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Institution

University of Massachusetts Boston

EducationBoston, Massachusetts, United States
About: University of Massachusetts Boston is a education organization based out in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 6541 authors who have published 12918 publications receiving 411731 citations. The organization is also known as: UMass Boston.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that the decrease in nutrient input with depth may select for larger size because of its metabolic or competitive advantages, and that larger size plays a role in limiting diversity.
Abstract: The evolution of body size is a problem of fundamental interest, and one that has an important bearing on community structure and conservation of biodiversity. The most obvious and pervasive characteristic of the deep-sea benthos is the small size of most species. The numerous attempts to document and explain geographic patterns of body size in the deep-sea benthos have focused on variation among species or whole faunal components, and have led to conflicting and contradictory results. It is important to recognize that studying size as an adaptation to the deep-sea environment should include analyses within species using measures of size that are standardized to common growth stages. An analysis within eight species of deep-sea benthic gastropods presented here reveals a clear trend for size to increase with depth in both larval and adult shells. An ANCOVA with multiple comparison tests showed that, in general, size–depth relationships for both adult and larval shells are more pronounced in the bathyal region than in the abyss. This result reinforces the notion that steepness of the bathymetric selective gradient decreases with depth, and that the bathyal region is an evolutionary hotspot that promotes diversification. Bathymetric size clines in gastropods support neither the predictions of optimality models nor earlier arguments based on tradeoffs among scaling factors. As in other environments, body size is inversely related to both abundance and species density. We suggest that the decrease in nutrient input with depth may select for larger size because of its metabolic or competitive advantages, and that larger size plays a role in limiting diversity. Adaptation is an important evolutionary driving force of biological diversity, and geographic patterns of body size could help unify ecological and historical theories of deep-sea biodiversity.

107 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider the survival probability of a thermofield double state under unitary time evolution which is related to the analytic continuation of the partition function and provide an exponential lower bound to the survival probabilities with a rate governed by the inverse of the energy fluctuations of the initial state.
Abstract: Quantum speed limits set an upper bound to the rate at which a quantum system can evolve, and as such can be used to analyze the scrambling of information. To this end, we consider the survival probability of a thermofield double state under unitary time evolution which is related to the analytic continuation of the partition function. We provide an exponential lower bound to the survival probability with a rate governed by the inverse of the energy fluctuations of the initial state. Further, we elucidate universal features of the nonexponential behavior at short and long times of evolution that follow from the analytic properties of the survival probability and its Fourier transform, both for systems with a continuous and for systems with a discrete energy spectrum. We find the spectral form factor in a number of illustrative models; notably, we obtain the exact answer in the Gaussian unitary ensemble for any $N$ with excellent agreement with recent numerical studies. We also discuss the relationship of our findings to models of black hole information loss, such as the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev model dual to ${\mathrm{AdS}}_{2}$, as well as higher-dimensional versions of AdS/CFT.

107 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined management options for biodiversity in agricultural landscapes, eight research regions were classified into social-ecological domains, using a dataset of indicators of livelihood resources, i.e., capital assets.
Abstract: To examine management options for biodiversity in agricultural landscapes, eight research regions were classified into social-ecological domains, using a dataset of indicators of livelihood resources, i.e., capital assets. Potential interventions for biodiversity-based agriculture were then compared among landscapes and domains. The approach combined literature review with expert judgment by researchers working in each landscape. Each landscape was described for land use, rural livelihoods and attitudes of social actors toward biodiversity and intensification of agriculture. Principal components analysis of 40 indicators of natural, human, social, financial and physical capital for the eight landscapes showed a loss of biodiversity associated with high-input agricultural intensification. High levels of natural capital (e.g. indicators of wildland biodiversity conservation and agrobiodiversity for human needs) were positively associated with indicators of human capital, including knowledge of the flora and fauna and knowledge sharing among farmers. Three social-ecological domains were identified across the eight landscapes (Tropical Agriculture-Forest Matrix, Tropical Degrading Agroecosystem, and Temperate High-Input Commodity Agriculture) using hierarchical clustering of the indicator values. Each domain shared a set of interventions for biodiversity-based agriculture and ecological intensification that could also increase food security in the impoverished landscapes. Implementation of interventions differed greatly among the landscapes, e.g. financial capital for new farming practices in the Intensive Agriculture domain vs. developing market value chains in the other domains. This exploratory study suggests that indicators of knowledge systems should receive greater emphasis in the monitoring of biodiversity and ecosystem services, and that inventories of assets at the landscape level can inform adaptive management of agrobiodiversity-based interventions.

106 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper examined the influence of cultural factors on Filipino American students' sense of belonging in college and found that pressure to commit cultural suicide and connections to cultural heritage indirectly influence sense of feeling of belonging via their impact on cultural adjustment.
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of cultural factors on Filipino American students' sense of belonging in college. The authors utilized structural equation modeling techniques to analyze a single-institution sample of 143 Filipino American undergraduates and estimate the impact of pressure to commit "cultural suicide," connections to cultural heritage, and ease of cultural adjustment on those students' sense of belonging to their campus cultures. Results indicate that pressure to commit cultural suicide and connections to cultural heritage indirectly influence sense of belonging via their impact on cultural adjustment. Implications for future research and practice are discussed.

106 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the relationship between spirituality and mental health outcomes (selfconcept and coping style), familial attitudes (family climate and attitudes toward parenting), and satisfaction with social support.
Abstract: Spirituality and its relationship to mental health outcomes (self-concept and coping style), familial attitudes (family climate and attitudes toward parenting), and satisfaction with social support...

106 citations


Authors

Showing all 6667 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Derek R. Lovley16858295315
Wei Li1581855124748
Susan E. Hankinson15178988297
Roger J. Davis147498103478
Thomas P. Russell141101280055
George Alverson1401653105074
Robert H. Brown136117479247
C. Dallapiccola1361717101947
Paul T. Costa13340688454
Robert R. McCrae13231390960
David Julian McClements131113771123
Mauro Giavalisco12841269967
Benjamin Brau12897172704
Douglas T. Golenbock12331761267
Zhifeng Ren12269571212
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202367
2022131
2021833
2020851
2019823
2018776