Institution
Simón Bolívar University
Education•Caracas, Venezuela•
About: Simón Bolívar University is a education organization based out in Caracas, Venezuela. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Crystallization. The organization has 5912 authors who have published 8294 publications receiving 126152 citations.
Topics: Population, Crystallization, Nucleation, Differential scanning calorimetry, Context (language use)
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: The results indicated that the incidence and diversity of fungal endophytes in these samples were comparable with those in other tropical plant communities and those in semiarid temperate grasslands, and supports the notion that dark septate fungalendophytes dominate semiarids grasslands worldwide.
58 citations
••
TL;DR: In this article, a series of poly(mono n-alkyl itaconate) derivatives with more than 12 carbon atoms were shown to be able to crystallize in hexagonal lattices.
58 citations
••
TL;DR: In this paper, a procedure for testing the null hypothesis of multivariate elliptical symmetry is presented, based on the average of some spherical harmonics over the projections of the scaled residual.
58 citations
••
Victoria University of Wellington1, Queensland University of Technology2, University of Melbourne3, Universidad de Sonora4, Simón Bolívar University5, University of Gothenburg6, University of Surrey7, Federal University of Paraíba8, University of Iceland9, Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya10, University of Warsaw11, Nagoya University12, Complutense University of Madrid13, University of Groningen14, University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland FHNW15, Nagoya University of Commerce & Business16, Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg17, Aix-Marseille University18, University of Pretoria19, University of Oslo20, National Research University – Higher School of Economics21, Pontifical Catholic University of Chile22, California State University San Marcos23, University of La Frontera24, University of Bath25, University of Victoria26, University of Ghana27
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors tested the negative association between social dominance orientation and environmentalism and the validity of the Short Social Dominance Orientation Scale in two cross-cultural samples of students and the general population (N = 4,163, k = 25) and found that the higher people were on SDO, the less likely they were to engage in environmental citizenship actions, pro-environmental behaviors and donate to an environmental organization.
Abstract: Approval of hierarchy and inequality in society indexed by social dominance orientation (SDO) extends to support for human dominance over the natural world. We tested this negative association between SDO and environmentalism and the validity of the new Short Social Dominance Orientation Scale in two cross-cultural samples of students (N = 4,163, k = 25) and the general population (N = 1,237, k = 10). As expected, the higher people were on SDO, the less likely they were to engage in environmental citizenship actions, pro-environmental behaviors and to donate to an environmental organization. Multilevel moderation results showed that the SDO–environmentalism relation was stronger in societies with marked societal inequality, lack of societal development, and environmental standards. The results highlight the interplay between individual psychological orientations and social context, as well as the view of nature subscribed to by those high in SDO.
58 citations
••
TL;DR: In this paper, the kinetics of the electrochemical nucleation of Hg onto vitreous carbon were studied from analysis of potentiostatic current transients obtained at different overpotentials in Hg22+ and Hg2+ solutions.
57 citations
Authors
Showing all 5925 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Franco Nori | 114 | 1117 | 63808 |
Ignacio Rodriguez-Iturbe | 96 | 334 | 32283 |
Ian W. Hamley | 78 | 469 | 25800 |
Francisco Zaera | 73 | 432 | 19907 |
Thomas G. Habetler | 73 | 395 | 20725 |
Douglas L. Jones | 70 | 512 | 21596 |
I. Taboada | 66 | 346 | 13528 |
Enrique Herrero | 64 | 242 | 11653 |
Rudi Studer | 60 | 268 | 19876 |
Alejandro J. Müller | 58 | 420 | 12410 |
David Padua | 58 | 243 | 11155 |
Rudolf Jaffé | 58 | 182 | 10268 |
Luis Balicas | 57 | 328 | 14114 |
Volker Abetz | 55 | 386 | 11583 |
Ananias A. Escalante | 51 | 160 | 8866 |