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Institution

University of Massachusetts Amherst

EducationAmherst Center, Massachusetts, United States
About: University of Massachusetts Amherst is a education organization based out in Amherst Center, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 37274 authors who have published 83965 publications receiving 3834996 citations. The organization is also known as: UMass Amherst & Massachusetts State College.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An integrative model is proposed, based on interdependence theory and communal coping perspectives, that explicitly considers dyadic processes as determinants of couple behavior and applies these constructs to consider how couple dynamics might influence adoption of risk-reducing health habits.

521 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that reading privacy notices is related to concern for privacy, positive perceptions about notice comprehension, and higher levels of trust in the notice, suggesting that effective privacy notices serve an important function in addressing risk issues related to e-commerce.

521 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper investigated the effect of outcome dependency on impression formation in short-term, task-oriented outcome dependency and found that accuracy-driven attention to attribute information also led to individuating processes, even under conditions that typically lead subjects to use relatively category-based processes.
Abstract: How might being outcome dependent on another person influence the processes that one uses to form impressions of that person? We designed three experiments to investigate this question with respect to short-term, task-oriented outcome dependency. In all three experiments, subjects expected to interact with a young man formerly hospitalized as a schizophrenic, and they received information about the person's attributes in either written profiles or videotapes. In Experiment 1, short-term, task-oriented outcome dependency led subjects to use relatively individuating processes (i.e., to base their impressions o f the patient on his particular attributes), even under conditions that typically lead subjects to use relatively category-based processes (i.e., to base their impressions on the patient's schizophrenic label). Moreover, in the conditions that elicited individuating processes, subjects spent more time attending to the patient's particular attribute information. Experiment 2 demonstrated that the attention effects in Experiment 1 were not merely a function of impression positivity and that outcome dependency did not influence the impression formation process when attribute information in addition to category-level information was unavailable. Finally, Experiment 3 manipulated not outcome dependency but theattentional goal of forming an accurate impression. We found that accuracy-driven attention to attribute information also led t o individuating processes. The results of the three experiments indicate that there are important influences of outcome dependency on impression formation. These results are consistent with a model in which the tendency for short-term, task-oriented outcome dependency to facilitate individuating impression formation processes is mediated by an increase in accuracy-driven attention to attribute information.

521 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
31 Mar 2000-Science
TL;DR: Findings provide evidence for germ line transmission of an extragenic sequence-specific silencing factor and implicate rde-1 and r de-4 in the formation of the inherited agent.
Abstract: In Caenorhabditis elegans, the introduction of double-stranded RNA triggers sequence-specific genetic interference (RNAi) that is transmitted to offspring. The inheritance properties associated with this phenomenon were examined. Transmission of the interference effect occurred through a dominant extragenic agent. The wild-type activities of the RNAi pathway genes rde-1 andrde-4 were required for the formation of this interfering agent but were not needed for interference thereafter. In contrast, therde-2 and mut-7 genes were required downstream for interference. These findings provide evidence for germ line transmission of an extragenic sequence-specific silencing factor and implicate rde-1 and rde-4 in the formation of the inherited agent.

521 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
16 Aug 2001-Nature
TL;DR: The framework of the titanium silicate ETS-4, the first member of this class of materials, can be systematically contracted through dehydration at elevated temperatures to ‘tune’ the effective size of the pores giving access to the interior of the crystal, which can be used to tailor the adsorption properties of the materials to give size-selective adsorbents suitable for commercially important separations of gas mixtures of molecules with similar size.
Abstract: Zeolites and related crystalline microporous oxides—tetrahedrally coordinated atoms covalently linked into a porous framework—are of interest for applications ranging from catalysis to adsorption and ion-exchange1. In some of these materials (such as zeolite rho) adsorbates2, ion-exchange, and dehydration and cation relocation3,4 can induce strong framework deformations. Similar framework flexibility has to date not been seen in mixed octahedral/tetrahedral microporous framework materials, a newer and rapidly expanding class of molecular sieves5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16. Here we show that the framework of the titanium silicate ETS-4, the first member of this class of materials8, can be systematically contracted through dehydration at elevated temperatures to ‘tune’ the effective size of the pores giving access to the interior of the crystal. We show that this so-called ‘molecular gate’ effect can be used to tailor the adsorption properties of the materials to give size-selective adsorbents17 suitable for commercially important separations of gas mixtures of molecules with similar size in the 4.0 to 3.0 A range, such as that of N2/CH4, Ar/O2 and N2/O2.

520 citations


Authors

Showing all 37601 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
George M. Whitesides2401739269833
Joan Massagué189408149951
David H. Weinberg183700171424
David L. Kaplan1771944146082
Michael I. Jordan1761016216204
James F. Sallis169825144836
Bradley T. Hyman169765136098
Anton M. Koekemoer1681127106796
Derek R. Lovley16858295315
Michel C. Nussenzweig16551687665
Alfred L. Goldberg15647488296
Donna Spiegelman15280485428
Susan E. Hankinson15178988297
Bernard Moss14783076991
Roger J. Davis147498103478
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023103
2022536
20213,983
20203,858
20193,712
20183,385