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Institution

University of Nebraska Omaha

EducationOmaha, Nebraska, United States
About: University of Nebraska Omaha is a education organization based out in Omaha, Nebraska, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 4526 authors who have published 8905 publications receiving 213914 citations. The organization is also known as: UNO & University of Omaha.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Exposure to cigarette smoke activates stem cell features of pancreatic cells, via CHRNA7 signaling and FOSL1 activation of PAF1 expression, which is increased in pancreatic tumors of humans and mice with chronic cigarette smoke exposure.

65 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Age‐related differences in the neural dynamics that serve working memory are examined by recording high‐density magnetoencephalography in younger and older adults while they performed a modified, high‐load Sternberg working memory task with letters as stimuli.
Abstract: Working memory is central to the execution of many daily functions and is typically divided into three phases: encoding, maintenance, and retrieval. While working memory performance has been repeatedly shown to decline with age, less is known regarding the underlying neural processes. We examined age-related differences in the neural dynamics that serve working memory by recording high-density magnetoencephalography (MEG) in younger and older adults while they performed a modified, high-load Sternberg working memory task with letters as stimuli. MEG data were evaluated in the time-frequency domain and significant oscillatory responses were imaged using a beamformer. A hierarchical regression was performed to investigate whether age moderated the relationship between oscillatory activity and accuracy on the working memory task. Our results indicated that the spatiotemporal dynamics of oscillatory activity in language-related areas of the left fronto-temporal cortices were similar across groups. Age-related differences emerged during early encoding in the right-hemispheric homologue of Wernicke's area. Slightly later, group differences emerged in the homologue of Broca's area and these persisted throughout memory maintenance. Additionally, occipital alpha activity during maintenance was stronger, occurred earlier, and involved more cortical tissue in older adults. Finally, age significantly moderated the relationship between accuracy and neural activity in the prefrontal cortices. In younger adults, as prefrontal activity decreased, accuracy tended to increase. Our results are consistent with predictions of the compensation-related utilization of neural circuits hypothesis (CRUNCH). Such differences in the oscillatory dynamics could reflect compensatory mechanisms, which would aid working memory performance in older age. Hum Brain Mapp 37:2348-2361, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

65 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that stochastic effects of disturbance and dispersal on community assembly play an important, but underappreciated, role in mediating biotic homogenisation and biodiversity responses to environmental change.
Abstract: A major challenge in ecology, conservation and global-change biology is to understand why biodiversity responds differently to similar environmental changes. Contingent biodiversity responses may depend on how disturbance and dispersal interact to alter variation in community composition (β-diversity) and assembly mechanisms. However, quantitative syntheses of these patterns and processes across studies are lacking. Using null-models and meta-analyses of 22 factorial experiments in herbaceous plant communities across Europe and North America, we show that disturbance diversifies communities when dispersal is limited, but homogenises communities when combined with increased immigration from the species pool. In contrast to the hypothesis that disturbance and dispersal mediate the strength of niche assembly, both processes altered β-diversity through neutral-sampling effects on numbers of individuals and species in communities. Our synthesis suggests that stochastic effects of disturbance and dispersal on community assembly play an important, but underappreciated, role in mediating biotic homogenisation and biodiversity responses to environmental change.

64 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors assess differences in victimization risk between African American and white, non-Latino inmates, and to estimate race group differences in the correlates of victimization.

64 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Analysis of studies of the causes and correlates of prisoner victimization published between 1980 and 2014 revealed that predictor variables reflecting inmates’ background characteristics, their institutional routines and experiences, and prison characteristics all influence victimization.
Abstract: A considerable amount of research has been directed at understanding the sources of inmate misconduct (offending within prison), whereas few studies have focused on identifying the causes and correlates of prisoner victimization. The sources of inmate victimization should be distinguished from those of offending, however, because the policy implications of each focus differ to some extent. In order to determine the predictors of inmate victimization and stimulate further research on the topic, we systematically reviewed studies of the causes/correlates of prisoner victimization published between 1980 and 2014. Our findings revealed that predictor variables reflecting inmates' background characteristics (e.g., history of victimization), their institutional routines and experiences (e.g., history of misconduct), and prison characteristics (e.g., population size) all influence victimization.

64 citations


Authors

Showing all 4588 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Darell D. Bigner13081990558
Dan L. Longo12569756085
William B. Dobyns10543038956
Eamonn Martin Quigley10368539585
Howard E. Gendelman10156739460
Alexander V. Kabanov9944734519
Douglas T. Fearon9427835140
Dapeng Yu9474533613
John E. Wagner9448835586
Zbigniew K. Wszolek9357639943
Surinder K. Batra8756430653
Frank L. Graham8525539619
Jing Zhou8453337101
Manish Sharma82140733361
Peter F. Wright7725221498
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202323
2022108
2021585
2020537
2019492
2018421