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Institution

University of Rijeka

EducationRijeka, Croatia
About: University of Rijeka is a education organization based out in Rijeka, Croatia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Tourism. The organization has 3471 authors who have published 7993 publications receiving 110386 citations. The organization is also known as: Rijeka University & Sveučilište u Rijeci.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the decay rate of an excited molecule embedded in a dispersive and absorbing planar cavity is derived by using a recently obtained compact form of the Green's function for a multilayer.
Abstract: The decay rate of an excited molecule (atom) embedded in a dispersive and absorbing planar cavity is derived by using a recently obtained compact form of the Green's function for a multilayer. As a by-product, a hint is provided for a straightforward extension of the results obtained for lossless cavities of other shapes to the corresponding absorbing cavities. The decay rate in an absorbing cavity consists of the spontaneous emission rate and of the nonradiative rates caused by the near-field interaction of the molecule with the cavity medium and, for nearby molecules, with the cavity mirrors. Only the spontaneous emission rate is satisfactorily described in the macroscopic approach adopted. The theory is applied to an analysis of the effects of the weak cavity absorption on the decay rate in a dielectric microcavity formed by two metallic mirrors. As expected, dissipation in the cavity medium spoils the conditions for controlled spontaneuos emission and strongly suppresses the intensity of spontaneous emission. However, its effect on the spontaneous emission rate is much less pronounced.

37 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the effects of Eysenck's personality traits on coping styles and moods, as well as the effect of coping styles on moods.

37 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Both posttraumatic stress symptoms and aspects of the post-war environment independently influence SQOL in war-affected populations, and aid programmes to improve wellbeing following the traumatic war events should include both treatment of posttraumatic symptoms and social interventions.
Abstract: Exposure to traumatic war events may lead to a reduction in quality of life for many years. Research suggests that these impairments may be associated with posttraumatic stress symptoms; however, wars also have a profound impact on social conditions. Systematic studies utilising subjective quality of life (SQOL) measures are particularly rare and research in post-conflict settings is scarce. Whether social factors independently affect SQOL after war in addition to symptoms has not been explored in large scale studies. War-affected community samples were recruited through a random-walk technique in five Balkan countries and through registers and networking in three Western European countries. The interviews were carried out on average 8 years after the war in the Balkans. SQOL was assessed on Manchester Short Assessment of Quality of Life - MANSA. We explored the impact of war events, posttraumatic stress symptoms and post-war environment on SQOL. We interviewed 3313 Balkan residents and 854 refugees in Western Europe. The MANSA mean score was 4.8 (SD = 0.9) for the Balkan sample and 4.7 (SD = 0.9) for refugees. In both samples participants were explicitly dissatisfied with their employment and financial situation. Posttraumatic stress symptoms had a strong negative impact on SQOL. Traumatic war events were directly linked with lower SQOL in Balkan residents. The post-war environment influenced SQOL in both groups: unemployment was associated with lower SQOL and recent contacts with friends with higher SQOL. Experiencing more migration-related stressors was linked to poorer SQOL in refugees. Both posttraumatic stress symptoms and aspects of the post-war environment independently influence SQOL in war-affected populations. Aid programmes to improve wellbeing following the traumatic war events should include both treatment of posttraumatic symptoms and social interventions.

37 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Optimizacija parametara obrade tokarenja s vise kriterija kvalitete uporabom Grey relacijske analize.
Abstract: Optimizacija parametara obrade tokarenja s vise kriterija kvalitete uporabom Grey relacijske analize Izvorni znanstveni clanak Optimizacija procesa obrade je neophodna za postizanje vece produktivnosti i visoke kvalitete proizvoda kako bi ostali tržisno konkurentni. Ovaj rad istražuje vise-kriterijsku optimizaciju procesa tokarenja s optimalnom kombinacijom parametara obrade koji osiguravaju minimalnu hrapavost povrsine (Ra) s maksimalnim ucinkom uklanjanja materijala (MRR) uporabom Grey-based Taguchi metode. Razmatrani parametri obrade tokarenjem su brzina rezanja, posmak i dubina rezanja. Primjenom Taguchijevog L9 (3 4 ) ortogonalnog plana provedeno je devet eksperimenata te je koristena Grey relacijska analiza kako bi se rijesio visekriterijski problem optimizacije. Temeljem vrijednosti Grey relacijskog stupnja utvrđene su optimalne razine parametara. Signifikantnost parametara na sveukupne kriterije kvalitete procesa tokarenja ocijenjena je analizom varijance (ANOVA). Optimalne vrijednosti parametara dobivene tijekom istraživanja potvrđene su verifikacijskim eksperimentom. Kljucne rijeci: ANOVA; Grey relacijska analiza; Taguchijeva metoda; tokarenje; visekriterijska optimizacija

37 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There were no significant differences between groups in the intensity of traumatization, severity of PTSD symptoms, and the frequency of depression; however, there was one exception: severity of hyperarousal symptoms was positively correlated with occurrence of psychotic symptoms.
Abstract: The presence of psychotic symptoms in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has already been recognized. Using the Structured Clinical Interview Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, we searched for and assessed psychotic symptoms in 91 males suffering from combat-related PTSD. Hallucinations and delusions were present in 20% of patients. We divided all patients into three groups: the group with hallucinations and delusions, the group without these symptoms, and the group with “subthreshold” psychotic symptoms. Using the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire, Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale, and Structured Clinical Interview Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, we investigated differences between groups in the intensity of traumatization, severity of PTSD symptoms, and the frequency of depression. There were no significant differences between groups; however, there was one exception: severity of hyperarousal symptoms was positively correlated with occurrence of psychotic symptoms.

37 citations


Authors

Showing all 3537 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Igor Rudan142658103659
Nikola Godinovic1381469100018
Ivica Puljak134143697548
Damir Lelas133135493354
D. Mekterovic11044946779
Ulrich H. Koszinowski9628127709
Michele Doro7943720090
Robert Zivadinov7352218636
D. Dominis Prester7036316701
Daniel Ferenc7022516145
Vladimir Parpura6422618050
Stipan Jonjić6222719363
Dario Hrupec6028813345
Alessandro Laviano5929814609
Tomislav Terzić5827110699
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202329
202279
2021636
2020707
2019622
2018564