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Institution

University of Illinois at Chicago

EducationChicago, Illinois, United States
About: University of Illinois at Chicago is a education organization based out in Chicago, Illinois, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 57071 authors who have published 110536 publications receiving 4264936 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results supported the moral mandate hypothesis: Stronger moral conviction led to greater preferred social and physical distance from attitudinally dissimilar others, and a greater inability to generate procedural solutions to resolve disagreements.
Abstract: Attitudes held with strong moral conviction (moral mandates) were predicted to have different interpersonal consequences than strong but nonmoral attitudes. After controlling for indices of attitude strength, the authors explored the unique effect of moral conviction on the degree that people preferred greater social (Studies 1 and 2) and physical (Study 3) distance from attitudinally dissimilar others and the effects of moral conviction on group interaction and decision making in attitudinally homogeneous versus heterogeneous groups (Study 4). Results supported the moral mandate hypothesis: Stronger moral conviction led to (a) greater preferred social and physical distance from attitudinally dissimilar others, (b) intolerance of attitudinally dissimilar others in both intimate (e.g., friend) and distant relationships (e.g., owner of a store one frequents), (c) lower levels of good will and cooperativeness in attitudinally heterogeneous groups, and (d) a greater inability to generate procedural solutions to resolve disagreements.

593 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
21 Jan 2016-Nature
TL;DR: It is shown that crystalline LiO2 can be stabilized in a Li–O2 battery by using a suitable graphene-based cathode, which could open the way to high-energy-density batteries based onLiO2 as well as to other possible uses of this compound, such as oxygen storage.
Abstract: Lithium–oxygen batteries allow oxygen to be reduced at the battery’s cathode when a current is drawn; in present-day batteries, this results in formation of Li2O2, but it is now shown that another high energy density material, namely LiO2, with better electronic conduction can be used instead as the discharge product, if the electrode is decorated with iridium nanoparticles. Nonaqueous lithium–air batteries have a much superior theoretical gravimetric energy density compared to conventional lithium ion batteries, and thus have the potential for making long-range electric vehicles a reality. Batteries based on sodium and potassium superoxides have recently been reported, but thermodynamically unstable lithium superoxide (LiO2), with its potential high energy density, has proved more problematic. This paper demonstrates that crystalline LiO2 can be stabilized in a Li–O2 battery by using a suitable cathode material — reduced graphene oxide decorated with iridium nanoparticles. A battery based on this new lithium–oxygen chemistry was demonstrated through 40 cycles before failure, achieving high efficiency and good capacity. Batteries based on sodium superoxide and on potassium superoxide have recently been reported1,2,3. However, there have been no reports of a battery based on lithium superoxide (LiO2), despite much research4,5,6,7,8 into the lithium–oxygen (Li–O2) battery because of its potential high energy density. Several studies9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16 of Li–O2 batteries have found evidence of LiO2 being formed as one component of the discharge product along with lithium peroxide (Li2O2). In addition, theoretical calculations have indicated that some forms of LiO2 may have a long lifetime17. These studies also suggest that it might be possible to form LiO2 alone for use in a battery. However, solid LiO2 has been difficult to synthesize in pure form18 because it is thermodynamically unstable with respect to disproportionation, giving Li2O2 (refs 19, 20). Here we show that crystalline LiO2 can be stabilized in a Li–O2 battery by using a suitable graphene-based cathode. Various characterization techniques reveal no evidence for the presence of Li2O2. A novel templating growth mechanism involving the use of iridium nanoparticles on the cathode surface may be responsible for the growth of crystalline LiO2. Our results demonstrate that the LiO2 formed in the Li–O2 battery is stable enough for the battery to be repeatedly charged and discharged with a very low charge potential (about 3.2 volts). We anticipate that this discovery will lead to methods of synthesizing and stabilizing LiO2, which could open the way to high-energy-density batteries based on LiO2 as well as to other possible uses of this compound, such as oxygen storage.

593 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Raltegravir is a well tolerated alternative to efavirenz as part of a combination regimen against HIV-1 in treatment-naive patients and has rapid and potent antiretroviral activity, which was non-inferior to that of efvirenz at week 48.

593 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The author distinguishes between clouds that provide on-demand computing instances and those that provide in-service computing capacity, which are two different types of clouds.
Abstract: To understand clouds and cloud computing, we must first understand the two different types of clouds. The author distinguishes between clouds that provide on-demand computing instances and those that provide on-demand computing capacity. Cloud computing doesn't yet have a standard definition, but a good working description of it is to say that clouds, or clusters of distributed computers, provide on-demand resources and services over a network, usually the Internet, with the scale and reliability of a data center.

592 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
09 Jun 1989-JAMA
TL;DR: Analyses of 42 schools indicate that the prevalence rates of use for all three drugs are significantly lower at 1-year follow-up in the intervention condition relative to the delayed intervention condition, and the net increase in drug use prevalence among intervention schools is half that of delayed intervention schools.
Abstract: The entire early adolescent population of the 15 communities that constitute the Kansas City (Kansas and Missouri) metropolitan area has participated in a community-based program for prevention of drug abuse since September 1984. The Kansas City area is the first of two major metropolitan sites being evaluated in the Midwestern Prevention Project, a longitudinal trial for primary prevention of cigarette, alcohol, and marijuana use in adolescents. The project includes mass media programming, a school-based educational program for youths, parent education and organization, community organization, and health policy components that are introduced sequentially into communities during a 6-year period. Effects of the program are determined through annual assessments of adolescent drug use in schools that are assigned to immediate intervention or delayed intervention control conditions. In the first 2 years of the project, 22 500 sixth- and seventh-grade adolescents received the school-based educational program component, with parental involvement in homework and mass media coverage. Analyses of 42 schools indicate that the prevalence rates of use for all three drugs are significantly lower at 1-year follow-up in the intervention condition relative to the delayed intervention condition, with or without controlling for race, grade, socioeconomic status, and urbanicity (17% vs 24% for cigarette smoking, 11% vs 16% for alcohol use, and 7% vs 10% for marijuana use in the last month), and the net increase in drug use prevalence among intervention schools is half that of delayed intervention schools. (JAMA. 1989;261:3259-3266)

592 citations


Authors

Showing all 57433 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Meir J. Stampfer2771414283776
Frank B. Hu2501675253464
Lewis C. Cantley196748169037
Ronald Klein1941305149140
Anil K. Jain1831016192151
Yusuke Nakamura1792076160313
Bruce M. Spiegelman179434158009
Jie Zhang1784857221720
D. M. Strom1763167194314
Yury Gogotsi171956144520
Todd R. Golub164422201457
Rodney S. Ruoff164666194902
Philip A. Wolf163459114951
Barbara E.K. Klein16085693319
David Jonathan Hofman1591407140442
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023112
2022582
20215,602
20205,335
20194,825
20184,520