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Institution

University of Rhode Island

EducationKingston, Rhode Island, United States
About: University of Rhode Island is a education organization based out in Kingston, Rhode Island, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Bay. The organization has 11464 authors who have published 22770 publications receiving 841066 citations. The organization is also known as: URI & Rhode Island College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the impact of multiple directorships on board meeting attendance and found that individuals with multiple board seats exhibit a higher tendency to be absent from board meetings, even after controlling for firm-specific characteristics, board-of-directors structure and endogeneity.
Abstract: This study contributes to the debate on the benefits and costs of multiple directorships by investigating the impact of multiple directorships on board meeting attendance. Individuals with multiple board seats (or "busy" directors) exhibit a higher tendency to be absent from board meetings. The results are robust even after controlling for firm-specific characteristics, board-of-directors structure and endogeneity. Furthermore, our results do not support the hypothesis that directors with higher ownership stakes are more motivated to attend board meetings. Monetary inducements such as board meeting fees and annual director retainers do not appear to enhance attendance. Finally, the enactment of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act appears to have a material impact on board attendance.

168 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is discussed how PRN structure and its system-level properties could determine both individual performance and patterns of physiological evolution, as well as how evolutionary change is constrained by interactions within PRNs.
Abstract: Ecological and evolutionary physiology has traditionally focused on one aspect of physiology at a time. Here, we discuss the implications of considering physiological regulatory networks (PRNs) as integrated wholes, a perspective that reveals novel roles for physiology in organismal ecology and evolution. For example, evolutionary response to changes in resource abundance might be constrained by the role of dietary micronutrients in immune response regulation, given a particular pathogen environment. Because many physiological components impact more than one process, organismal homeostasis is maintained, individual fitness is determined and evolutionary change is constrained (or facilitated) by interactions within PRNs. We discuss how PRN structure and its system-level properties could determine both individual performance and patterns of physiological evolution.

168 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: To be disseminable, physical-activity interventions must move beyond reliance on strictly face-to-face modes and begin to more fully use newer technologies, such as the Internet.

168 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The performance of three groups of children on a battery of executive function tasks was investigated in this article, where a double dissociation paradigm was used to evaluate the performance of children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, 34 children with developmental language disorder, and 45 non-abled children.
Abstract: The performance of three groups of children on a battery of executive function tasks was investigated. A double dissociation paradigm was used, including six executive function tasks (Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, Matching Familiar Figures Test, visual search, verbal fluency, Tower of Hanoi, and mazes) and two vocabulary tasks (Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test‐Revised and the Boston Naming Test). Executive function was defined as goal‐directed behavior including strategic planning, impulse control, organized search, and flexibility of thought and action. One hundred and fifteen children, aged 6.0 to 12.11 years, participated in the study (36 children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, 34 children with developmental language disorder, and 45 nondisabled children). Four main results were found: (a) groups differed on three of the executive function tasks, (b) groups differed on both of the nonexecutive function tasks, (c) the relationship between age and performance was linear, and (d) discriminan...

168 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The 79 A.D. plinian eruption of Vesuvius ejected ∼4 km3 (ORE) of phonolitic magma over a period of ∼19 hr.
Abstract: The 79 A.D. plinian eruption of Vesuvius ejected ∼4 km3 (ORE) of phonolitic magma over a period of ∼19 hr. A change in magma composition during the eruption is marked by a sharp transition from white, evolved phonolitic pumice to denser, overlying gray pumice, at mid-level within the fall deposit. Deposition of the upper, gray pumice fall was interrupted six times by the emplacement of pyroclastic surges and flows. Reverse size grading is conspicuous in the fall deposit. Measurements of maximum pumice and lithic diameters have been used to construct isopleths for eight chronostratigraphic levels within the fall deposit. The temporal evolution of eruption column height and magma discharge rate have been evaluated from these isopleths, using a theoretical model of pyroclast dispersal from explosive eruptions. During ejection of the white pumice, the column height rose from 14 to 26 km, as the magma discharge rate increased to 7.7 × 107 kg/s. Shortly after onset of the gray pumice fall, the column reached its maximum altitude of 32 km, with a discharge rate of 1.5 × 108 kg/s. Subsequent generation of surges and pyroclastic flows was associated with fluctuations in column height, supporting an origin by column collapse. At the white-gray boundary in the fall deposit, pumice density increases abruptly from 0.60 g/cm3 in the white pumice to 1.10 g/cm3 at the base of the gray pumice. Higher in the gray fall, the density decreases continuously to 0.60 g/cm3. The variation in pumice density is attributed primarily to differences in volatile content of two magmas which were tapped and mixed in varying proportions during ascent and eruption.

168 citations


Authors

Showing all 11569 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
James M. Tiedje150688102287
Roberto Kolter12031552942
Robert S. Stern12076162834
Michael S. Feld11955251968
William C. Sessa11738352208
Kenneth H. Mayer115135164698
Staffan Kjelleberg11442544414
Kevin C. Jones11474450207
David R. Nelson11061566627
Peter K. Smith10785549174
Peter M. Groffman10645740165
Ming Li103166962672
Victor Nizet10256444193
Anil Kumar99212464825
James O. Prochaska9732073265
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202344
2022161
20211,105
20201,058
2019996
2018888