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Institution

University of Waterloo

EducationWaterloo, Ontario, Canada
About: University of Waterloo is a education organization based out in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 36093 authors who have published 93906 publications receiving 2948139 citations. The organization is also known as: UW & uwaterloo.


Papers
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MonographDOI
27 Sep 2006
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a survey of tourism and religious pilgrimages in the Roman Catholic and Sikhs traditions, focusing on the following: 1. Tourism and Religious Journeys 2. Sacred Spaces and Tourist Places 3. Religious and Secular Pilgrimage 4. Paradigms of Travel 5. Travel and Journeying on the Sea of Faith 6. Religious Tourism as an Educational Experience 7. Empty Bottles at Sacred Sites 8. Management Issues for Religious Heritage Attractions 9 Tourism and the Spiritual Philosophies of the 'Orient' 10.
Abstract: 1. Tourism and Religious Journeys 2. Sacred Spaces and Tourist Places 3. Religious and Secular Pilgrimage 4. Paradigms of Travel 5. Travel and Journeying on the Sea of Faith 6. Religious Tourism as an Educational Experience 7. Empty Bottles at Sacred Sites 8. Management Issues for Religious Heritage Attractions 9. Tourism and the Spiritual Philosophies of the 'Orient' 10. Nature Religion, Self Spirituality and New Age Tourism 11. Global Jewish Tourism 12. Buddhism, Tourism and the Middle Way 13. Tourism and Islam 14. Pilgrimage in Sikh Tradition 15. Pilgrimage in Hinduism 16. Sacred Places and Tourism in the Roman Catholic Tradition 17. Tourism and Informal Pilgrimage among the Latter-Day Saints 18. Conclusion

408 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors argue that people protect the belief in a controlled, nonrandom world by imbuing their social, physical, and metaphysical environments with order and structure when their sense of personal control is threatened.
Abstract: We propose that people protect the belief in a controlled, nonrandom world by imbuing their social, physical, and metaphysical environments with order and structure when their sense of personal control is threatened. We demonstrate that when personal control is threatened, people can preserve a sense of order by (a) perceiving patterns in noise or adhering to superstitions and conspiracies, (b) defending the legitimacy of the sociopolitical institutions that offer control, or (c) believing in an interventionist God. We also present evidence that these processes of compensatory control help people cope with the anxiety and discomfort that lacking personal control fuels, that it is lack of personal control specifically and not general threat or negativity that drives these processes, and that these various forms of compensatory control are ultimately substitutable for one another. Our model of compensatory control offers insight into a wide variety of phenomena, from prejudice to the idiosyncratic rituals o...

407 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two heuristics for space subdivisions using bintrees are examined based on the intuition that surface area is a good estimate of intersection probability and the fact that the optimal splitting plane lies between the spatial median and the object median planes of a volume.
Abstract: Ray tracing requires testing of many rays to determine intersections with objects. A way of reducing the computation is to organize objects into hierarchical data structures. We examine two heuristics for space subdivisions using bintrees, one based on the intuition that surface area is a good estimate of intersection probability, one based on the fact that the optimal splitting plane lies between the spatial median and the object median planes of a volume. Traversal algorithms using cross links between nodes are presented as generalizations of ropes in octrees. Simulations of the surface area heuristic and the cross link scheme are presented. These results generalize to other hierarchical data structures.

407 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This consensus statement represents a set of recommendations developed following the 1st and 2nd International Symposia on the Female Athlete Triad and is intended to provide clinical guidelines for physicians, athletic trainers and other healthcare providers for the screening, diagnosis and treatment of the Female athlete Triad.
Abstract: The Female Athlete Triad is a medical condition often observed in physically active girls and women, and involves three components: (1) low energy availability with or without disordered eating, (2) menstrual dysfunction and (3) low bone mineral density. Female athletes often present with one or more of the three Triad components, and an early intervention is essential to prevent its progression to serious endpoints that include clinical eating disorders, amenorrhoea and osteoporosis. This consensus statement represents a set of recommendations developed following the 1st (San Francisco, California, USA) and 2nd (Indianapolis, Indiana, USA) International Symposia on the Female Athlete Triad. It is intended to provide clinical guidelines for physicians, athletic trainers and other healthcare providers for the screening, diagnosis and treatment of the Female Athlete Triad and to provide clear recommendations for return to play. The 2014 Female Athlete Triad Coalition Consensus Statement on Treatment and Return to Play of the Female Athlete Triad expert panel has proposed a risk stratification point system that takes into account magnitude of risk to assist the physician in decision-making regarding sport participation, clearance and return to play. Guidelines are offered for clearance categories, management by a multidisciplinary team and implementation of treatment contracts. This consensus paper has been endorsed by the Female Athlete Triad Coalition, an International Consortium of leading Triad researchers, physicians and other healthcare professionals, the American College of Sports Medicine and the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine.

407 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a donor-acceptor polymer semiconductor (PDPP-TBT) was proposed for low-bandgap OTFTs with balanced hole and electron mobilities of 0.35 cm2 V1s-1 and 0.40 cm 2 V-1s -1, respectively.
Abstract: A new, solution-processable, low-bandgap, diketopyrrolopyrrole- benzothiadiazole-based, donor-acceptor polymer semiconductor (PDPP-TBT) is reported. This polymer exhibits ambipolar charge transport when used as a single component active semiconductor in OTFTs with balanced hole and electron mobilities of 0.35 cm2 V-1s-1 and 0.40 cm 2 V-1s-1, respectively. This polymer has the potential for ambipolar transistor-based complementary circuits in printed electronics.

406 citations


Authors

Showing all 36498 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
John J.V. McMurray1781389184502
David A. Weitz1781038114182
David Taylor131246993220
Lei Zhang130231286950
Will J. Percival12947387752
Trevor Hastie124412202592
Stephen Mann12066955008
Xuan Zhang119153065398
Mark A. Tarnopolsky11564442501
Qiang Yang112111771540
Wei Zhang112118993641
Hans-Peter Seidel112121351080
Theodore S. Rappaport11249068853
Robert C. Haddon11257752712
David Zhang111102755118
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20241
2023213
2022702
20215,360
20205,388
20195,200