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Institution

University of Connecticut

EducationStorrs, Connecticut, United States
About: University of Connecticut is a education organization based out in Storrs, Connecticut, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 35297 authors who have published 81224 publications receiving 2952682 citations. The organization is also known as: UConn & Storrs Agricultural School.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A meta-analysis was performed of studies of mediated health campaigns in the United States in order to examine the effects of the campaigns on behavior change, finding that campaigns with an enforcement component were more effective than those without.
Abstract: A meta-analysis was performed of studies of mediated health campaigns in the United States in order to examine the effects of the campaigns on behavior change. Mediated health campaigns have small measurable effects in the short-term. Campaign effect sizes varied by the type of behavior: r¯ = .15 for seat belt use, r¯ = .13 for oral health, r¯ = .09 for alcohol use reduction, r¯ = .05 for heart disease prevention, r¯ = .05 for smoking, r¯ = .04 for mammography and cervical cancer screening, and r¯ = .04 for sexual behaviors. Campaigns with an enforcement component were more effective than those without. To predict campaign effect sizes for topics other than those listed above, researchers can take into account whether the behavior in a cessation campaign was addictive, and whether the campaign promoted the commencement of a new behavior, versus cessation of an old behavior, or prevention of a new undesirable behavior. Given the small campaign effect sizes, campaign planners should set modest goals for fut...

493 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a review article mainly focuses on the development of CDs based fluorescent sensors in recent 5 years, and a broad range of analytes including cations, anions, small molecules, macromolecules, cells and bacteria are discussed.
Abstract: Fluorescent carbon dots (CDs) are a new class of carbon nanomaterials and have demonstrated excellent optical properties, good biocompatibility, great aqueous solubility, low cost, simple synthesis, etc. Since their discovery, various synthesis methods using different precursors have been developed, and are mainly classified as top-down and bottom-up approaches. For the mechanistic origin of CDs photoluminescence, three mechanisms have been proposed such as quantum confinement effect, surface state and molecule state. CDs have presented many applications, and this review article mainly focuses on the development of CDs based fluorescent sensors in recent 5 years. The sensing mechanisms, senor design and sensing properties to various targets are summarized. A broad range of analytes including cations, anions, small molecules, macromolecules, cells and bacteria have been discussed. In addition, the challenges and future directions for CDs as sensing materials are also presented.

493 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Support for the hypotheses tested provides evidence for the validity of the QEWB as an instrument for assessing eudaimonic well-being and implications for theory and future research directions are discussed.
Abstract: The Questionnaire for Eudaimonic Well-Being (QEWB) was developed to measure well-being in a manner consistent with how it is conceptualized in eudaimonist philosophy. Aspects of eudaimonic well-being assessed by the QEWB include self-discovery, perceived development of one's best potentials, a sense of purpose and meaning in life, intense involvement in activities, investment of significant effort, and enjoyment of activities as personally expressive. The QEWB was administered to two large, ethnically diverse samples of college students drawn from multiple sites across the United States. A three-part evaluation of the instrument was conducted: (1) evaluating psychometric properties, (2) comparing QEWB scores across gender, age, ethnicity, family income, and family structure, and (3) assessing the convergent, discriminant, construct, and incremental validity of the QEWB. Six hypotheses relating QEWB scores to identity formation, personality traits, and positive and negative psychological functioning were evaluated. The internal consistency of the scale was high and results of independent CFAs indicated that the QEWB items patterned onto a common factor. The distribution of scores approximated a normal curve. Demographic variables were found to predict only small proportions of QEWB score variability. Support for the hypotheses tested provides evidence for the validity of the QEWB as an instrument for assessing eudaimonic well-being. Implications for theory and future research directions are discussed.

492 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comparison of measured BPA environmental concentrations with chronic values suggests that no significant margin of safety exists for the protection of aquatic communities against the toxicity of BPA.

492 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
20 Sep 2010-Analyst
TL;DR: This critical review evaluates progress toward viable point-of-care protein biomarker measurements for cancer detection and diagnostics using a number of ultrasensitive immunosensors and some arrays developed, many based on nanotechnology.
Abstract: This critical review evaluates progress toward viable point-of-care protein biomarker measurements for cancer detection and diagnostics. The ability to measure panels of specific, selective cancer biomarker proteins in physicians' surgeries and clinics has the potential to revolutionize cancer detection, monitoring, and therapy. The dream envisions reliable, cheap, automated, technically undemanding devices that can analyze a patient's serum or saliva in a clinical setting, allowing on-the-spot diagnosis. Existing commercial products for protein assays are reliable in laboratory settings, but have limitations for point-of-care applications. A number of ultrasensitive immunosensors and some arrays have been developed, many based on nanotechnology. Multilabel detection coupled with high capture molecule density in immunosensors and arrays seems to be capable of detecting a wide range of protein concentrations with sensitivity ranging into the sub pg mL−1 level. Multilabel arrays can be designed to detect both high and ultralow abundance proteins in the same sample. However, only a few of the newer ultrasensitive methods have been evaluated with real patient samples, which is key to establishing clinical sensitivity and selectivity.

492 citations


Authors

Showing all 35666 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Zhong Lin Wang2452529259003
Richard A. Flavell2311328205119
Ralph Weissleder1841160142508
Eric J. Nestler178748116947
David L. Kaplan1771944146082
Masayuki Yamamoto1711576123028
Mark Gerstein168751149578
Marc A. Pfeffer166765133043
Carl W. Cotman165809105323
Murray F. Brennan16192597087
Alfred L. Goldberg15647488296
Xiang Zhang1541733117576
Hakon Hakonarson152968101604
Christopher P. Cannon1511118108906
James M. Wilson150101078686
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023129
2022552
20214,491
20204,342
20193,789
20183,498