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Institution

University of Texas at Dallas

EducationRichardson, Texas, United States
About: University of Texas at Dallas is a education organization based out in Richardson, Texas, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Computer science. The organization has 14986 authors who have published 35589 publications receiving 1293714 citations. The organization is also known as: UT-Dallas & UT Dallas.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that the relationship between age and crime in adolescence and early adulthood is largely explainable, though not entirely, attributable to multiple co-occurring developmental changes.
Abstract: Age is one of the most robust correlates of criminal behavior. Yet, explanations for this relationship are varied and conflicting. Developmental theories point to a multitude of sociological, psychological, and biological changes that occur during adolescence and adulthood. One prominent criminological perspective outlined by Gottfredson and Hirschi claims that age has a direct effect on crime, inexplicable from sociological and psychological variables. Despite the attention this claim has received, few direct empirical tests of it have been conducted. We use data from Pathways to Desistance, a longitudinal study of over 1,300 serious youthful offenders (85.8% male, 40.1% African-American, 34.3% Hispanic, 21.0% White), to test this claim. On average, youths were 16.5 years old at the initial interview and were followed for 7 years. We use multilevel longitudinal models to assess the extent to which the direct effects of age are reduced to statistical and substantive non-significance when constructs from a wide range of developmental and criminological theories are controlled. Unlike previous studies, we are able to control for changes across numerous realms emphasized within differing theoretical perspectives including social control (e.g., employment and marriage), procedural justice (e.g., perceptions of the legitimacy and fairness of the legal system), learning (e.g., gang membership and exposure to antisocial peers), strain (e.g., victimization and relationship breakup), psychosocial maturity (e.g., impulse control, self-regulation and moral disengagement), and rational choice (e.g., costs and rewards of crime). Assessed separately, these perspectives explain anywhere from 3% (procedural justice) to 49% (social learning) of the age-crime relationship. Together, changes in these constructs explain 69% of the drop in crime from ages 15 to 25. We conclude that the relationship between age and crime in adolescence and early adulthood is largely explainable, though not entirely, attributable to multiple co-occurring developmental changes.

294 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: With this flexible ultrasensitive temperature sensor, the world’s first successful measurement of dynamic change of temperature in the lung during very fast artificial respiration is demonstrated, conclusively shows that the lung of a warm-blooded animal maintains surprising temperature stability despite the large difference between core temperature and inhaled air temperature.
Abstract: We report a fabrication method for flexible and printable thermal sensors based on composites of semicrystalline acrylate polymers and graphite with a high sensitivity of 20 mK and a high-speed response time of less than 100 ms. These devices exhibit large resistance changes near body temperature under physiological conditions with high repeatability (1,800 times). Device performance is largely unaffected by bending to radii below 700 µm, which allows for conformal application to the surface of living tissue. The sensing temperature can be tuned between 25 °C and 50 °C, which covers all relevant physiological temperatures. Furthermore, we demonstrate flexible active-matrix thermal sensors which can resolve spatial temperature gradients over a large area. With this flexible ultrasensitive temperature sensor we succeeded in the in vivo measurement of cyclic temperatures changes of 0.1 °C in a rat lung during breathing, without interference from constant tissue motion. This result conclusively shows that the lung of a warm-blooded animal maintains surprising temperature stability despite the large difference between core temperature and inhaled air temperature.

294 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a simple method for preparing freestanding carbon nanotube (CNT)-V2O5 nanowire (VNW) composite paper electrodes without using binders.
Abstract: Vanadium pentoxide (V2O5) layered nanostructures are known to have very stable crystal structures and high faradaic activity. The low electronic conductivity of V2O5 greatly limits the application of vanadium oxide as electrode materials and requires combining with conducting materials using binders. It is well known that the organic binders can degrade the overall performance of electrode materials and need carefully controlled compositions. In this study, we develop a simple method for preparing freestanding carbon nanotube (CNT)-V2O5 nanowire (VNW) composite paper electrodes without using binders. Coin cell type (CR2032) supercapacitors are assembled using the nanocomposite paper electrode as the anode and high surface area carbon fiber electrode (Spectracarb 2225) as the cathode. The supercapacitor with CNT-VNW composite paper electrode exhibits a power density of 5.26 kW Kg−1 and an energy density of 46.3 Wh Kg−1. (Li)VNWs and CNT composite paper electrodes can be fabricated in similar manner and show improved overall performance with a power density of 8.32 kW Kg−1 and an energy density of 65.9 Wh Kg−1. The power and energy density values suggest that such flexible hybrid nanocomposite paper electrodes may be useful for high performance electrochemical supercapacitors.

294 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Oct 2001
TL;DR: This work proposes a key management scheme to periodically update the symmetric keys used by all pebbles, combining mobility-adaptive clustering and an effective probabilistic selection of the key-generating node, which meets the requirements of efficiency, scalability and security needed for the survivability of networks of pebble (pebblenets).
Abstract: We consider the problem of securing communication in large ad hoc networks, i.e., wireless networks with no fixed, wired infrastructure and with multi-hop routes. Such networks, e.g., networks of sensors, are deployed for applications such as microsensing, monitoring and control, and for extending the peer-to-peer communication capability of smaller group of network users. Because the nodes of these networks, which we term pebbles for their very limited size and large number, are resource constrained, only symmetric key cryptography is feasible. We propose a key management scheme to periodically update the symmetric keys used by all pebbles. By combining mobility-adaptive clustering and an effective probabilistic selection of the key-generating node, the proposed scheme meets the requirements of efficiency, scalability and security needed for the survivability of networks of pebbles (pebblenets)

294 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the Hippo (Hpo) signaling pathway plays an essential role in regulating ISC proliferation, and it is shown that the Hpo pathway mediator Yorkie (Yki) is also required in precursor cells for injury-inducedISC proliferation in response to tissue-damaging reagent DSS.
Abstract: Intestinal stem cells (ISCs) in the Drosophila adult midgut are essential for maintaining tissue homeostasis and replenishing lost cells in response to tissue damage. Here we demonstrate that the Hippo (Hpo) signaling pathway, an evolutionarily conserved pathway implicated in organ size control and tumorigenesis, plays an essential role in regulating ISC proliferation. Loss of Hpo signaling in either midgut precursor cells or epithelial cells stimulates ISC proliferation. We provide evidence that loss of Hpo signaling in epithelial cells increases the production of cytokines of the Upd family and multiple EGFR ligands that activate JAK-STAT and EGFR signaling pathways in ISCs to stimulate their proliferation, thus revealing a unique non-cell-autonomous role of Hpo signaling in blocking ISC proliferation. Finally, we show that the Hpo pathway mediator Yorkie (Yki) is also required in precursor cells for injury-induced ISC proliferation in response to tissue-damaging reagent DSS.

293 citations


Authors

Showing all 15148 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Eugene Braunwald2301711264576
Younan Xia216943175757
Eric N. Olson206814144586
Thomas C. Südhof191653118007
Scott M. Grundy187841231821
Jing Wang1844046202769
Eric Boerwinkle1831321170971
Eric J. Nestler178748116947
John D. Minna169951106363
Elliott M. Antman161716179462
Adi F. Gazdar157776104116
Bruce D. Walker15577986020
R. Kowalewski1431815135517
Joseph Izen137143398900
James A. Richardson13636375778
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20241
202371
2022217
20212,152
20202,227
20192,192