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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
TL;DR: A transactional model of adolescent suicidal behavior is supported, whereby inaccuracies in the appraisal aspects of problem solving (but not in the solution-generation aspects) in the face of high life stress lead to a reduction in the use of adaptive efforts to cope.
Abstract: Twenty adolescents who had made suicide attempts were compared with 20 nonpsychiatric control subjects on measures of problem solving, stress, and coping. The suicidal group did not show evidence of "rigid" thinking or of deficits in the ability to generate solutions to standardized interpersonal problems. However, they did report recent histories of more severe life stress and had inaccurate appraisal of the extent to which stressful events could be controlled. Although suicidal patients were able to generate as many adaptive strategies as control subjects for coping with their own most severe recent real-life stressor, they actually used fewer. They were also more likely to identify maladaptive behaviors as ways of coping. These findings support a transactional model of adolescent suicidal behavior, whereby inaccuracies in the appraisal aspects of problem solving (but not in the solution-generation aspects) in the face of high life stress lead to a reduction in the use of adaptive efforts to cope.

131 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article analyzed factors related to casual sex among Canadian university students on a spring break vacation and found that expectation of participation in spring break activities, social norms expressed through peer group influences, and personal attitudes explained 74% of the variance in the intentions to engage in casual sex.
Abstract: Using Triandis's theory of interpersonal behavior, we analyzed factors related to casual sex among Canadian university students on a spring break vacation. Two samples were obtained: 151 students completed a questionnaire before a spring break trip to Daytona Beach, Florida and 681 completed a questionnaire during or immediately following the vacation. More men than women intended to have casual sex but similar percentages of men (15%) and women (13%) had actually engaged in casual sex. In ordinary least squares regression, expectation of participation in spring break activities, social norms expressed through peer group influences, and personal attitudes explained 74% of the variance in the intentions to engage in casual sex. In logistic regression, intentions and participation in spring break activities correctly classified 80% of the men into those who did and did not engage in casual sex. Agreements formed with friends about casual sex and the proportion of friends who participated in coitus on spring...

131 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Investigation of suppressive capabilities of mussels 6–22-mm in size on Lake St Clair microzooplankton found direct suppression by Dreissena coupled with food limitation provides the most parsimonious explanation for these patterns.
Abstract: SUMMARY 1. The zebra mussel (Dreissena polymorpha) is amongst the most recent species to invade the Great Lakes. We explored the suppressive capabilities of mussels 6–22-mm in size on Lake St Clair microzooplankton (< 240)μm) in laboratory experiments. 2. Absolute suppression of rotifers and Dreissena veliger larvae was proportional to mussel shell length for individuals larger than 10 mm; larger zooplankton, mainly copepod nauplii and Cladocera, were not affected. Mussel clearance rates on rotifers generally exceeded those on veligers, although rates for both increased with increasing mussel size. Rotifer-based clearance rates of large (22 mm) mussels approached published values for phytoplankton food. 3. Most zooplankton taxa, particularly rotifers, declined significantly in western Lake Erie during the late 1980s concomitant with the establishment and population growth of zebra mussels in the basin. Densities of some taxa subsequently increased, although rotifers and copepod nauplii densities remained suppressed through 1993. Available evidence indicates that direct suppression by Dreissena coupled with food limitation provides the most parsimonious explanation for these patterns.

131 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The electrophysiological methods of auditory brainstem response (ABR) and electroolfactogram (EOG) were used to investigate auditory and olfactory abilities of pre- and post-settlement stages of a damselfish, Pomacentrus nagasakiensis, finding similar capabilities in both ontogenetic stages.
Abstract: The propagules of most species of reef fish are advected from the reef, necessitating a return to reef habitats at the end of the pelagic stage. There is increasing evidence of active attraction to the reef but the sensory abilities of reef fish larvae have not been characterized well enough to fully identify cues. The electrophysiological methods of auditory brainstem response (ABR) and electroolfactogram (EOG) were used to investigate auditory and olfactory abilities of pre- and post-settlement stages of a damselfish, Pomacentrus nagasakiensis (Pisces, Pomacentridae). Audiograms of the two ontogenetic stages were similar. Pre-settlement larvae heard as well as their post-settlement counterparts at all but two of the tested frequencies between 100 Hz and 2,000 Hz. At 100 and 600 Hz, pre-settlement larvae had ABR thresholds 8 dB higher than those of post-settlement juveniles. Both stages were able to detect locally recorded reef sounds. Similarly, no difference in olfactory ability was found between the two ontogenetic stages. Both stages showed olfactory responses to conspecifics as well as L-alanine. Therefore, the auditory and olfactory senses have similar capabilities in both ontogenetic stages. Settlement stage larvae of P. nagasakiensis can hear and smell reef cues but it is unclear as to what extent larvae use these sounds or smells, or both, as cues for locating settlement sites.

131 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An efficient approximation scheme for hyperbolic tangent function is proposed, based on a mathematical analysis considering the maximum allowable error as design parameter, which results in reduction in area, delay, and power in VLSI implementation of artificial neural networks with hyperbolics tangent activation function.
Abstract: Nonlinear activation function is one of the main building blocks of artificial neural networks. Hyperbolic tangent and sigmoid are the most used nonlinear activation functions. Accurate implementation of these transfer functions in digital networks faces certain challenges. In this paper, an efficient approximation scheme for hyperbolic tangent function is proposed. The approximation is based on a mathematical analysis considering the maximum allowable error as design parameter. Hardware implementation of the proposed approximation scheme is presented, which shows that the proposed structure compares favorably with previous architectures in terms of area and delay. The proposed structure requires less output bits for the same maximum allowable error when compared to the state-of-the-art. The number of output bits of the activation function determines the bit width of multipliers and adders in the network. Therefore, the proposed activation function results in reduction in area, delay, and power in VLSI implementation of artificial neural networks with hyperbolic tangent activation function.

131 citations


Authors

Showing all 10751 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Jie Zhang1784857221720
Robert E. W. Hancock15277588481
Michael Lynch11242263461
David Zhang111102755118
Paul D. N. Hebert11153766288
Eleftherios P. Diamandis110106452654
Qian Wang108214865557
John W. Berry9735152470
Douglas W. Stephan8966334060
Rebecca Fisher8625550260
Mehdi Dehghan8387529225
Zhong-Qun Tian8164633168
Robert J. Letcher8041122778
Daniel J. Sexton7636925172
Bin Ren7347023452
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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