Institution
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
Education•Lincoln, Nebraska, United States•
About: University of Nebraska–Lincoln is a education organization based out in Lincoln, Nebraska, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 28059 authors who have published 61544 publications receiving 2139104 citations. The organization is also known as: Nebraska & UNL.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Large Hadron Collider, Gene, Laser
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the history of dark personality traits, how they relate to normal personality traits and their relative importance as determinants of organizational out comes, and measurement issues surrounding the assessment of these characteristics.
Abstract: Although there has been increasing interest in dark personality traits in the organizational sciences, these char acteristics remain relatively understudied and somewhat misunderstood. The present manuscript aims to clar ify some of the issues surrounding dark personality traits by discussing the history of dark personality traits, how they relate to normal personality traits, their relative importance as determinants of organizational out comes, and measurement issues surrounding the assessment of these characteristics. We will then discuss po tential future directions for research investigating the causes and consequences of these traits as well as provid ing guidance on the implementation of dark personality assessment in the workplace for selection and training.
329 citations
••
TL;DR: The authors empirically test a model of how organization reputation, job and organizational attributes, and recruiter behaviors influence applicant attraction to firms using data from 361 campus recruitment interviews in which applicants completed surveys before and after the interview.
329 citations
••
TL;DR: Analysis of specific causes of death revealed that suicide, homicide/violence, and cardiovascular diseases were substantially elevated among sexual minorities in high-prejudice communities and highlighted the importance of examining structural forms of stigma and prejudice as social determinants of health and longevity among minority populations.
329 citations
••
TL;DR: AllMAPS is a method capable of computing a scaffold ordering that maximizes colinearity across a collection of maps, which is robust against common mapping errors, and generates sequences that are maximally concordant with the input maps.
Abstract: The ordering and orientation of genomic scaffolds to reconstruct chromosomes is an essential step during de novo genome assembly. Because this process utilizes various mapping techniques that each provides an independent line of evidence, a combination of multiple maps can improve the accuracy of the resulting chromosomal assemblies. We present ALLMAPS, a method capable of computing a scaffold ordering that maximizes colinearity across a collection of maps. ALLMAPS is robust against common mapping errors, and generates sequences that are maximally concordant with the input maps. ALLMAPS is a useful tool in building high-quality genome assemblies. ALLMAPS is available at: https://github.com/tanghaibao/jcvi/wiki/ALLMAPS.
329 citations
••
TL;DR: In this article, the residual effects of manure or compost application on crop production and soil properties can last for several years, and the residual effect of manure and compost applications significantly increased soil electrical conductivity and pH levels and plant available P and NO 3 -N concentrations.
Abstract: Residual effects of manure or compost application on crop production and soil properties can last for several years This study was conducted to evaluate residual effects of annual or biennial applications of N- and P-based composted and noncomposted beef cattle (Bos taurus) feedlot manure, chemical fertilizer, and no-treatment check on corn (Zea mays L) production and soil properties Manure and compost were applied from 1992 to 1995, and the residual effects were determined from 1997 to 1999 Residual effects of N- and P-based manure and compost applications on corn grain yield and N uptake lasted for at least one growing season while the effects on soil properties were longer lasting Soil P can contribute to crop P uptake for >4 yr after N-based manure or compost application had ceased The residual effects of manure and compost applications significantly increased soil electrical conductivity and pH levels and plant-available P and NO 3 -N concentrations Four years after the last application, P leaching to a soil depth of 45 to 60 cm was observed with N-based manure or compost application No residual effects of manure and compost applications on soil NH 4 -N were observed Averaged across years, soil total C concentrations or quantities were not different among the treatments, indicating that total C was not a sensitive indicator Residual effects of N- or P-based manure or compost application increased crop production for one year and influenced soil properties for several years
328 citations
Authors
Showing all 28272 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Donald P. Schneider | 242 | 1622 | 263641 |
Suvadeep Bose | 154 | 960 | 129071 |
David D'Enterria | 150 | 1592 | 116210 |
Aaron Dominguez | 147 | 1968 | 113224 |
Gregory R Snow | 147 | 1704 | 115677 |
J. S. Keller | 144 | 981 | 98249 |
Andrew Askew | 140 | 1496 | 99635 |
Mitchell Wayne | 139 | 1810 | 108776 |
Kenneth Bloom | 138 | 1958 | 110129 |
P. de Barbaro | 137 | 1657 | 102360 |
Randy Ruchti | 137 | 1832 | 107846 |
Ia Iashvili | 135 | 1676 | 99461 |
Yuichi Kubota | 133 | 1695 | 98570 |
Ilya Kravchenko | 132 | 1366 | 93639 |
Andrea Perrotta | 131 | 1380 | 85669 |