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Institution

San Diego State University

EducationSan Diego, California, United States
About: San Diego State University is a education organization based out in San Diego, California, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 12418 authors who have published 27950 publications receiving 1192375 citations. The organization is also known as: SDSU & San Diego State College.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a broad array of evidence that illustrates con- vincingly; the Arctic is undergoing a system-wide response to an altered climatic state.
Abstract: The Arctic climate is changing. Permafrost is warming, hydrological processes are chang- ing and biological and social systems are also evolving in response to these changing conditions. Knowing how the structure and function of arctic terrestrial ecosystems are responding to recent and persistent climate change is paramount to understanding the future state of the Earth system and how humans will need to adapt. Our holistic review presents a broad array of evidence that illustrates con- vincingly; the Arctic is undergoing a system-wide response to an altered climatic state. New extreme and seasonal surface climatic conditions are being experienced, a range of biophysical states and pro- cesses influenced by the threshold and phase change of freezing point are being altered, hydrological and biogeochemical cycles are shifting, and more regularly human sub-systems are being affected. Importantly, the patterns, magnitude and mechanisms of change have sometimes been unpredictable or difficult to isolate due to compounding factors. In almost every discipline represented, we show

1,315 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Aesthetic attributes, convenience of facilities for walking, accessibility of destinations, and perceptions about traffic and busy roads were found to be associated with walking for particular purposes, and early evidence is promising.

1,301 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Natalie M. Batalha1, Natalie M. Batalha2, Jason F. Rowe2, Stephen T. Bryson2, Thomas Barclay2, Christopher J. Burke2, Douglas A. Caldwell2, Jessie L. Christiansen2, Fergal Mullally2, Susan E. Thompson2, Timothy M. Brown3, Andrea K. Dupree4, Daniel C. Fabrycky5, Eric B. Ford6, Jonathan J. Fortney5, Ronald L. Gilliland7, Howard Isaacson8, David W. Latham4, Geoffrey W. Marcy8, Samuel N. Quinn9, Samuel N. Quinn4, Darin Ragozzine4, Avi Shporer3, William J. Borucki2, David R. Ciardi10, Thomas N. Gautier10, Michael R. Haas2, Jon M. Jenkins2, David G. Koch2, Jack J. Lissauer2, William Rapin2, Gibor Basri8, Alan P. Boss11, Lars A. Buchhave12, Joshua A. Carter4, David Charbonneau4, Joergen Christensen-Dalsgaard13, Bruce D. Clarke10, William D. Cochran14, Brice-Olivier Demory15, Jean-Michel Desert4, Edna DeVore16, Laurance R. Doyle16, Gilbert A. Esquerdo4, Mark E. Everett, Francois Fressin4, John C. Geary4, Forrest R. Girouard2, Alan Gould17, Jennifer R. Hall2, Matthew J. Holman4, Andrew W. Howard8, Steve B. Howell2, Khadeejah A. Ibrahim2, Karen Kinemuchi2, Hans Kjeldsen13, Todd C. Klaus2, Jie Li2, Philip W. Lucas18, Søren Meibom4, Robert L. Morris2, Andrej Prsa19, Elisa V. Quintana2, Dwight T. Sanderfer2, Dimitar Sasselov4, Shawn Seader2, Jeffrey C. Smith2, Jason H. Steffen20, Martin Still2, Martin C. Stumpe2, Jill Tarter16, Peter Tenenbaum2, Guillermo Torres4, Joseph D. Twicken2, Kamal Uddin2, Jeffrey Van Cleve2, Lucianne M. Walkowicz21, William F. Welsh22 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors verified nearly 5000 periodic transit-like signals against astrophysical and instrumental false positives yielding 1108 viable new transiting planet candidates, bringing the total count up to over 2300.
Abstract: New transiting planet candidates are identified in 16 months (2009 May-2010 September) of data from the Kepler spacecraft. Nearly 5000 periodic transit-like signals are vetted against astrophysical and instrumental false positives yielding 1108 viable new planet candidates, bringing the total count up to over 2300. Improved vetting metrics are employed, contributing to higher catalog reliability. Most notable is the noise-weighted robust averaging of multi-quarter photo-center offsets derived from difference image analysis that identifies likely background eclipsing binaries. Twenty-two months of photometry are used for the purpose of characterizing each of the candidates. Ephemerides (transit epoch, T_0, and orbital period, P) are tabulated as well as the products of light curve modeling: reduced radius (R_P/R_★), reduced semimajor axis (d/R_★), and impact parameter (b). The largest fractional increases are seen for the smallest planet candidates (201% for candidates smaller than 2 R_⊕ compared to 53% for candidates larger than 2 R_⊕) and those at longer orbital periods (124% for candidates outside of 50 day orbits versus 86% for candidates inside of 50 day orbits). The gains are larger than expected from increasing the observing window from 13 months (Quarters 1-5) to 16 months (Quarters 1-6) even in regions of parameter space where one would have expected the previous catalogs to be complete. Analyses of planet frequencies based on previous catalogs will be affected by such incompleteness. The fraction of all planet candidate host stars with multiple candidates has grown from 17% to 20%, and the paucity of short-period giant planets in multiple systems is still evident. The progression toward smaller planets at longer orbital periods with each new catalog release suggests that Earth-size planets in the habitable zone are forthcoming if, indeed, such planets are abundant.

1,271 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In a real‐world study, the primary physical environment was found to strongly control the neural tube defects (NTD) occurrences in the Heshun region (China) and basic nutrition was finding to be more important than man‐made pollution in the control of the spatial NTD pattern.
Abstract: Physical environment, man-made pollution, nutrition and their mutual interactions can be major causes of human diseases. These disease determinants have distinct spatial distributions across geographical units, so that their adequate study involves the investigation of the associated geographical strata. We propose four geographical detectors based on spatial variation analysis of the geographical strata to assess the environmental risks of health: the risk detector indicates where the risk areas are; the factor detector identifies factors that are responsible for the risk; the ecological detector discloses relative importance between the factors; and the interaction detector reveals whether the risk factors interact or lead to disease independently. In a real-world study, the primary physical environment (watershed, lithozone and soil) was found to strongly control the neural tube defects (NTD) occurrences in the Heshun region (China). Basic nutrition (food) was found to be more important than man-made pollution (chemical fertilizer) in the control of the spatial NTD pattern. Ancient materials released from geological faults and subsequently spread along slopes dramatically increase the NTD risk. These findings constitute valuable input to disease intervention strategies in the region of interest.

1,267 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the Kepler mission released data for 156,453 stars observed from the beginning of the science observations on 2009 May 2 through September 16, and there are 1235 planetary candidates with transit-like signatures detected in this period.
Abstract: On 2011 February 1 the Kepler mission released data for 156,453 stars observed from the beginning of the science observations on 2009 May 2 through September 16. There are 1235 planetary candidates with transit-like signatures detected in this period. These are associated with 997 host stars. Distributions of the characteristics of the planetary candidates are separated into five class sizes: 68 candidates of approximately Earth-size (R_p < 1.25 R_⊕), 288 super-Earth-size (1.25 R_⊕ ≤ R_p < 2 R_⊕), 662 Neptune-size (2 R_⊕ ≤ R_p < 6 R_⊕), 165 Jupiter-size (6 R_⊕ ≤ R_p < 15 R_⊕), and 19 up to twice the size of Jupiter (15 R_⊕ ≤ R_p < 22 R_⊕). In the temperature range appropriate for the habitable zone, 54 candidates are found with sizes ranging from Earth-size to larger than that of Jupiter. Six are less than twice the size of the Earth. Over 74% of the planetary candidates are smaller than Neptune. The observed number versus size distribution of planetary candidates increases to a peak at two to three times the Earth-size and then declines inversely proportional to the area of the candidate. Our current best estimates of the intrinsic frequencies of planetary candidates, after correcting for geometric and sensitivity biases, are 5% for Earth-size candidates, 8% for super-Earth-size candidates, 18% for Neptune-size candidates, 2% for Jupiter-size candidates, and 0.1% for very large candidates; a total of 0.34 candidates per star. Multi-candidate, transiting systems are frequent; 17% of the host stars have multi-candidate systems, and 34% of all the candidates are part of multi-candidate systems.

1,241 citations


Authors

Showing all 12533 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
David R. Williams1782034138789
James F. Sallis169825144836
Steven Williams144137586712
Larry R. Squire14347285306
Murray B. Stein12874589513
Robert Edwards12177574552
Roberto Kolter12031552942
Jack E. Dixon11540847201
Sonia Ancoli-Israel11552046045
John D. Lambris11465148203
Igor Grant11379155147
Kenneth H. Nealson10848351100
Mark Westoby10831659095
Eric Courchesne10724041200
Marc A. Schuckit10664343484
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202345
2022168
20211,595
20201,535
20191,454
20181,262