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Institution

Shanghai University

EducationShanghai, Shanghai, China
About: Shanghai University is a education organization based out in Shanghai, Shanghai, China. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Microstructure & Catalysis. The organization has 59583 authors who have published 56840 publications receiving 753549 citations. The organization is also known as: Shànghǎi Dàxué.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the recent progress made in the field of hybrid energy storage devices (HESDs), with the main focus on the electrode materials and the matching principles between the positive and negative electrodes are critically reviewed.

149 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Yingchun Ji1
TL;DR: Ji et al. as discussed by the authors investigated how China's so-called "leftover" women draw on and integrate elements of both tradition and modernity as they pursue their own ambitions and negotiate various constraints vis-a-vis marriage and their careers.
Abstract: Since the turn of the new millennium, single, educated women in China's major cities have found themselves increasingly castigated as "leftover" women (sheng nu) if they are not yet married by their late 20s. Anxious parents brave public embarrassment to gather in parks, displaying photographs of their daughters and listing their economic prospects in the hope of finding them a husband. Popular discourse, however, frames these unmarried women as selfish, picky, and only interested in men with financial resources. The issue of "leftover" women warrants headlines and feature stories in Chinese newspapers, popular magazines, and TV reality shows. International media such as the BBC News, The New York Times, The Economist, and CNN have also covered the issue.Unfortunately, academics have yet to accord the phenomenon much attention. Only a limited amount of quantitative research has investigated the effect of education on Chinese women's marriage timing, with only one study directly examining the so-called "leftover" women (Cai & Tian, 2013; Cai & Wang, 2011; Qian 2012; Tian, 2013; Yu & Xie, 2013). Qualitative research investigating the issue is similarly scarce (Fincher, 2014; Gaetano, 2010; To, 2013), but here too the few studies that exist are largely descriptive or have focused on mate choice strategy or the empowerment of the single experience. Little is known about the dynamics underlying these women's marriage decisions. It is thus urgent to investigate and conceptualize these educated women's constraints and struggles in regard to marriage formation in the rapidly changing context of China, which is understood by many of its own citizens as transitioning from tradition to modernity.Research indicates that marriage is still early and nearly universal in China, in spite of three decades of rapid industrialization, urbanization, and expansion of mass education after the economic reform initiated in the 1980s (Ji & Yeung, 2014; Jones & Gubhaju, 2009; Yeung & Hu, 2013). What is interesting is that the pace of educated Chinese women delaying or forgoing marriage is actually much slower/lower compared to equally educated Chinese men and equally educated women in other Asian societies. At the same time, alongside rapid economic reformation and modernization, China has witnessed a resurgence of patriarchal Confucian tradition in recent years (Fincher, 2014; Ji & Yeung, 2014; Sun & Chen, 2014). According to this tradition, women are valued in terms of their roles as wives and mothers, regardless of the impressive progress made in terms of gender equality in China, with women participating in the labor force en masse since even the pre-reformation Maoist period and receiving more and more education in the post-reformation period. The return of patriarchal tradition seems to be at least partially accountable for the now-stalled, if not declining, status of gender equality in China (P. N. Cohen & Wang, 2008; Davis & Harrell, 1993; Fincher, 2014; Ji & Yeung, 2014; Sun & Chen, 2014; Zuo & Bian, 2001).In this research I investigated how China's so-called "leftover" women draw on and integrate elements of both tradition and modernity as they pursue their own ambitions and negotiate various constraints vis-a-vis marriage and their careers. In doing so, this study challenges the linear narratives of progress and/or convergence claimed by modernization theories, which would predict that, through economic modernization, the "traditional" family mode in non-Western contexts will transition to the Western "modern" family mode. I use the terms tradition and modernity here in a deliberate but qualified way in order not only to critique the naturalization of the concepts and their assumptions but also to capture their resilient currency and meaning in people's everyday efforts to make sense of a society undergoing rapid change. In this study I conceptualized contemporary China as an uneasy mosaic, with expectations and elements deemed alternately modern and traditional commingling in educated women's marriage motivations and behaviors. …

149 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Junli Ma1, Houkai Li1
TL;DR: The gut microbiota-involved mechanisms of CVD focusing on atherosclerosis and hypertension, two major risk factors for serious CVD, are discussed and the prospects of Gut microbiota-targeted therapeutic strategies for the treatment of CVB in the future are discussed.
Abstract: In recent years, accumulating evidence has indicated the importance of gut microbiota in maintaining human health. Gut dysbiosis is associated with the pathogenesis of a number of metabolic diseases including obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), and cardiovascular diseases (CVDs). Indeed, CVD has become the leading cause of death worldwide, especially in developed countries. In this review, we mainly discuss the gut microbiota-involved mechanisms of CVD focusing on atherosclerosis and hypertension, two major risk factors for serious CVD. Then, we briefly discuss the prospects of gut microbiota-targeted therapeutic strategies for the treatment of CVD in the future.

149 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Through this controllable method, Pt-nanoparticle-functionalized ZnO nanowires (Pt NPs-ZnO NWs) with uniform particle dispersion, tunable Pt particle sizes, and narrow particle size distribution were obtained.
Abstract: Pt nanoparticles were introduced on the surface of ZnO nanowires using a chemically driven self-assembly method. Through this controllable method, Pt-nanoparticle-functionalized ZnO nanowires (Pt NPs-ZnO NWs) with uniform particle dispersion, tunable Pt particle sizes, and narrow particle size distribution were obtained. Changes in the morphology of the decorative preparation were observed as the amount of linker reagent and the concentration of Pt nanoparticle solution were altered. The as-prepared Pt NPs-ZnO NWs with optimal morphology showed excellent gas sensing and photocatalytic performance. Tuning of the functionalities of photocatalytic and gas sensors can be obtained by tailoring the morphology of Pt NP-ZnO NW composite materials.

149 citations


Authors

Showing all 59993 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Zhong Lin Wang2452529259003
Yang Yang1712644153049
Yang Liu1292506122380
Zhen Li127171271351
Xin Wang121150364930
Jian Liu117209073156
Xin Li114277871389
Wei Zhang112118993641
Jianjun Liu112104071032
Liquan Chen11168944229
Jin-Quan Yu11143843324
Jonathan L. Sessler11199748758
Peng Wang108167254529
Qian Wang108214865557
Wei Zhang104291164923
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023182
2022742
20216,322
20205,569
20195,063
20184,235