Institution
University of North Texas
Education•Denton, Texas, United States•
About: University of North Texas is a education organization based out in Denton, Texas, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 11866 authors who have published 26984 publications receiving 705376 citations. The organization is also known as: Fight, North Texas & UNT.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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01 Jan 2007TL;DR: Bates et al. as mentioned in this paper found that without establishing permanent housing, the ability of a household to carry out normal activities and reestablish a routine is limited and hampered, and that delays in reestablishing housing all too often delay all other dimensions of recovery.
Abstract: Reestablishing housing is a critical factor for understanding recovery processes, whether one is addressing the phenomenon at the household or community level. Researchers examining household or family recovery, for example, have utilized a variety of measures or indicators to capture different dimensions of recovery including psychological or perceptional measures related to stress, and sense of loss and recovery to more objective indicators such as regaining income, employment, household amenities, and household assets (Bates, 1982; Bolin, 1976, 1982, 1993, 1994; Bolin & Bolton, 1983; Bolin & Trainer, 1978; Peacock, Killian, & Bates, 1987). However, this research also suggests that fundamental to an overall assessment of household recovery is reestablishing permanent housing, or in the vernacular, home, because without establishing home, the ability of a household to carry out normal activities and reestablish a routine is limited and hampered (Bates & Peacock, 1987, 1993; Bolin & Trainer, 1978; Quarantelli, 1982). In short, delays in reestablishing housing all too often delay all other dimensions of recovery (Bolin, 1986).
186 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the role of the ω phase on the copious nucleation of α leading to super-refined precipitation in a metastable β Ti-alloy has been rationalized for the first time.
185 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the impact of litigant status and the changing ideology of the U.S. Supreme Court on differences in the success rates of direct parties before the Court.
Abstract: A substantial literature on lower federal courts and state courts suggests that the "haves" usually come out ahead in litigation because they possess superior resources for it and they reap advantages from their repeat player status. We investigate the success of 10 categories of litigants before the Warren, Burger, and Rehnquist Courts to determine whether the resources or experience of litigants has effects on Supreme Court outcomes paralleling those found in the courts below. While different categories of litigants are found to have very different rates of success, those differences do not consistently favor litigants with greater resources. A time series analysis of the success of different categories of litigants over the 36 years studied suggests that the changing ideological complexion of the Court has a greater impact on the success of litigants than differences among litigants in resources and experience. W e examine the impact of litigant status and the changing ideology of the U.S. Supreme Court on differences in the success rates of direct parties before the Court. Simply, we seek to explain why some categories of litigants win more frequently than others when appearing before the Court. Previous explanations have attributed differential success rates in lower federal courts to, inter alia, disparities between litigants of different status in judicial experience and resources. We argue, however, that differential success rates in Supreme Court decisions have more to do with the ideological composition of the Court and the Court's receptivity to the different types of legal claims made by litigants of different status. Previous research indicates that the status of litigants before American courts has substantial influence on judicial outcomes. Higher-status parties enjoy significant advantages in appellate courts and usually win. This has been demonstrated in the U.S. courts of appeals (Sheehan and Songer 1989) and, to a lesser degree, in state supreme courts (Wheeler et al. 1987). Curiously, the impact of litigant status on
185 citations
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TL;DR: Difficulties with perception, memory, and motor functions (cognitive failure) more consistently predicted intrusive thoughts, PTSD scores, and attempted suicide than did women’s attention to their inner thoughts and feelings (private self-consciousness), which was important for the sample and the subgroup that had sustained severe violence.
Abstract: Emotional distress and symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) were examined among women in psychologically abusive relationships. Women (N = 93) were divided into three groups (none, moderate, severe) according to scores on the violence subscale of the Severity of Violence Against Women Scales (Marshall, 1992). All groups reported serious emotional distress on the Symptom Checklist 90-Revised (Derogatis, 1983) dimensions (e.g. more so than 93% of the nonclinical norm for global distress). Psychoticism was the highest subscale for all groups. Most women (56%) suffered PTSD according to a subscale of the SCL90 (Saunders, Arata, & Kilpatrick, 1990). Difficulties with perception, memory, and motor functions (cognitive failure) more consistently predicted intrusive thoughts. PTSD scores, and attempted suicide than did women's attention to their inner thoughts and feelings (private self-consciousness), which was important for the sample and the subgroup that had sustained severe violence. Limitations and contributions are discussed as are different uses for conservative and inclusive measures of PTSD.
185 citations
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01 Jan 1994TL;DR: Computers and computation the discrete neuron the Boolean neuron alternating circuits small, shallow alternating circuits threshold circuits cyclic networks probabilistic neural networks.
Abstract: Computers and computation the discrete neuron the Boolean neuron alternating circuits small, shallow alternating circuits threshold circuits cyclic networks probabilistic neural networks.
185 citations
Authors
Showing all 12053 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Steven N. Blair | 165 | 879 | 132929 |
Scott D. Solomon | 137 | 1145 | 103041 |
Richard A. Dixon | 126 | 603 | 71424 |
Thomas E. Mallouk | 122 | 549 | 52593 |
Hong-Cai Zhou | 114 | 489 | 66320 |
Qian Wang | 108 | 2148 | 65557 |
Boris I. Yakobson | 107 | 443 | 45174 |
J. N. Reddy | 106 | 926 | 66940 |
David Spiegel | 106 | 733 | 46276 |
Charles A. Nelson | 103 | 557 | 40352 |
Robert J. Vallerand | 98 | 301 | 41840 |
Gerald R. Ferris | 93 | 332 | 29478 |
Michael H. Abraham | 89 | 726 | 37868 |
Jere H. Mitchell | 88 | 337 | 24386 |
Alan Needleman | 86 | 373 | 39180 |