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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: The results trace the bilingual advantage in cognitive control to the unimodal bilingual's experience controlling two languages in the same modality.
Abstract: Bilinguals often outperform monolinguals on nonverbal tasks that require resolving conflict from competing alternatives. The regular need to select a target language is argued to enhance executive control. We investigated whether this enhancement stems from a general effect of bilingualism (the representation of two languages) or from a modality constraint that forces language selection. Bimodal bilinguals can, but do not always, sign and speak at the same time. Their two languages involve distinct motor and perceptual systems, leading to weaker demands on language control. We compared the performance of 15 monolinguals, 15 bimodal bilinguals, and 15 unimodal bilinguals on a set of flanker tasks. There were no group differences in accuracy, but unimodal bilinguals were faster than the other groups; bimodal bilinguals did not differ from monolinguals. These results trace the bilingual advantage in cognitive control to the unimodal bilingual's experience controlling two languages in the same modality.

286 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Individual-level effects of discrimination found in this study, as well as institutional-level conditions and contextual effects, should be treated as crucial to future studies of individual-level physical health differentials.
Abstract: The authors propose that perceived discrimination has an effect on self-reported health statuses, which are known to affect future morbidity and mortality. A sample of 3,012 Mexican-origin adults from the Mexican American Prevalence and Services Study in California is utilized to test this hypothesis. Dependent variables include a self-rating of health and a count of self-reported chronic conditions; the key independent variable is a scale of overall discrimination specific to one’s Mexican origin. Results indicate that discrimination is related to poor physical health—net of controls for acculturation stress, national heritage, sociodemographic variables, and social support. Depression is identified as a major mechanism through which discrimination may affect physical health. Notably, job market stress/discrimination has a very strong association with poorer physical health, net of depression. Individual-level effects of discrimination found in this study, as well as institutional-level conditions and co...

285 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The objective of this study was to determine the efficacy of the use of pulsatile hypertonic saline nasal irrigation in the treatment of sinonasal disease.
Abstract: Objectives/Hypothesis Nasal disease, including chronic rhinosinusitis and allergic rhinitis, is a significant source of morbidity. Nasal irrigation has been used as an adjunctive treatment of sinonasal disease. However, despite an abundance of anecdotal reports, there has been little statistical evidence to support its efficacy. The objective of this study was to determine the efficacy of the use of pulsatile hypertonic saline nasal irrigation in the treatment of sinonasal disease. Study Design A prospective controlled clinical study. Methods Two hundred eleven patients from the University of California, San Diego (San Diego, CA) Nasal Dysfunction Clinic with sinonasal disease (including allergic rhinitis, aging rhinitis, atrophic rhinitis, and postnasal drip) and 20 disease-free control subjects were enrolled. Patients irrigated their nasal cavities using hypertonic saline delivered by a Water Pik device using a commercially available nasal adapter twice daily for 3 to 6 weeks. Patients rated nasal disease–specific symptoms and completed a self-administered quality of well-being questionnaire before intervention and at follow-up. Results Patients who used nasal irrigation for the treatment of sinonasal disease experienced statistically significant improvements in 23 of the 30 nasal symptoms queried. Improvement was also measured in the global assessment of health status using the Quality of Well-Being scale. Conclusions Nasal irrigation is effective in improving symptoms and the health status of patients with sinonasal disease.

285 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the effect of the turn-of-the-century drought in western North America on carbon uptake in the region, using reanalysis data, remote sensing observations and data from global monitoring networks.
Abstract: The severity and incidence of climatic extremes, including drought, have increased as a result of climate warming. Analyses of observational and reanalysis data suggest that the strength of the western North American carbon sink declined by 30–298 Tg carbon per year during the drought at the turn of the century. Fossil fuel emissions aside, temperate North America is a net sink of carbon dioxide at present1,2,3. Year-to-year variations in this carbon sink are linked to variations in hydroclimate that affect net ecosystem productivity3,4. The severity and incidence of climatic extremes, including drought, have increased as a result of climate warming5,6,7,8. Here, we examine the effect of the turn of the century drought in western North America on carbon uptake in the region, using reanalysis data, remote sensing observations and data from global monitoring networks. We show that the area-integrated strength of the western North American carbon sink declined by 30–298 Tg C yr−1 during the 2000–2004 drought. We further document a pronounced drying of the terrestrial biosphere during this period, together with a reduction in river discharge and a loss of cropland productivity. We compare our findings with previous palaeoclimate reconstructions7 and show that the last drought of this magnitude occurred more than 800 years ago. Based on projected changes in precipitation and drought severity, we estimate that the present mid-latitude carbon sink of 177–623 Tg C yr−1 in western North America could disappear by the end of the century.

285 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Women with varying socioeconomic status (SES) monitored positive and negative psychosocial experiences and emotions across 2 days to test several tenets of the reserve capacity model and found that lower SES was associated with less perceived control and positive affect and more social strain.
Abstract: The current study used ecological momentary assessment to test several tenets of the reserve capacity model (L.C. Gallo & K. A. Matthews, 2003). Women (N = 108) with varying socioeconomic status (SES) monitored positive and negative psychosocial experiences and emotions across 2 days. Measures of intrapsychic and social resources were aggregated to represent the reserve capacity available to manage stress. Lower SES was associated with less perceived control and positive affect and more social strain. Control and strain contributed to the association between SES and positive affect. Lower SES elicited greater positive but not negative emotional reactivity to psychosocial experiences. Women with low SES had fewer resources relative to those with higher SES, and resources contributed to the association between SES and daily experiences.

285 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