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Institution

Northampton Community College

EducationBethlehem, Pennsylvania, United States
About: Northampton Community College is a education organization based out in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 3410 authors who have published 4582 publications receiving 130398 citations. The organization is also known as: Northampton County Area Community College.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, an argument and theory-in-practice related to organizational learning and systemic practice as critically reflexive action research (CRAR) is developed, in the context of different emphases in understandings of and approaches to "managing" or "working with" change.
Abstract: This article sets out to develop an argument and theory-in-practice related to organizational learning and systemic practice as critically reflexive action research (CRAR). It explores principles and concepts associated with CRAR, in the context of different emphases in understandings of and approaches to “managing” or “working with” change. The notion of “epistemologies of practice” is developed, as the basis for introducing “on-site” and “off-site” CRAR as interweaving cycles of managerial and organizational learning. A multilayered illustration of an improvisational CRAR environment, using principles of dialectical enquiry and critical learning theater, is offered. A diagrammatic analysis provides the framework for describing and reflecting critically on key CRAR processes. This is expanded with a consideration of possibilities for documentation that can assist with the validation of quality in CRAR processes and outcomes. This has relevance in the context of postpositivist action research at postgraduate levels or within project-based CRAR partnerships. This leads to a further discussion of principles and concepts, in the context of other literature and pressures on public services.

48 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Its role in three anomalies associated with selective attention is considered: the apparently undue influence of distractor stimuli when decisions in the Eriksen flanker task have to be made under time pressure; the phenomenon associated with attentional load that distractors distal to a target exert more effect when the demands on selective attention are smaller than larger.

48 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The use of the proposed method based on LC-ISP(-)-MS/MS opens a new way to directly determine OH-PBDEs without the need of derivatization.
Abstract: We propose an instrumental method based on liquid chromatography coupled to negative ion-spray ionization (ISP(-)) tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS), for the simultaneous analysis of eight hydroxylated brominated diphenyl ethers (OH-PBDEs) in four different environmental matrices (soil, fish, sludge and particulate matter). The reversed-phase chromatographic separation was performed on a 50 mm Xbridge C18 column, and the compounds were well resolved with a gradient consisting of a ternary mixture of 5 mMammonium acetate, methanol and acetonitrile. Detection was performed in the multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) mode using the [M - H](-) ion as base peak. The fragmentation pathways of the OH-PBDEs varied according to the hydroxyl substitution in the benzene rings and produced characteristic MRM transitions needed for resolving isomeric compounds. The method is acceptable for quantification in the high picogram per gram dry weight (dw) level for all matrices analyzed. Repeatability and reproducibility tested at 75 pg microl(-1) were below 10% using internal standard quantification. The ISP (-) enhancement due to matrix effects was in the 76-132% range and the highest values corresponded to sludge samples. The use of the proposed method based on LC-ISP(-)-MS/MS opens a new way to directly determine OH-PBDEs without the need of derivatization.

48 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It was found that amongst traditional journalists use was light and non‐users were partly put off by the Internet’s potential for overloading them with information and its reputation for producing information of suspect quality, but online hosts seem to be at most risk in the future.
Abstract: There is very little qualitative data on what impact the Internet is having on information seeking in the workplace. Using open‐ended interviews, questionnaires and observation, the impact of the Internet on the British Media was assessed. The focus was largely on newspapers, with The Guardian being covered in some depth. Over 300 journalists and media librarians were surveyed. It was found that amongst traditional journalists use was light. Poor access to the Internet – and good access to other information resources – were largely the reasons for this. Of the journalists it was mainly the older and more senior journalists and the New Media journalists who used the Internet. Librarians were also significant users. Searching the World Wide Web was the principal Internet activity and use was generally conservative in character. Newspapers and official sites were favoured, and searches were mainly of a fact‐checking nature. Email was used on a very limited scale and was not regarded as a serious journalistic tool. Non‐users were partly put off by the Internet‘s potential for overloading them with information and its reputation for producing information of suspect quality. Users generally dismissed these concerns, dealing with potential overload and quality problems largely by using authoritative sites and exploiting the lower quality data where it was needed. Where the Internet has been used it has not been at the expense of other information sources or communication channels, but online hosts seem to be at most risk in the future.

48 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Language development seems to be facilitated by encouraging child participation and using a more contingent and child centred interaction in this small group of very young deaf children.

48 citations


Authors

Showing all 3411 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Simon Baron-Cohen172773118071
Pete Smith1562464138819
Martin N. Rossor12867095743
Mark D. Griffiths124123861335
Richard G. Brown8321726205
Brendon Stubbs8175428180
Stuart N. Lane7633715788
Paul W. Burgess6915621038
Thomas Dietz6820337313
Huseyin Sehitoglu6732414378
Susan Golombok6721512856
David S.G. Thomas6322814796
Stephen Morris6344316484
Stephen Robertson6119723363
Michael J. Morgan6026612211
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20233
20221
202182
202073
201968
201865