Institution
University of Memphis
Education•Memphis, Tennessee, United States•
About: University of Memphis is a education organization based out in Memphis, Tennessee, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 7710 authors who have published 20082 publications receiving 611618 citations. The organization is also known as: U of M.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Fractional calculus, Health care, Cognition
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: A new generation of intelligent tutoring systems that hold mixed-initiative conversational dialogues with the learner, and help students actively construct knowledge through conversations are presented.
Abstract: Many of the intelligent tutoring systems that have been developed during the last 20 years have proven to be quite successful, particularly in the domains of mathematics, science, and technology. They produce significant learning gains beyond classroom environments. They are capable of engaging most students' attention and interest for hours. We have been working on a new generation of intelligent tutoring systems that hold mixed-initiative conversational dialogues with the learner. The tutoring systems present challenging problems and questions to the learner, the learner types in answers in English, and there is a lengthy multiturn dialogue as complete solutions or answers evolve. This article presents the tutoring systems that we have been developing. AutoTutor is a conversational agent, with a talking head, that helps college students learn about computer literacy. andes, atlas, and why2 help adults learn about physics. Instead of being mere information-delivery systems, our systems help students actively construct knowledge through conversations.
370 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a quantitative meta-analytic review provides a critical analysis of the effectiveness of mentoring, with an emphasis on research designs that compared career outcomes of mentored individuals to non-mentored individuals.
363 citations
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TL;DR: This article examined how text features (i.e., cohesion) and individual differences contribute to biology text comprehension and found that reading a high-cohesion text improved text-based comprehension; overall comprehension was positively correlated with participants' prior knowledge.
363 citations
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TL;DR: Results indicate that self-monitoring and risk aversion moderate the intentions-turnover link, and the relationship between turnover intentions and turnover is stronger for low self-monitors and those lower in risk aversion.
Abstract: This article explores moderators of the relationship between turnover intentions and turnover behavior to better explain why some employees translate intentions into behavior and other employees do not. Individual differences in self-monitoring, locus of control, proactive personality, and risk aversion were examined. Results indicate that self-monitoring and risk aversion moderate the intentions-turnover link. Specifically, the relationship between turnover intentions and turnover is stronger for low self-monitors and those lower in risk aversion. Locus of control moderated the relationship in 1 of 2 samples such that the relationship was stronger for those with an internal locus of control. Proactive personality, however, did not directly moderate the relationship between intentions and turnover behaviors.
360 citations
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École Normale Supérieure1, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris2, University of Chile3, Institut de radioprotection et de sûreté nucléaire4, Ohio State University5, University of Hawaii6, University of Memphis7, University of Concepción8, National University of Cuyo9, Instituto Geográfico Nacional10
TL;DR: Using data from Global Positioning System networks in Central Chile to infer the static deformation and the kinematics of the 2010 moment magnitude 8.8 Maule megathrust earthquake, it is found that rupture reached shallow depths, probably extending up to the trench.
Abstract: Large earthquakes produce crustal deformation that can be quantified by geodetic measurements, allowing for the determination of the slip distribution on the fault. We used data from Global Positioning System (GPS) networks in Central Chile to infer the static deformation and the kinematics of the 2010 moment magnitude ( M w) 8.8 Maule megathrust earthquake. From elastic modeling, we found a total rupture length of ~500 kilometers where slip (up to 15 meters) concentrated on two main asperities situated on both sides of the epicenter. We found that rupture reached shallow depths, probably extending up to the trench. Resolvable afterslip occurred in regions of low coseismic slip. The low-frequency hypocenter is relocated 40 kilometers southwest of initial estimates. Rupture propagated bilaterally at about 3.1 kilometers per second, with possible but not fully resolved velocity variations.
359 citations
Authors
Showing all 7827 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
James F. Sallis | 169 | 825 | 144836 |
Robert G. Webster | 158 | 843 | 90776 |
Ching-Hon Pui | 145 | 805 | 72146 |
James Whelan | 128 | 786 | 89180 |
Tom Baranowski | 103 | 485 | 36327 |
Peter C. Doherty | 101 | 516 | 40162 |
Jian Chen | 96 | 1718 | 52917 |
Arthur C. Graesser | 95 | 614 | 38549 |
David Richards | 95 | 578 | 47107 |
Jianhong Wu | 93 | 726 | 36427 |
Richard W. Compans | 91 | 526 | 31576 |
Shiriki K. Kumanyika | 90 | 349 | 44959 |
Alexander J. Blake | 89 | 1133 | 35746 |
Marek Czosnyka | 88 | 747 | 29117 |
David M. Murray | 86 | 300 | 21500 |