Institution
University of Kansas
Education•Lawrence, Kansas, United States•
About: University of Kansas is a education organization based out in Lawrence, Kansas, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 38183 authors who have published 81381 publications receiving 2986312 citations. The organization is also known as: KU & Univ of Kansas.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Large Hadron Collider, Health care, Cancer
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: This work proposes that social cognition can and should be enriched by an explicit recognition that conceptual metaphor is a unique cognitive mechanism that shapes social thought and attitudes, and introduces the metaphoric transfer strategy as a means of empirically assessing whether metaphors influence social information processing in ways that are distinct from the operation of schemas alone.
Abstract: Social cognition is the scientific study of the cognitive events underlying social thought and attitudes. Currently, the field’s prevailing theoretical perspectives are the traditional schema view and embodied cognition theories. Despite important differences, these perspectives share the seemingly uncontroversial notion that people interpret and evaluate a given social stimulus using knowledge about similar stimuli. However, research in cognitive linguistics (e.g., Lakoff & Johnson, 1980) suggests that people construe the world in large part through conceptual metaphors, which enable them to understand abstract concepts using knowledge of superficially dissimilar, typically more concrete concepts. Drawing on these perspectives, we propose that social cognition can and should be enriched by an explicit recognition that conceptual metaphor is a unique cognitive mechanism that shapes social thought and attitudes. To advance this metaphor-enriched perspective, we introduce the metaphoric transfer strategy as a means of empirically assessing whether metaphors influence social information processing in ways that are distinct from the operation of schemas alone. We then distinguish conceptual metaphor from embodied simulation—the mechanism posited by embodied cognition theories—and introduce the alternate source strategy as a means of empirically teasing apart these mechanisms. Throughout, we buttress our claims with empirical evidence of the influence of metaphors on a wide range of social psychological phenomena. We outline directions for future research on the strength and direction of metaphor use in social information processing. Finally, we mention specific benefits of a metaphor-enriched perspective for integrating and generating social cognitive research and for bridging social cognition with neighboring fields.
615 citations
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06 Sep 2011
TL;DR: In this article, the causes, consequences, and implications of cross-border consolidation of financial institutions by reviewing several hundred studies, providing comparative international data, and estimating cross-bank efficiency in France, Germany, Spain, the U.K., and the United States during the 1990s.
Abstract: We address the causes, consequences, and implications of the cross-border consolidation of financial institutions by reviewing several hundred studies, providing comparative international data, and estimating cross-border banking efficiency in France, Germany, Spain, the U.K., and the U.S. during the 1990s. We find that, on average, domestic banks have higher profit efficiency than foreign banks. However, banks from at least one country (the U.S.) appear to operate with relatively high efficiency both at home and abroad. If these results continue to hold, they do not preclude successful international expansion by some financial firms, but they do suggest limits to global consolidation.
615 citations
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614 citations
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TL;DR: Results here show that synthesis of nitric oxide (NO) was greatly increased when cells of the mouse macrophage cell line RAW 264.7 were costimulated with bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and interferon-gamma (IFN-Gamma) and LPS, compared to LPS alone, which paralleled increases in cytotoxicity.
614 citations
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TL;DR: Lesbian, gay, and bisexual youngsters, aged 14-21 and living at home, were studied for patterns of disclosure of sexual orientation to families and reported verbal and physical abuse by family members and acknowledged more suicidality than those who had not "come out" to their families.
Abstract: Lesbian, gay, and bisexual youngsters, aged 14-21 and living at home, were studied for patterns of disclosure of sexual orientation to families. Three-quarters had told at least one parent, more often the mother than the father. Those who had disclosed were generally more open about their sexual orientation than those who had not, and few of the nondisclosed expected parental acceptance. Those who had disclosed reported verbal and physical abuse by family members, and acknowledged more suicidality than those who had not "come out" to their families. Language: en
613 citations
Authors
Showing all 38401 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Gordon H. Guyatt | 231 | 1620 | 228631 |
Krzysztof Matyjaszewski | 169 | 1431 | 128585 |
Wei Li | 158 | 1855 | 124748 |
David Tilman | 158 | 340 | 149473 |
Tomas Hökfelt | 158 | 1033 | 95979 |
Pete Smith | 156 | 2464 | 138819 |
Daniel J. Rader | 155 | 1026 | 107408 |
Melody A. Swartz | 148 | 1304 | 103753 |
Kevin Murphy | 146 | 728 | 120475 |
Carlo Rovelli | 146 | 1502 | 103550 |
Stephen Sanders | 145 | 1385 | 105943 |
Marco Zanetti | 145 | 1439 | 104610 |
Andrei Gritsan | 143 | 1531 | 135398 |
Gunther Roland | 141 | 1471 | 100681 |
Joseph T. Hupp | 141 | 731 | 82647 |