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Institution

University of Windsor

EducationWindsor, Ontario, Canada
About: University of Windsor is a education organization based out in Windsor, Ontario, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Argumentation theory. The organization has 10654 authors who have published 22307 publications receiving 435906 citations. The organization is also known as: UWindsor & Assumption University of Windsor.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Tom Carney1

3,200 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Drug–placebo differences in antidepressant efficacy increase as a function of baseline severity, but are relatively small even for severely depressed patients.
Abstract: Background Meta-analyses of antidepressant medications have reported only modest benefits over placebo treatment, and when unpublished trial data are included, the benefit falls below accepted criteria for clinical significance. Yet, the efficacy of the antidepressants may also depend on the severity of initial depression scores. The purpose of this analysis is to establish the relation of baseline severity and antidepressant efficacy using a relevant dataset of published and unpublished clinical trials. Methods and Findings We obtained data on all clinical trials submitted to the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the licensing of the four new-generation antidepressants for which full datasets were available. We then used meta-analytic techniques to assess linear and quadratic effects of initial severity on improvement scores for drug and placebo groups and on drug–placebo difference scores. Drug–placebo differences increased as a function of initial severity, rising from virtually no difference at moderate levels of initial depression to a relatively small difference for patients with very severe depression, reaching conventional criteria for clinical significance only for patients at the upper end of the very severely depressed category. Meta-regression analyses indicated that the relation of baseline severity and improvement was curvilinear in drug groups and showed a strong, negative linear component in placebo groups.

2,215 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Investigation of how the Five-Factor Model of personality relates to Facebook use indicated that personality factors were not as influential as previous literature would suggest, but a motivation to communicate was influential in terms of Facebook use.

1,679 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results indicate some positive findings with respect to reporting practices including proposing multiple models a priori and near universal reporting of the chi-square significance test, but many deficiencies were found such as lack of information regarding missing data and assessment of normality.
Abstract: Reporting practices in 194 confirmatory factor analysis studies (1,409 factor models) published in American Psychological Association journals from 1998 to 2006 were reviewed and compared with established reporting guidelines. Three research questions were addressed: (a) how do actual reporting practices compare with published guidelines? (b) how do researchers report model fit in light of divergent perspectives on the use of ancillary fit indices (e.g., L.-T. Hu & P. M. Bentler, 1999; H. W. Marsh, K.-T., Hau, & Z. Wen, 2004)? and (c) are fit measures that support hypothesized models reported more often than fit measures that are less favorable? Results indicate some positive findings with respect to reporting practices including proposing multiple models a priori and near universal reporting of the chi-square significance test. However, many deficiencies were found such as lack of information regarding missing data and assessment of normality. Additionally, the authors found increases in reported values of some incremental fit statistics and no statistically significant evidence that researchers selectively report measures of fit that support their preferred model. Recommendations for reporting are summarized and a checklist is provided to help editors, reviewers, and authors improve reporting practices.

1,662 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
17 Nov 2006-Science
TL;DR: The compound (C6H2Me3)2PH(C 6F4)BH(C6F5)2 (Me, methyl), which is derived through an unusual reaction involving dimesitylphosphine substitution at a para carbon of tris(pentafluorophenyl) borane, cleanly loses H2 at temperatures above 100°C.
Abstract: Although reversible covalent activation of molecular hydrogen (H2) is a common reaction at transition metal centers, it has proven elusive in compounds of the lighter elements. We report that the compound (C6H2Me3)2PH(C6F4)BH(C6F5)2 (Me, methyl), which we derived through an unusual reaction involving dimesitylphosphine substitution at a para carbon of tris(pentafluorophenyl) borane, cleanly loses H2 at temperatures above 100°C. Preliminary kinetic studies reveal this process to be first order. Remarkably, the dehydrogenated product (C6H2Me3)2P(C6F4)B(C6F5)2 is stable and reacts with 1 atmosphere of H2 at 25°C to reform the starting complex. Deuteration studies were also carried out to probe the mechanism.

1,617 citations


Authors

Showing all 10751 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Keith S. Dobson5328821699
Mohamed F. Mokbel5323711362
Frank A. P. C. Gobas5314711645
Fatih Şen533998622
Jiming Liu5342911738
John D. Brennan522288617
K. W. Michael Siu522198381
Ali Polat521868450
Ricardo Aroca5129510276
Rajni V. Patel5149810578
E. Glenn Schellenberg501259605
Jack P. Callaghan502818397
Ahmet T. Alpas491887680
Byron P. Rourke491117762
Thomas J. Katz492048060
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202327
2022178
20211,147
20201,005
20191,001
2018882