Institution
University of Oklahoma
Education•Norman, Oklahoma, United States•
About: University of Oklahoma is a education organization based out in Norman, Oklahoma, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Radar. The organization has 25269 authors who have published 52609 publications receiving 1821706 citations. The organization is also known as: OU & Oklahoma University.
Topics: Population, Radar, Large Hadron Collider, Poison control, Higgs boson
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors manipulated the levels of controlling language and lexical concreteness within health messages targeting a young adult population and found that messages using concrete language receive more attention, are viewed as more important, and generate more positive assessments of the source.
Abstract: Recent social influence research utilizing psychological reactance theory (J. W. Brehm, 1966) has focused on how reactance motivates message rejection due to threats to perceived freedoms posed by controlling language. Although reactance has been shown to increase message rejection and source derogation, persuasive appeals employing alternative forms of restoration of freedom, as suggested by the theory, have received little if any empirical scrutiny. The present study manipulated the levels of controlling language and lexical concreteness within health messages targeting a young adult population. Results show a number of negative outcomes associated with the use of controlling language but suggest more positive outcomes associated with the use of restoration postscripts. Findings also indicate that relative to abstract language, messages using concrete language receive more attention, are viewed as more important, and generate more positive assessments of the source.
391 citations
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TL;DR: The purpose of this review article is to summate the research advances in understanding of BCC biology and to acquaint pathologists and clinicians to the practical issues in BCC diagnosis and subclassification which flow there from.
390 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the solubilization of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) was achieved by functionalizing the SWNT with glucosamine.
Abstract: Water solubilization of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) has been achieved by functionalizing the SWNT with glucosamine. The grafting of glucosamine to the nanotubes was attained by producing acyl chloride on the carboxylic groups associated with the nanotubes. Subsequently, amide bonds were formed between the glucosamine and the SWNT. This grafting results in solubility of SWNT in water, which ranges from 0.1 to 0.3 mg/mL, depending on temperature.
390 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the abundances of the elements La and Eu have been determined over the stellar metallicity range -3 < [Fe/H] < +0.3 in 159 giant and dwarf stars.
Abstract: From newly obtained high-resolution, high signal-to-noise ratio spectra the abundances of the elements La and Eu have been determined over the stellar metallicity range -3 < [Fe/H] < +0.3 in 159 giant and dwarf stars. Lanthanum is predominantly made by the s-process in the solar system, while Eu owes most of its solar system abundance to the r-process. The changing ratio of these elements in stars over a wide metallicity range traces the changing contributions of these two processes to the Galactic abundance mix. Large s-process abundances can be the result of mass transfer from very evolved stars, so to identify these cases we also report carbon abundances in our metal-poor stars. Results indicate that the s-process may be active as early as [Fe/H] = -2.6, although we also find that some stars as metal-rich as [Fe/H] = -1 show no strong indication of s-process enrichment. There is a significant spread in the level of s-process enrichment even at solar metallicity.
390 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the transverse momentum balance between a jet and a reference object such as a photon, $Z$ boson, or multijet system for jets with $20 0.2 fb$^{-1}$ collected during 2015 at the LHC is derived from dijet balance measurements.
Abstract: Jet energy scale measurements and their systematic uncertainties are reported for jets measured with the ATLAS detector using proton-proton collision data with a center-of-mass energy of $\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 3.2 fb$^{-1}$ collected during 2015 at the LHC. Jets are reconstructed from energy deposits forming topological clusters of calorimeter cells, using the anti-$k_{t}$ algorithm with radius parameter $R = 0.4$. Jets are calibrated with a series of simulation-based corrections and in situ techniques. In situ techniques exploit the transverse momentum balance between a jet and a reference object such as a photon, $Z$ boson, or multijet system for jets with $20 0.8$) is derived from dijet $p_{T}$ balance measurements. For jets of $p_{T} = 80$ GeV, the additional uncertainty for the forward jet calibration reaches its largest value of about 2% in the range $|\eta| > 3.5$ and in a narrow slice of $2.2 < |\eta| < 2.4$.
390 citations
Authors
Showing all 25490 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Ronald C. Kessler | 274 | 1332 | 328983 |
Michael A. Strauss | 185 | 1688 | 208506 |
Derek R. Lovley | 168 | 582 | 95315 |
Ashok Kumar | 151 | 5654 | 164086 |
Peter J. Schwartz | 147 | 647 | 107695 |
Peter Buchholz | 143 | 1181 | 92101 |
Robert Hirosky | 139 | 1697 | 106626 |
Elizabeth Barrett-Connor | 138 | 793 | 73241 |
Brad Abbott | 137 | 1566 | 98604 |
Lihong V. Wang | 136 | 1118 | 72482 |
Itsuo Nakano | 135 | 1539 | 97905 |
Phillip Gutierrez | 133 | 1391 | 96205 |
P. Skubic | 133 | 1573 | 97343 |
Elizaveta Shabalina | 133 | 1421 | 92273 |
Richard Brenner | 133 | 1108 | 87426 |