Institution
New York University
Education•New York, New York, United States•
About: New York University is a education organization based out in New York, New York, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 72380 authors who have published 165545 publications receiving 8334030 citations. The organization is also known as: NYU & University of the City of New York.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Context (language use), Health care, Cancer
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: This life-span approach to fatherhood considers the broader sociohistorical context in which fatherhood develops, and emphasizes the urgent need to consider mothers, fathers, and family structure in future research as the authors seek to understand and model the effects of parenting on children's development.
Abstract: The twentieth century has been characterized by four important social trends that have fundamentally changed the social cultural context in which children develop: womenOs increased labor force participation, increased absence of nonresidential fathers in the lives of their children, increased involvement of fathers in intact families, and increased cultural diversity in the U.S.. In this essay, we discuss how these trends are changing the nature of father involvement and family life, and in turn affecting childrenOs and fathersO developmental trajectories. We end with an eye toward the twenty-Þrst century by examining how the children of today will construct their expectations about the roles of fathers and mothers as they become the parents of tomorrow. This life-span approach to fatherhood considers the broader sociohistorical context in which fatherhood develops, and emphasizes the urgent need to consider mothers, fathers, and family structure in future research as we seek to understand and model the effects of parenting on childrenOs development.
1,275 citations
••
University of Manchester1, Boston University2, Medical University of Vienna3, University of Ottawa4, VU University Amsterdam5, Leiden University6, Johns Hopkins University7, Columbia University8, University of Pisa9, University of Melbourne10, University of York11, University of Florence12, University of Paris13, University of Leeds14, University of California, Los Angeles15, University of Santiago de Compostela16, University of Toronto17, University of Bristol18, Maastricht University19, University of Nebraska Medical Center20, Autonomous University of Madrid21, New York University22, Food and Drug Administration23, Genentech24, Stanford University25, University of Basel26, MedImmune27, University of Kansas28
TL;DR: It is proposed that a patient's RA can be defined as being in remission based on one of two definitions: (1) when scores on the tender joint count, swollen joint counts, CRP level, and patient global assessment are all ≤1, or (2) when the score on the Simplified Disease Activity Index is ≤3.
Abstract: Objective Remission in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is an increasingly attainable goal, but there is no widely used defi nition of remission that is stringent but achievable and could be applied uniformly as an outcome measure in clinical trials. This work was undertaken to develop such a defi nition. Methods A committee consisting of members of the American College of Rheumatology, the European League Against Rheumatism, and the Outcome Measures in Rheumatology Initiative met to guide the process and review prespecifi ed analyses from RA clinical trials. The committee requested a stringent defi nition (little, if any, active disease) and decided to use core set measures including, as a minimum, joint counts and levels of an acute-phase reactant to defi ne remission. Members were surveyed to select the level of each core set measure that would be consistent with remission. Candidate defi nitions of remission were tested, including those that constituted a number of individual measures of remission (Boolean approach) as well as defi nitions using disease activity indexes. To select a defi nition of remission, trial data were analysed to examine the added contribution of patient-reported outcomes and the ability of candidate measures to predict later good radiographic and functional outcomes. Results Survey results for the defi nition of remission suggested indexes at published thresholds and a count of core set measures, with each measure scored as 1 or less (eg, tender and swollen joint counts, C reactive protein (CRP) level, and global assessments on a 0–10 scale). Analyses suggested the need to include a patientreported measure. Examination of 2-year follow-up data suggested that many candidate defi nitions performed comparably in terms of predicting later good radiographic and functional outcomes, although 28-joint Disease Activity Score–based measures of remission did not
1,273 citations
••
01 Jun 1996TL;DR: In this article, a two-tier replication algorithm is proposed that allows mobile (disconnected) applications to propose tentative update transactions that are later applied to a master copy to avoid the instability of other replication schemes.
Abstract: Update anywhere-anytime-anyway transactional replication has unstable behavior as the workload scales up: a ten-fold increase in nodes and traffic gives a thousand fold increase in deadlocks or reconciliations. Master copy replication (primary copy) schemes reduce this problem. A simple analytic model demonstrates these results. A new two-tier replication algorithm is proposed that allows mobile (disconnected) applications to propose tentative update transactions that are later applied to a master copy. Commutative update transactions avoid the instability of other replication schemes.
1,269 citations
••
TL;DR: The evidence suggests that while these effects are largely dependent on the particular goals that users bring to the interaction-such as self-expression, affiliation, or competition-they also interact in important ways with the unique qualities of the Internet communication situation.
Abstract: The Internet is the latest in a series of technological breakthroughs in interpersonal communication, following the telegraph, telephone, radio, and television. It combines innovative features of its predecessors, such as bridging great distances and reaching a mass audience. However, the Internet has novel features as well, most critically the relative anonymity afforded to users and the provision of group venues in which to meet others with similar interests and values. We place the Internet in its historical context, and then examine the effects of Internet use on the user's psychological well-being, the formation and maintenance of personal relationships, group memberships and social identity, the workplace, and community involvement. The evidence suggests that while these effects are largely dependent on the particular goals that users bring to the interaction—such as self-expression, affiliation, or competition—they also interact in important ways with the unique qualities of the Internet communicat...
1,269 citations
••
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider the problem of finding an increasing subsequence in a group of permutations of 1,2,..., N, and show that the longest increasing subsequences are 1 2 4 and 1 3 4, respectively.
Abstract: Let SN be the group of permutations of 1,2,..., N. If 7r E SN, we say that 7(i1),... , 7F(ik) is an increasing subsequence in 7r if il < i2 < ... < ik and 7r(ii) < 7r(i2) < ...< 7r(ik). Let 1N(r) be the length of the longest increasing subsequence. For example, if N = 5 and 7r is the permutation 5 1 3 2 4 (in one-line notation: thus 7r(1) = 5, 7r(2) = 1, ... ), then the longest increasing subsequences are 1 2 4 and 1 3 4, and N() = 3. Equip SN with uniform distribution,
1,265 citations
Authors
Showing all 73237 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Rob Knight | 201 | 1061 | 253207 |
Virginia M.-Y. Lee | 194 | 993 | 148820 |
Frank E. Speizer | 193 | 636 | 135891 |
Stephen V. Faraone | 188 | 1427 | 140298 |
Eric R. Kandel | 184 | 603 | 113560 |
Andrei Shleifer | 171 | 514 | 271880 |
Eliezer Masliah | 170 | 982 | 127818 |
Roderick T. Bronson | 169 | 679 | 107702 |
Timothy A. Springer | 167 | 669 | 122421 |
Alvaro Pascual-Leone | 165 | 969 | 98251 |
Nora D. Volkow | 165 | 958 | 107463 |
Dennis R. Burton | 164 | 683 | 90959 |
Charles N. Serhan | 158 | 728 | 84810 |
Giacomo Bruno | 158 | 1687 | 124368 |
Tomas Hökfelt | 158 | 1033 | 95979 |