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Institution

University of Johannesburg

EducationJohannesburg, South Africa
About: University of Johannesburg is a education organization based out in Johannesburg, South Africa. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 8070 authors who have published 22749 publications receiving 329408 citations. The organization is also known as: UJ.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Georges Aad1, Brad Abbott2, J. Abdallah3, A. A. Abdelalim4  +3114 moreInstitutions (193)
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured the jet shapes in the ATLAS experiment at the LHC and compared the results with several leading-order QCD matrix elements plus parton shower Monte Carlo predictions, including different sets of parameters tuned to model fragmentation processes and underlying event contributions in the final state.
Abstract: Jet shapes have been measured in inclusive jet production in proton-proton collisions at root s = 7 TeV using 3 pb(-1) of data recorded by the ATLAS experiment at the LHC. Jets are reconstructed using the anti-k(t) algorithm with transverse momentum 30 GeV < p(T) < 600 GeV and rapidity in the region vertical bar y vertical bar < 2.8. The data are corrected for detector effects and compared to several leading-order QCD matrix elements plus parton shower Monte Carlo predictions, including different sets of parameters tuned to model fragmentation processes and underlying event contributions in the final state. The measured jets become narrower with increasing jet transverse momentum and the jet shapes present a moderate jet rapidity dependence. Within QCD, the data test a variety of perturbative and nonperturbative effects. In particular, the data show sensitivity to the details of the parton shower, fragmentation, and underlying event models in the Monte Carlo generators. For an appropriate choice of the parameters used in these models, the data are well described.

87 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the impact of cultural values on the importance individuals assign to project success/failure factors (PSFFs) and find that the levels of importance people assign to both factors are dependent on age and gender, but also cultural values measured as constructs based on Hofstede's individualism, masculinity, power distance and uncertainty avoidance.
Abstract: Purpose – This study aims to explore the impact of cultural values on the importance individuals assign to project success/failure factors (PSFFs) Design/methodology/approach – Themes emerging from 40 interviews of project practitioners based in Brazil, China, Greece, Nigeria, Thailand, the UAE, the UK and the USA are integrated with literature evidence to design a survey instrument One thousand three hundred and thirteen practitioner survey responses from the eight countries are analysed using multi-group, structural equation modelling Findings – Ten project success/failure indicators (PSFIs) are found to reduce to two main PSFFs: project control and extra-organisational goals and project team management/development and intra-organisational goals It is found that the levels of importance individuals assign to both factors are dependent, not only on age and gender, but also cultural values measured as constructs based on Hofstede's individualism, masculinity, power distance and uncertainty avoidance d

87 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Assessment of microcosms (laboratory-scale shallow ponds) as a post polishing stage for the remediation of artificial textile wastewater comprising two commercial dyes as a mixture showed that the planted simulated ponds possess a significant potential for improving the outflow characteristics and eliminate dyes, ammonium-nitrogen (NH4-N), and nitrate-nitrogens (NO3-N) in all mixtures compared with the corresponding unplanted ponds.
Abstract: The aim was to assess the ability of microcosms (laboratory-scale shallow ponds) as a post polishing stage for the remediation of artificial textile wastewater comprising two commercial dyes (basic red 46 (BR46) and reactive blue 198 (RB198)) as a mixture. The objectives were to evaluate the impact of Lemna minor L. (common duckweed) on the water quality outflows; the elimination of dye mixtures, organic matter, and nutrients; and the impact of synthetic textile wastewater comprising dye mixtures on the L. minor plant growth. Three mixtures were prepared providing a total dye concentration of 10 mg/l. Findings showed that the planted simulated ponds possess a significant (p < 0.05) potential for improving the outflow characteristics and eliminate dyes, ammonium-nitrogen (NH4-N), and nitrate-nitrogen (NO3-N) in all mixtures compared with the corresponding unplanted ponds. The removal of mixed dyes in planted ponds was mainly due to phyto-transformation and adsorption of BR46 with complete aromatic amine mineralisation. For ponds containing 2 mg/l of RB198 and 8 mg/l of BR46, removals were around 53%, which was significantly higher than those for other mixtures: 5 mg/l of RB198 and 5 mg/l of BR46 and 8 mg/l of RB198 and 2 mg/l of BR46 achieved only 41 and 26% removals, respectively. Dye mixtures stopped the growth of L. minor, and the presence of artificial wastewater reduced their development.

87 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The new concept of permutation trellis codes is introduced and a generalized construction procedure is presented, applying the technique of distance-preserving mappings, to make transmissions robust against narrowband, broadband, and background noise disturbances, such as those encountered in power-line communications.
Abstract: We introduce the new concept of permutation trellis codes and present a generalized construction procedure, applying our technique of distance-preserving mappings. Minimum-distance decoding follows naturally, using the Viterbi algorithm. We furthermore investigate the performance of these codes when combined with multitone frequency-shift keying modulation and noncoherent detection in a diversity scheme, to make transmissions robust against narrowband, broadband, and background noise disturbances, such as those encountered in power-line communications.

87 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: How input from comparative and cross-cultural empiricism has altered the authors' perspectives of human development and, in particular, led to a deeper understanding of the evolution of the human cultural mind is highlighted.
Abstract: As a discipline, developmental psychology has a long history of relying on animal models and data collected among distinct cultural groups to enrich and inform theories of the ways social and cognitive processes unfold through the lifespan. However, approaches that draw together developmental, cross-cultural and comparative perspectives remain rare. The need for such an approach is reflected in the papers by Heyes (2015 Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B 371, 20150069. (doi:10.1098/rstb.2015.0069)), Schmelz & Call (2015 Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B 371, 20150067. (doi:10.1098/rstb.2015.0067)) and Keller (2015 Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B 371, 20150070. (doi:10.1098/rstb.2015.0070)) in this theme issue. Here, we incorporate these papers into a review of recent research endeavours covering a range of core aspects of social cognition, including social learning, cooperation and collaboration, prosociality, and theory of mind. In so doing, we aim to highlight how input from comparative and cross-cultural empiricism has altered our perspectives of human development and, in particular, led to a deeper understanding of the evolution of the human cultural mind.

87 citations


Authors

Showing all 8414 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Vinod Kumar Gupta16571383484
Arnold B. Bakker135506103778
Trevor Vickey12887376664
Ketevi Assamagan12893477061
Diego Casadei12373369665
Michael R. Hamblin11789959533
E. Castaneda-Miranda11754556349
Xiaoming Li113193272445
Katharine Leney10845952547
M. Aurousseau10340344230
Mika Sillanpää96101944260
Sahal Yacoob8940825338
Evangelia Demerouti8523649228
Lehana Thabane8599436620
Sahal Yacoob8439935059
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023196
2022526
20213,152
20202,933
20192,706
20182,150