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Institution

Tilburg University

EducationTilburg, Noord-Brabant, Netherlands
About: Tilburg University is a education organization based out in Tilburg, Noord-Brabant, Netherlands. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Anxiety. The organization has 5550 authors who have published 22330 publications receiving 791335 citations.


Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
10 Dec 2003
TL;DR: This paper introduces an extended service oriented architecture that provides separate tiers for composing and coordinating services and for managing services in an open marketplace by employing grid services.
Abstract: Service-oriented computing (SOC) is the computing paradigm that utilizes services as fundamental elements for developing applications/solutions. To build the service model, SOC relies on the service oriented architecture (SOA), which is a way of reorganizing software applications and infrastructure into a set of interacting services. However, the basic SOA does not address overarching concerns such as management, service orchestration, service transaction management and coordination, security, and other concerns that apply to all components in a service architecture. In this paper we introduce an extended service oriented architecture that provides separate tiers for composing and coordinating services and for managing services in an open marketplace by employing grid services.

1,447 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of internet-based CBT were compared to control conditions in 13 contrast groups with a total number of 2334 participants, and two sets of post hoc subgroup analyses were carried out.
Abstract: Background. We studied to what extent internet-based cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) programs for symptoms of depression and anxiety are effective. Method. A meta-analysis of 12 randomized controlled trials. Results. The effects of internet-based CBT were compared to control conditions in 13 contrast groups with a total number of 2334 participants. A meta-analysis on treatment contrasts resulted in a moderate to large mean effect size (fixed effects analysis (FEA) d=0 . 40, mixed effects analysis (MEA) d=0 . 60) and significant heterogeneity. Therefore, two sets of post hoc subgroup analyses were carried out. Analyses on the type of symptoms revealed that interventions for symptoms of depression had a small mean effect size (FEA d=0 . 27, MEA d=0 . 32) and significant heterogeneity. Further analyses showed that one study could be regarded as an outlier. Analyses without this study showed a small mean effect size and moderate, non-significant heterogeneity. Interventions for anxiety had a large mean effect size (FEA and MEA d=0 . 96) and very low heterogeneity. When examining the second set of subgroups, based on therapist assistance, no significant heterogeneity was found. Interventions with therapist support (n=5) had a large mean effect size, while inter- ventions without therapist support (n=6) had a small mean effect size (FEA d=0 . 24, MEA d=0 . 26). Conclusions. In general, effect sizes of internet-based interventions for symptoms of anxiety were larger than effect sizes for depressive symptoms ; however, this might be explained by differences in the amount of therapist support.

1,445 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The DS14 is a brief, psychometrically sound measure of negative affectivity and social inhibition that could readily be incorporated in epidemiologic and clinical research.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE Type D personality-a joint tendency toward negative affectivity (NA) and social inhibition (SI)-is related to poor cardiac prognosis, but there is no standard for assessing Type D. This study reports on the Type D Scale-14 (DS14) as a standard measure of NA, SI, and Type D. METHODS The study included 3813 participants (2508 from the general population, 573 cardiac patients, 732 hypertension patients). They all filled out the DS14, containing 7-item NA and SI subscales; 275 subjects also completed the NEO-FFI, and 121 patients filled out the DS14 twice. RESULTS Factor analysis of the DS14 yielded 2 dominant traits; all of the NA and SI items loaded between 0.62 to 0.82 on their corresponding factor (N = 3678). The NA scale covered dysphoria, worry, and irritability; the SI scale covered discomfort in social interactions, reticence, and lack of social poise. The NA and SI scales were internally consistent (alpha = 0.88/0.86; N = 3678), stable over a 3-month period (test-retest r = 0.72/0.82) and not dependent on mood and health status (N = 121). NA correlated positively with neuroticism (r = 0.68); SI correlated negatively with extraversion (r = -0.59/-0.65). Scale-level factor analysis confirmed the construct validity of the DS14 against the NEO-FFI. Using a cutoff of 10 (NA > or =10 and SI > or =10), 1027 subjects (28%) were classified as Type D, 21% in the general population versus 28% in coronary heart disease and 53% in hypertension (p < or = .001). Age, sex, and Type D (odds ratio, 3.98; 95% confidence interval, 3.2-4.6; p <.0001) were independently associated with cardiovascular morbidity. CONCLUSION The DS14 is a brief, psychometrically sound measure of negative affectivity and social inhibition that could readily be incorporated in epidemiologic and clinical research.

1,323 citations

Book
Jan Blommaert1
08 Apr 2010
TL;DR: The Sociolinguistics of Globalization as mentioned in this paper constructs a theory of changing language in a changing society reconsidering locality, repertoires, competence, history and sociolinguistic inequality.
Abstract: Human language has changed in the age of globalization: no longer tied to stable and resident communities, it moves across the globe, and it changes in the process. The world has become a complex 'web' of villages, towns, neighbourhoods and settlements connected by material and symbolic ties in often unpredictable ways. This phenomenon requires us to revise our understanding of linguistic communication. In The Sociolinguistics of Globalization Jan Blommaert constructs a theory of changing language in a changing society reconsidering locality, repertoires, competence, history and sociolinguistic inequality.

1,308 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The very high cumulative incidence of thrombotic complications in critically ill patients with COVID-19 pneumonia is confirmed in this updated analysis.

1,305 citations


Authors

Showing all 5691 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
David M. Fergusson12747455992
Johan P. Mackenbach12078356705
Henning Tiemeier10886648604
Allen N. Berger10638265596
Thorsten Beck9937362708
Luc Laeven9335536916
William J. Baumol8546049603
Michael H. Antoni8443121878
Russell Spears8433631609
Wim Meeus8144522646
Daan van Knippenberg8022325272
Wolfgang Karl Härdle7978328934
Aaron Cohen7841266543
Jan-Benedict E.M. Steenkamp7417836059
Geert Hofstede72126103728
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202369
2022205
20211,274
20201,206
20191,097
20181,038