aurally, while simultaneously using gaze and gesture to direct the learners to focus their attention on the relevant part of the example. In Experiment 1, learners presented with an agent delivering explanations aurally (voice plus agent) outperformed their control peers on measures of transfer. In Experiment 2, learners in the voice-plus-agent condition outperformed their peers presented with textual explanations on a variety of measures, including far transfer. In sum, an animated agent programmed to deliver instructions aurally can help optimize learning from examples. A worked example is an instructional device that provides a model for solving a particular type of problem by presenting the solution in a step-by-step fashion. It is intended to provide the learner with an expert’s solution, which the learner can use as a model for his or her own problem solving. To date, in most experiments, worked examples have been visually fixed; that is, the examples simultaneously presented a problem and an expert’s solution steps. As such, these worked examples are similar to those found in traditional mathematics and science texts; however, instructional materials delivered on multimedia computer systems need not be limited in this way. For example, Stark (1999) and Renkl (1997) suggested that example processing can be enhanced by sequentially presenting problem states. According to Stark and Renkl, this type of presentation encourages learners to explain the examples to themselves by anticipating the next step in an example solution, then checking to determine whether the predicted step corresponded to the actual step—a phenomenon Renkl termed anticipative reasoning. According to Catrambone (1994, 1996, 1998), worked examples should be structured so they emphasize conceptually related solution steps (i.e., subgoals) by visually isolating them, by labeling them, or both. With regard to presenting examples that require learners to reference multiple sources of information, Mousavi and his colleagues (Mousavi, Low, & Sweller, 1995) offer a simple solution: Some segments of instructional information should be presented visually, whereas other segments should be presented aurally (i.e., mixed-mode format). One advantage of using the computer to deliver instruction is that it enables instructional designers to combine multiple instructional principles or components in a worked example, which may prove to enhance its efficacy. According to Mayer’s (1997) generative theory of multimedia learning, computers—in contrast to a book-based medium—also provide a more favorable environment in which to implement some forms of effective instruction, such as the coordination of the visual presentation of sequential problem states with an auditory description of each of those states. For example, in Atkinson and Derry (2000), one way to structure an example within a computer-based multimedia environment so that learning can be maximized was to create a multicomponent worked example that (a) was sequential, in that it consisted of a sequential presentation of problem states; (b) was constructed to emphasize problem subgoals (i.e., it is subgoal oriented); and (c) incorporated a second modality that is coordinated with the sequential presentation of problem states (i.e., visually presented steps coupled with verbal instructional explanations). Learners exposed to these sequential, subgoal-oriented (SE–SO) examples with dual modes outperformed learners who were exposed to more traditional, simultaneous, non-subgoal-oriented examples on conceptually based measures of problem-solving transfer. Moreover, this difference occurred despite the fact that the examples in the latter condition were also dual mode.

435 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a corpus of expert-graded essays, based on a standardized scoring rubric, is computationally evaluated so as to distinguish the differences between those essays that were rated as high and those rated as low.
Abstract: In this study, a corpus of expert-graded essays, based on a standardized scoring rubric, is computationally evaluated so as to distinguish the differences between those essays that were rated as high and those rated as low. The automated tool, Coh-Metrix, is used to examine the degree to which high- and low-proficiency essays can be predicted by linguistic indices of cohesion (i.e., coreference and connectives), syntactic complexity (e.g., number of words before the main verb, sentence structure overlap), the diversity of words used by the writer, and characteristics of words (e.g., frequency, concreteness, imagability). The three most predictive indices of essay quality in this study were syntactic complexity (as measured by number of words before the main verb), lexical diversity (as measured by the Measure of Textual Lexical Diversity), and word frequency (as measured by Celex, logarithm for all words). Using 26 validated indices of cohesion from Coh-Metrix, none showed differences between high- and lo...

435 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The combination of traditional culturing with maturing culture-free approaches and phylogenomics should accelerate the process of completing and resolving the eukaryote Tree of Life at its deepest levels.
Abstract: For 15 years, the eukaryote Tree of Life (eToL) has been divided into five to eight major groupings, known as ‘supergroups’. However, the tree has been profoundly rearranged during this time. The new eToL results from the widespread application of phylogenomics and numerous discoveries of major lineages of eukaryotes, mostly free-living heterotrophic protists. The evidence that supports the tree has transitioned from a synthesis of molecular phylogenetics and biological characters to purely molecular phylogenetics. Most current supergroups lack defining morphological or cell-biological characteristics, making the supergroup label even more arbitrary than before. Going forward, the combination of traditional culturing with maturing culture-free approaches and phylogenomics should accelerate the process of completing and resolving the eToL at its deepest levels.

433 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a comprehensive review on current control technology is given with a discussion on challenges of microgrid controls, and the research needs and roadmap for microgrid control are also described.
Abstract: The interest on microgrid has increased significantly triggered by the increasing demand of reliable, secure, efficient, clean, and sustainable electricity. More research and implementation of microgrid will be conducted in order to improve the maturity of microgrid technology. Among different aspects of microgrid, this paper focuses on controls of microgrid with energy storage. A comprehensive review on current control technology is given with a discussion on challenges of microgrid controls. Basic simulation results are also presented to enhance and support the analysis. Finally, research needs and roadmap for microgrid control are also described.

432 citations


Authors

Showing all 14277 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Naomi J. Halas14043582040
Bin Liu138218187085
Shuai Liu129109580823
Vijay P. Singh106169955831
Liangpei Zhang9783935163
K. L. Dooley9532063579
Feng Chen95213853881
Marco Cavaglia9337260157
Tuan Vo-Dinh8669824690
Nicholas H. Barton8426732707
S. Kandhasamy8123550363
Michael S. Sacks8038620510
Dinesh Mohan7928335775
James Mallet7820921349
George D. Kuh7724830346
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202347
2022247
20211,725
20201,620
20191,465
20181,467