Institution
State University of New York System
Education•Albany, New York, United States•
About: State University of New York System is a education organization based out in Albany, New York, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 54077 authors who have published 78070 publications receiving 2985160 citations.
Topics: Population, Poison control, RNA, Gene, Receptor
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: A model that describes the antecedents of organizational slack is presented in this article, which contains three sets of predictors: environmental contingencies, organizational characteristics, and the values and beliefs of dominant coalition.
Abstract: Organizational slack has been widely discussed, but only in its role as an antecedent of performance, political behavior, bankruptcy, and other phenomena. A model that describes the antecedents of organizational slack is presented here. It contains three sets of predictors: environmental contingencies, organizational characteristics, and the values and beliefs of dominant coalition. Hypotheses detailing how each set of predictors leads to the development of different levels and types of slack resources are presented.
557 citations
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TL;DR: Several mechanisms are proposed to explain the potential role of oral bacteria in the pathogenesis of respiratory infection: aspiration of oral pathogens into the lung to cause infection, and cytokines originating from periodontal tissues may alter respiratory epithelium to promote infection by respiratory pathogens.
Abstract: An association between oral conditions such as periodontal disease and several respiratory conditions has been noted. For example, recent evidence has suggested a central role for the oral cavity in the process of respiratory infection. Oral periodontopathic bacteria can be aspirated into the lung to cause aspiration pneumonia. The teeth may also serve as a reservoir for respiratory pathogen colonization and subsequent nosocomial pneumonia. Typical respiratory pathogens have been shown to colonize the dental plaque of hospitalized intensive care and nursing home patients. Once established in the mouth, these pathogens may be aspirated into the lung to cause infection. Other epidemiologic studies have noted a relationship between poor oral hygiene or periodontal bone loss and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Several mechanisms are proposed to explain the potential role of oral bacteria in the pathogenesis of respiratory infection: 1. aspiration of oral pathogens (such as Porphyromonas gingivalis, Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans, etc.) into the lung to cause infection; 2. periodontal disease-associated enzymes in saliva may modify mucosal surfaces to promote adhesion and colonization by respiratory pathogens, which are then aspirated into the lung; 3. periodontal disease-associated enzymes may destroy salivary pellicles on pathogenic bacteria to hinder their clearance from the mucosal surface; and 4. cytokines originating from periodontal tissues may alter respiratory epithelium to promote infection by respiratory pathogens.
555 citations
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TL;DR: A new cooperative communication protocol is proposed, which achieves higher bandwidth efficiency while guaranteeing the same diversity order as that of the conventional cooperative schemes, and the tradeoff between the achievable bandwidth efficiency and the corresponding SER is presented.
Abstract: In this paper; we propose a new cooperative communication protocol, which achieves higher bandwidth efficiency while guaranteeing the same diversity order as that of the conventional cooperative schemes. The proposed scheme considers relay selection via the available partial channel state information (CSI) at the source and the relays. In particular, we discuss the multi-node decode-and-forward cooperative scenarios, where arbitrary N relays are available. The source determines when it needs to cooperate with one relay only, and which relay to cooperate with in case of cooperation, i.e., "When to cooperate?" and "Whom to cooperate with?". An optimal relay is the one which has the maximum instantaneous scaled harmonic mean functionof its source-relay and relay-destination channel gains. For the symmetric scenario, we derive an approximate expression of the bandwidth efficiency and obtain an upper bound on the symbol error rate (SER) performance. We show that full diversity is guaranteed and that a significant increase of the bandwidth efficiency is achieved. Moreover, we present the tradeoff between the achievable bandwidth efficiency and the corresponding SER. Finally, the obtained analytical results are verified through computer simulations.
553 citations
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TL;DR: Serum albumin concentration is an independent predictor of mortality risk and could be useful in the quantification of risk in a broad range of clinical and research settings and a direct protective effect of the albumin molecule is suggested.
552 citations
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TL;DR: Remaining diagnostic difficulties, particularly in identifying levels of agoraphobic avoidance and in reliably diagnosing generalized anxiety disorder, are discussed in the context of changes in diagnostic criteria that are under consideration for DSM-IV.
Abstract: • A large reliability study ofDSM-III-Ranxiety disorders is reported in which outpatients (n=267) received two independent structured interviews (Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule—Revised). It is the only reliability study to date in which the finalDSM-III-Rcriteria are used throughout the study. Reliability was assessed for each diagnosis when it was assigned as a principal diagnosis and when it was assigned as either a principal or an additional diagnosis. Excellent reliability was obtained for current principal diagnoses of simple phobia, social phobia, and obsessivecompulsive disorder. Agreement was good for panic disorder when all severity levels of agoraphobic avoidance were combined. Reliability was fair for generalized anxiety disorder. Remaining diagnostic difficulties, particularly in identifying levels of agoraphobic avoidance and in reliably diagnosing generalized anxiety disorder, are discussed in the context of changes in diagnostic criteria that are under consideration forDSM-IV.
552 citations
Authors
Showing all 54162 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Meir J. Stampfer | 277 | 1414 | 283776 |
Bert Vogelstein | 247 | 757 | 332094 |
Zhong Lin Wang | 245 | 2529 | 259003 |
Peter Libby | 211 | 932 | 182724 |
Robert M. Califf | 196 | 1561 | 167961 |
Stephen V. Faraone | 188 | 1427 | 140298 |
David L. Kaplan | 177 | 1944 | 146082 |
David Baker | 173 | 1226 | 109377 |
Nora D. Volkow | 165 | 958 | 107463 |
David R. Holmes | 161 | 1624 | 114187 |
Richard J. Davidson | 156 | 602 | 91414 |
Ronald G. Crystal | 155 | 990 | 86680 |
Jovan Milosevic | 152 | 1433 | 106802 |
James J. Collins | 151 | 669 | 89476 |
Mark A. Rubin | 145 | 699 | 95640 |