Institution
San Diego State University
Education•San 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 published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The MacArthur Communicative Development Inventories (CDI) as mentioned in this paper are a pair of widely used parent-report instruments for assessing communicative skills in infants and toddlers, and they have been widely used in clinical applications.
Abstract: The MacArthur Communicative Development Inventories (CDIs) are a pair of widely used
parent-report instruments for assessing communicative skills in infants and toddlers. This report
describes short-form versions of the CDIs and their development, summarizes newly available
normative data and psychometric properties of the instruments, and discusses research and
clinical applications. The infant short form (Level I, for 8- to 18-month-olds) contains an
89-word checklist for vocabulary comprehension and production. The two parallel versions of
the toddler short form (Level II, Forms A and B, for 16- to 30-month-olds) each contain a
100-word vocabulary production checklist and a question about word combinations. The forms
may also be useful with developmentally delayed children beyond the specified age ranges.
Copies of the short forms and the normative tables appear in the appendices.
576 citations
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TL;DR: This article reviews the literature on the relationship between interpersonal rejection and aggression and possible explanations for why rejection leads to anger and aggression are explored.
Abstract: This article reviews the literature on the relationship between interpersonal rejection and aggression. Four bodies of research are summarized: laboratory experiments that manipulate rejection, rejection among adults in everyday life, rejection in childhood, and individual differences that may moderate the relationship. The theoretical mechanisms behind the effect are then explored. Possible explanations for why rejection leads to anger and aggression include: rejection as a source of pain, rejection as a source of frustration, rejection as a threat to self-esteem, mood improvement following aggression, aggression as social influence, aggression as a means of reestablishing control, retribution, disinhibition, and loss of self-control.
574 citations
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TL;DR: Data support the hypothesis that in the 24 months after ACLR and RTS, patients are at a greater risk to suffer a subsequent ACL injury compared with young athletes without a history of ACL injuries, and the contralateral limb of female patients appears at greatest risk.
Abstract: Background:The incidence of second anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries in the first 12 months after ACL reconstruction (ACLR) and return to sport (RTS) in a young, active population has been reported to be 15 times greater than that in a previously uninjured cohort. There are no reported estimates of whether this high relative rate of injury continues beyond the first year after RTS and ACLR.Hypothesis:The incidence rate of a subsequent ACL injury in the 2 years after ACLR and RTS would be less than the incidence rate reported within the first 12 months after RTS but greater than the ACL injury incidence rate in an uninjured cohort of young athletes.Study Design:Cohort study; Level of evidence, 2.Methods:Seventy-eight patients (mean age, 17.1 ± 3.1 years) who underwent ACLR and were ready to return to a pivoting/cutting sport and 47 controls (mean age, 17.2 ± 2.6 years) who also participated in pivoting/cutting sports were prospectively enrolled. Each participant was followed for injury and athlete ...
570 citations
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TL;DR: The effects of increased word use associated with monolingualism, language dominance, and increased age on picture naming times are contrasted to challenge competition based accounts of bilingual disadvantages in language production, and illustrate how between-group processing differences may emerge from cognitive mechanisms general to all speakers.
567 citations
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TL;DR: Home equipment and convenient facilities scales were correlated with self-reported physical activity and the only significant association, after adjusting for neighborhood socioeconomic status, was home equipment with strength exercise.
Abstract: The present study evaluated a measure of perceived physical environments that may influence physical activity. Forty-three self-report items were used to assess environmental variables at homes, in neighborhoods, or on frequently traveled routes. The presence of facilitators of (e.g., equipment, programs, attractive surroundings) and barriers to (e.g., high crime) physical activity was assessed. In 110 college students, test-retest reliabilities were .89 for the home equipment scale, .68 for the neighborhood scale, and .80 for the convenient facilities scale. Home equipment and convenient facilities scales were correlated with self-reported physical activity. In multiple regression analyses, the only significant association, after adjusting for neighborhood socioeconomic status, was home equipment with strength exercise. Further research is needed to identify other environmental characteristics that may influence physical activity.
565 citations
Authors
Showing all 12533 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
David R. Williams | 178 | 2034 | 138789 |
James F. Sallis | 169 | 825 | 144836 |
Steven Williams | 144 | 1375 | 86712 |
Larry R. Squire | 143 | 472 | 85306 |
Murray B. Stein | 128 | 745 | 89513 |
Robert Edwards | 121 | 775 | 74552 |
Roberto Kolter | 120 | 315 | 52942 |
Jack E. Dixon | 115 | 408 | 47201 |
Sonia Ancoli-Israel | 115 | 520 | 46045 |
John D. Lambris | 114 | 651 | 48203 |
Igor Grant | 113 | 791 | 55147 |
Kenneth H. Nealson | 108 | 483 | 51100 |
Mark Westoby | 108 | 316 | 59095 |
Eric Courchesne | 107 | 240 | 41200 |
Marc A. Schuckit | 106 | 643 | 43484 |