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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.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Eysenck Personality Profiler and a stress symptom checklist were given to 162 performing artists (33 actors, 26 dancers, 65 musicians and 38 singers) and scores were compared against test norms and a control group as discussed by the authors.

167 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate shoplifting as consumer behavior, demonstrating that well-defined models of normal consumer behaviour can be applied to aberrant behaviour such as shop theft and show how adults and teenagers form belief systems that amount to rational intentions in the decision to shoplift.
Abstract: Although customer theft is traditionally researched from a criminological or psychological perspective, this paper investigates shoplifting as consumer behaviour, demonstrating that well-defined models of normal consumer behaviour can be applied to aberrant behaviour such as shop theft. Empirical research is used to show how adults and teenagers form belief systems that amount to rational intentions in the decision to shoplift. The theory of planned behaviour (Ajzen, 1991) was used as the basis for two self-report surveys which investigated the interaction between consumers' attitudes and beliefs about shoplifting and their perceptions of retail security. The first survey utilised a sample of shoppers from the South East Midlands; the second a sample of school students from the same area (861 respondents in total, 109 respondents admitting to shoplifting in the previous year). Both studies indicate that the decision to shoplift is influenced by pro-shoplifting attitudes, social factors, opportunities for shoplifting and perceptions of low risks of apprehension. This implies that the deterrent messages we use must be reassessed. Copyright © 2002 Henry Stewart Publications.

167 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The development of the CDIs is described, the volume of research that has been generated in a range of applications of the measures is summarised, and their current standing both as a research tool and as a clinical measure is evaluated.
Abstract: The Communicative Development Inventories (CDIs) are parent report measures of vocabulary and other aspects of language development in very young children. They have evolved over the past 20 years to be one of the most well recognised assessments of infant language. Of particular significance is the fact that the CDIs are the first measures of their kind to be widely translated and adapted for use in many different languages. The inventories have served a variety of functions including measuring early language acquisition, deriving normative data on language acquisition, and both identifying and describing children whose early language is significantly delayed. This review describes the development of the CDIs, summarises the volume of research that has been generated in a range of applications of the measures, and evaluates their current standing both as a research tool and as a clinical measure. Issues around the sensitivity and predictive value of the CDIs are also considered. © 2008 Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health.

167 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The body of evidence summarised in this review is insufficient to allow any conclusion to be drawn about the use of pharmacological interventions in the treatment of antisocial personality disorder.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Antisocial personality disorder (AsPD) is associated with a wide range of disturbance including persistent rule-breaking, criminality, substance misuse, unemployment, homelessness and relationship difficulties. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the potential beneficial and adverse effects of pharmacological interventions for people with AsPD. SEARCH STRATEGY: We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (The Cochrane Library 2009, Issue 3), MEDLINE (1950 to September 2009), EMBASE (1980 to 2009, week 37), CINAHL (1982 to September 2009), PsycINFO (1872 to September 2009) , ASSIA (1987 to September 2009) , BIOSIS (1985 to September 2009), COPAC (September 2009), National Criminal Justice Reference Service Abstracts (1970 to July 2008), Sociological Abstracts (1963 to September 2009), ISI-Proceedings (1981 to September 2009), Science Citation Index (1981 to September 2009), Social Science Citation Index (1981 to September 2009), SIGLE (1980 to April 2006), Dissertation Abstracts (September 2009), ZETOC (September 2009) and the metaRegister of Controlled Trials (September 2009). SELECTION CRITERIA: Controlled trials in which participants with AsPD were randomly allocated to a pharmacological intervention and a placebo control condition. Two trials comparing one drug against another without a placebo control are reported separately. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: Three review authors independently selected studies. Two review authors independently extracted data. We calculated mean differences, with odds ratios for dichotomous data. MAIN RESULTS: Eight studies met the inclusion criteria involving 394 participants with AsPD. Data were available from four studies involving 274 participants with AsPD. No study set out to recruit participants solely on the basis of having AsPD, and in only one study was the sample entirely of AsPD participants. Eight different drugs were examined in eight studies. Study quality was relatively poor. Inadequate reporting meant the data available were generally insufficient to allow any independent statistical analysis. The findings are limited to descriptive summaries based on analyses carried out and reported by the trial investigators. All the available data were derived from unreplicated single reports. Only three drugs (nortriptyline, bromocriptine, phenytoin) were effective compared to placebo in terms of improvement in at least one outcome. Nortriptyline was reported in one study as superior for men with alcohol dependency on mean number of drinking days and on alcohol dependence, but not for severity of alcohol misuse or on the patient's or clinician's rating of drinking. In the same study, both nortriptyline and bromocriptine were reported as superior to placebo on anxiety on one scale but not on another. In one study, phenytoin was reported as superior to placebo on the frequency and intensity of aggressive acts in male prisoners with impulsive (but not premeditated) aggression. In the remaining two studies, both amantadine and desipramine were not superior to placebo for adults with opioid and cocaine dependence, and desipramine was not superior to placebo for men with cocaine dependence. AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The body of evidence summarised in this review is insufficient to allow any conclusion to be drawn about the use of pharmacological interventions in the treatment of antisocial personality disorder. Language: en

166 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review presents a new unified view of the pathogenesis of three common causes of acquired retinal degenerative disease—diabetic Retinopathy, age related macular degeneration, and retinopathy of prematurity, and suggests novel methods of treatment and prevention of these conditions that may be simpler and more inexpensive than current therapies and that have a smaller potential for adverse effects.
Abstract: This review presents a new unified view of the pathogenesis of three common causes of acquired retinal degenerative disease—diabetic retinopathy, age related macular degeneration, and retinopathy of prematurity. In these three conditions, angiogenesis has a predominant role in the development of sight threatening pathology. Angiogenesis is controlled by among other factors the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), which in turn is regulated by absolute and relative lack of oxygen. The severe pathological manifestations of these three conditions are not part of a general underlying disease process because they are peculiar to the eye, and the profound hypoxia that develops in normal retina during dark adaptation (rod driven hypoxia) is an adequate and elegant additional factor to explain their pathogenesis. A large number of experimental reports support this conclusion, although rod driven anoxia is not generally considered as a causal factor in ocular disease. However, the hypothesis can be critically tested, and also suggests novel methods of treatment and prevention of these conditions that may be simpler and more inexpensive than current therapies and that have a smaller potential for adverse effects.

164 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