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Institution

University of North Carolina at Wilmington

EducationWilmington, North Carolina, United States
About: University of North Carolina at Wilmington is a education organization based out in Wilmington, North Carolina, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 3329 authors who have published 6797 publications receiving 186308 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: For instance, this paper found that the victim is perceived less favorably and there is more leniency toward the perpetrator than in a stranger rape when there is ambiguity in the victim's desire for intercourse.
Abstract: There is evidence to suggest that in an acquaintance rape the victim is perceived less favorably and there is more leniency toward the perpetrator than in a stranger rape. The purpose of the present study was to assess the perceptual effects of factors that might underlie this differential perception. Victim-perpetrator attraction and ambiguity in victim's desire for intercourse were varied since both are often perceived to occur at a much higher frequency in acquaintance rape than stranger rape. The design of the study was a 3 (victim-perpetrator attraction — minimal, moderate, maximal) × 2 (ambiguity in desire for intercourse — ambiguous, relatively unambiguous) × 2 (gender of subject — male, female) factorial. The results indicated that ambiguity had a significant effect on perceptions. More specifically, perception tended to be less favorable toward the victim and more lenient toward the defendant when there was ambiguity in the victim's desire for intercourse. Additionally, when compared to females, males' perception tended to be less favorable toward the victim and more lenient toward the perpetrator. There were no other significant main effects or interactions. The implications of these findings for the differential perception of acquaintance and stranger rape are discussed.

66 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used computer-based video instruction (CBVI) to teach 3 high school students with moderate or severe intellectual disabilities how to order in fast-food restaurants by using an augmentative, alternative communication device.
Abstract: In the study reported on here, the authors used computer-based video instruction (CBVI) to teach 3 high school students with moderate or severe intellectual disabilities how to order in fast-food restaurants by using an augmentative, alternative communication device. The study employed a multiple probe design to institute CBVI as the only intervention tool and measured generalization of skills to community restaurants. For 2 of the 3 students, the ability to order their meals dramatically increased immediately following CBVI; for the third student, the ability to perform this task increased during a second generalization condition. Performance was maintained for each student. The authors discuss their results as support for this approach, which would be one solution for providing instruction in a simulated environment when community-based instruction is limited.

65 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although insomnia severity increases with age-largely due to the accumulation of health conditions-this trend appears more pronounced among Hispanic older adults than in non-Hispanic whites, even after adjustment for number of accumulated health conditions, body mass index, and number of depressive symptoms.
Abstract: Objectives Insomnia is reported to be more prevalent in minority racial/ethnic groups. Little is known, however, about racial/ethnic differences in changes in insomnia severity over time, particularly among older adults. We examined racial/ethnic differences in trajectories of insomnia severity among middle-aged and older adults. Design Data were drawn from five waves of the Health and Retirement Study (2002–2010), a nationally representative longitudinal biennial survey of adults aged > 50 years. Setting Population-based. Participants 22,252 participants from non-Hispanic white, non-Hispanic black, Hispanic, and other racial/ethnic groups. Measurements Participants reported the severity of four insomnia symptoms; summed scores ranged from 4 (no insomnia) to 12 (severe insomnia). We assessed change in insomnia across the five waves as a function of race/ethnicity. Results Across all participants, insomnia severity scores increased 0.19 points (95% CI: 0.14–0.24; t = 7.52; design df = 56; p Conclusions Although insomnia severity increases with age—largely due to the accumulation of health conditions—this trend appears more pronounced among Hispanic older adults than in non-Hispanic whites. Further research is needed to determine the reasons for a different insomnia trajectory among Hispanics.

65 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results demonstrate that growth and survival of early-stage southern flounder larvae are maximized under long photoperiods of 18–24L and in full-strength seawater, which is consistent with other reports that tolerance to lower salinities in these euryhaline flatfish increases post-metamorphosis.

65 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a systematic review of the field of ecology network analysis (ENA) is presented, identifying the topic diversity, exposing methodological development, highlighting applications, and assessing collaboration among ENA scholars.

65 citations


Authors

Showing all 3396 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Henry F. Schaefer111161168695
David P. White9936344403
Christopher J. Cramer9356550075
Robin D. Rogers9043243314
Xuemei Chen7628124252
Thomas C. Baker6733617050
Yang Song6664621184
Kevin E. O'Grady6431613770
Gary L. Miller6330613010
Randall S. Wells6224212142
Frank C. Schroeder582499821
C. Nathan DeWall5717716492
Kevin E. O'Shea5614210881
Joseph R. Pawlik551559290
Jerrold Meinwald5541111344
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202328
2022102
2021464
2020452
2019372
2018332