Institution
Texas Christian University
Education•Fort Worth, Texas, United States•
About: Texas Christian University is a education organization based out in Fort Worth, Texas, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 3245 authors who have published 8258 publications receiving 282216 citations. The organization is also known as: TCU & Texas Christian University, TCU.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Earnings, Substance abuse, Mental health
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The findings support the effectiveness of intensive treatment when it is integrated with aftercare, and the benefits are most apparent for offenders with more serious crime and drug-related problems.
Abstract: Longer term in-prison therapeutic community (ITC) outcome studies are needed, along with more attention on who benefits most from these programs. This study examined reincarceration records for 394 nonviolent offenders during the 3 years following prison. Those who completed both ITC and aftercare were the least likely to be reincarcerated (25%), compared to 64% of the aftercare dropouts and 42% of the untreated comparison groups. Furthermore, high-severity aftercare completers were reincarcerated only half as often as those in the aftercare dropout and comparison groups (26% vs. 66% and 52%). The findings support the effectiveness of intensive treatment when it is integrated with aftercare, and the benefits are most apparent for offenders with more serious crime and drug-related problems.
220 citations
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TL;DR: This paper explored the influence of varied, competing, principal interests on executive actions and found that ownership of a firm by dedicated institutional investors, who hold concentrated portfolios over time, is positively associated with firm use of strategic competitive actions.
Abstract: This research extends agency theory by exploring the influence of varied, competing, principal interests on executive actions. Findings reveal that ownership of a firm by dedicated institutional investors, who hold concentrated portfolios over time, is positively associated with firm use of strategic competitive actions. Ownership by transient institutional investors, who hold broad portfolios and make frequent trades based on current earnings, is negatively associated with strategic competitive actions and positively associated with tactical ones. Appreciable ownership of the same firm by these two classes of investors influences both strategic and tactical competitive actions. These results have broad implications for executives, investors, and policy makers.
219 citations
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TL;DR: ITC treatment, especially when followed by residential aftercare, was effective for reducing post-release recidivism rates and Corrections-based treatment policy should emphasize a continuum of care model with high quality programs and services.
Abstract: Aims. This study examined the impact of residential aftercare on recidivism following prison-based treatment for drug-involved offenders. Design. A matched group quasi-experimental design. Survival regression analyses were used to predict time until rearrest. A logistic regression model was constructed for predicting aftercare completion. Setting. A 9-month in-prison therapeutic community (ITC) and several communitybased transitional therapeutic communities (TTCs). Participants. Data were collected from 396 male inmates (293 treated, 103 untreated). Measurements. Background information (gender, ethnicity, age, education level, criminal history and risk for recidivism) was abstracted from the state criminal justice databases and a structured interview led by clinical staff. During treatment process measures were based on inmate self-ratings of their counselors, program and peers. A post-treatment interview conducted by field research staff assessed satisfaction with transitional aftercare. Post-release recidivism was based on state-maintained computerized criminal history records. Findings. ITC treatment, especially when followed by residential aftercare, was effective for reducing post-release recidivism rates. Lower satisfaction with transitional aftercare treatment was associated with not completing the residential phase of community-based aftercare. Conclusions. Corrections-based treatment policy should emphasize a continuum of care model (from institution to community) with high quality programs and services .
218 citations
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TL;DR: Although the survey reveals many insights and opportunities, five major areas for future study became apparent: activity interactions, global process improvements, process models as an organizing structure for knowledge management, modeling in cases of uncertainty and ambiguity, and determining the optimum amount of process prescription and structure for an innovative project.
Abstract: Given the crucial role of process modeling in product development (PD) project management research and practice, and the variety of models proposed in the literature, a survey of the PD process modeling literature is timely and valuable. In this work, we focus on the activity network-based process models that support PD project management and present a comprehensive survey of the literature published in the last decade. To organize our survey, we use a framework based on the purposes of PD process models: project visualization, project planning, project control, and project development. For each purpose, we provide an overview of the relevant models, highlight their key assumptions and findings, synthesize key insights, and illuminate avenues for further research. Although the survey reveals many insights and opportunities, five major areas for future study became apparent: activity interactions, global process improvements, process models as an organizing structure for knowledge management, modeling in cases of uncertainty and ambiguity, and determining the optimum amount of process prescription and structure for an innovative project.
217 citations
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TL;DR: This work addresses the static resource-constrained multi-project scheduling problem (RCMPSP) with two lateness objectives, project lateness and portfolio lateness, and found several situations in which widely advocated priority rules perform poorly.
216 citations
Authors
Showing all 3295 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Fred H. Gage | 216 | 967 | 185732 |
Daniel J. Eisenstein | 179 | 672 | 151720 |
Michael A. Hitt | 120 | 361 | 74448 |
Joseph Sarkis | 101 | 482 | 45116 |
Peter M. Frinchaboy | 76 | 216 | 38085 |
Lynn A. Boatner | 72 | 661 | 22536 |
Tai C. Chen | 70 | 276 | 22671 |
D. Dwayne Simpson | 65 | 245 | 16239 |
Garry D. Bruton | 64 | 150 | 17157 |
Robert F. Lusch | 64 | 180 | 43021 |
Johnmarshall Reeve | 60 | 113 | 18671 |
Nigel F. Piercy | 54 | 166 | 9051 |
Barbara J. Thompson | 53 | 217 | 12992 |
Zygmunt Gryczynski | 52 | 374 | 10692 |
Priyabrata Mukherjee | 51 | 140 | 14328 |