Institution
University of Windsor
Education•Windsor, 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 published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Two environmental subsidy policies are examined, namely, consumer and manufacturer subsidies, and it is found that the former yields a lower abatements and higher consumption quantity than the latter by focusing on consumption quantity instead of production emissions abatement.
101 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated information transmission and price discovery in informationally linked markets within the multivariate generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity and information share frameworks, and they showed that there is a bidirectional relationship in terms of price and volatility spillovers between US and Chinese markets, with a stronger effect from US to Chinese markets than the other way around.
101 citations
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TL;DR: Differences between Facebook non-users and frequent users were explored, indicating that close friendships might actually extend to social networks and contribute to a feeling of closeness and intimacy between friends in both an online and offline context.
101 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, an n-butanol-fuelled homogeneous charge compression ignition (HCCI) combustion was studied for a single-cylinder high compression ratio (18.2:1) diesel engine without any modifications to the airpath system.
101 citations
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TL;DR: If attachment theory can provide a framework for understanding treatment completion in an eating disorders partial hospital program among women with anorexia nervosa (AN), self-reports of high avoidant attachment predicted noncompletion of treatment for those with AN binge-purge subtype (ANB).
Abstract: The goal of this study was to examine if attachment theory can provide a framework for understanding treatment completion in an eating disorders partial hospital program among women with anorexia nervosa (AN). Attachment was measured using the Attachment Styles Questionnaire (Feeney, Noller, & Hanrahan, 1994). As hypothesized, self-reports of high avoidant attachment predicted noncompletion of treatment for those with AN binge-purge subtype (ANB). However, this relationship did not emerge for those with AN restricting subtype (ANR). Also as hypothesized, self-reports of high anxious attachment predicted completing treatment for those with ANB but not for those with ANR. For completers with ANB and ANR, the program was helpful in increasing body weight and lowering drive for thinness, body dissatisfaction, interpersonal problems, and depression. Attachment avoidance, characterized by devaluing one's need for relationships, may be a contraindication for group-based partial hospital treatment of ANB. Attachment anxiety, characterized by high preoccupation with relationships, may facilitate remaining in treatment for those with ANB.
100 citations
Authors
Showing all 10751 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Jie Zhang | 178 | 4857 | 221720 |
Robert E. W. Hancock | 152 | 775 | 88481 |
Michael Lynch | 112 | 422 | 63461 |
David Zhang | 111 | 1027 | 55118 |
Paul D. N. Hebert | 111 | 537 | 66288 |
Eleftherios P. Diamandis | 110 | 1064 | 52654 |
Qian Wang | 108 | 2148 | 65557 |
John W. Berry | 97 | 351 | 52470 |
Douglas W. Stephan | 89 | 663 | 34060 |
Rebecca Fisher | 86 | 255 | 50260 |
Mehdi Dehghan | 83 | 875 | 29225 |
Zhong-Qun Tian | 81 | 646 | 33168 |
Robert J. Letcher | 80 | 411 | 22778 |
Daniel J. Sexton | 76 | 369 | 25172 |
Bin Ren | 73 | 470 | 23452 |