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Institution

University of Arkansas

EducationFayetteville, Arkansas, United States
About: University of Arkansas is a education organization based out in Fayetteville, Arkansas, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 17225 authors who have published 33329 publications receiving 941102 citations. The organization is also known as: Arkansas & UA.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper provides a framework for developing sampling designs in mixed methods research and presents sampling schemes that have been associated with quantitative and qualitative research, and provides a sampling design typology.
Abstract: This paper provides a framework for developing sampling designs in mixed methods research. First, we present sampling schemes that have been associated with quantitative and qualitative research. Second, we discuss sample size considerations and provide sample size recommendations for each of the major research designs for quantitative and qualitative approaches. Third, we provide a sampling design typology and we demonstrate how sampling designs can be classified according to time orientation of the components and relationship of the qualitative and quantitative sample. Fourth, we present four major crises to mixed methods research and indicate how each crisis may be used to guide sampling design considerations. Finally, we emphasize how sampling design impacts the extent to which researchers can generalize their findings. Key Words: Sampling Schemes, Qualitative Research, Generalization, Parallel Sampling Designs, Pairwise Sampling Designs, Subgroup Sampling Designs, Nested Sampling Designs, and Multilevel Sampling Designs

1,508 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The SILAR technique reported here can also be used for the growth of complex colloidal semiconductor nanostructures, such as quantum shells and colloidal quantum wells.
Abstract: Successive ion layer adsorption and reaction (SILAR) originally developed for the deposition of thin films on solid substrates from solution baths is introduced as a technique for the growth of high-quality core/shell nanocrystals of compound semiconductors. The growth of the shell was designed to grow one monolayer at a time by alternating injections of air-stable and inexpensive cationic and anionic precursors into the reaction mixture with core nanocrystals. The principles of SILAR were demonstrated by the CdSe/CdS core/shell model system using its shell-thickness-dependent optical spectra as the probes with CdO and elemental S as the precursors. For this reaction system, a relatively high temperature, about 220−240 °C, was found to be essential for SILAR to fully occur. The synthesis can be readily performed on a multigram scale. The size distribution of the core/shell nanocrystals was maintained even after five monolayers of CdS shell (equivalent to about 10 times volume increase for a 3.5 nm CdSe na...

1,502 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Investigation of the persuasive impact and detectability of normative social influence shows that normative messages can be a powerful lever of persuasion but that their influence is underdetected.
Abstract: The present research investigated the persuasive impact and detectability of normative social influence. The first study surveyed 810 Californians about energy conservation and found that descriptive normative beliefs were more predictive of behavior than were other relevant beliefs, even though respondents rated such norms as least important in their conservation decisions. Study 2, a field experiment, showed that normative social influence produced the greatest change in behavior compared to information highlighting other reasons to conserve, even though respondents rated the normative information as least motivating. Results show that normative messages can be a powerful lever of persuasion but that their influence is underdetected.

1,493 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the impact of certain audit committee characteristics identified by the Blue Ribbon Committee on Improving the Effectiveness of Corporate Audit Committees (BRC) on the likelihood of financial restatement was examined.
Abstract: This study addresses the impact of certain audit committee characteristics identified by the Blue Ribbon Committee on Improving the Effectiveness of Corporate Audit Committees (BRC) on the likelihood of financial restatement. We examine 88 restatements of annual results (without allegations of fraud) in the period 1991–1999, together with a matched pairs control group of firms of similar size, exchange listing, industry and auditor type. We find that the independence and activity level (our proxy for audit committee diligence) of the audit committee exhibit a significant and negative association with the occurrence of restatement. We also document a significant negative association between an audit committee that includes at least one member with financial expertise and restatement. To test the robustness of the results we also consider a sample of 44 fraud and no‐fraud firms and arrive at largely similar findings. Our results underscore the importance of the BRC's recommendations as a means of strengthen...

1,485 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors argue that organizational typologies meet the criteria of a theory and that when typologies are properly developed and fully specified, they are complex theories that can be subjected to rigorous empirical testing using the quantitative models they develop.
Abstract: Organizational typologies have proved to be a popular approach for thinking about organizational structures and strategies. Authors developing typologies, however, have been criticized for developing simplistic classification systems instead of theories. Contrary to these criticisms, we argue that typologies meet the criteria of a theory. When typologies are properly developed and fully specified, they are complex theories that can be subjected to rigorous empirical testing using the quantitative models we develop. We conclude by discussing the advantages of typological theories and presenting guidelines to improve the development of typologies.

1,483 citations


Authors

Showing all 17387 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Robert M. Califf1961561167961
Hugh A. Sampson14781676492
Stephen Boyd138822151205
Nikhil C. Munshi13490667349
Jian-Guo Bian128121980964
Bart Barlogie12677957803
Robert R. Wolfe12456654000
Daniel B. Mark12457678385
E. Magnus Ohman12462268976
Benoît Roux12049362215
Robert C. Haddon11257752712
Rodney J. Bartlett10970056154
Baoshan Xing10982348944
Gareth J. Morgan109101952957
Josep Dalmau10856849331
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202380
2022243
20211,973
20201,889
20191,736
20181,636