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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: Of the neuropsychological features of NLD described by Rourke, deficits in visual- perceptual-organizational psychomotor coordination and complex tactile-perceptual skills appeared to be most representative (in the sense of most discriminative) of the NLD syndrome in the children examined.
Abstract: The identifying features of the syndrome of nonverbal learning disabilities (NLD) were examined with a view to determining their relative discriminant validity A stepwise linear discriminant function analysis of children with NLD (n = 29), children with reading and spelling disabilities (Group R-S; n = 27), and a group of nonclinical children (NC; n = 27) on 15 neuropsychological variables yielded a subset of scores on four tests (Target Test; Trail Making Test, Part B; Tactual Performance Test; and Grooved Pegboard Test) that accurately (> 95%) discriminated the NLD group from the R-S and NC subjects Of the neuropsychological features of NLD described by Rourke (1987, 1988b, 1989), deficits in visual-perceptual-organizational psychomotor coordination and complex tactile-perceptual skills appeared to be most representative (in the sense of most discriminative) of the NDL syndrome in the children examined These are also the dimensions that are considered to be "primary" in the NLD model (Rourke, 1989) Replication of these results, employing children with other clinical disorders, is necessary

196 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is encouraging that ecologists are beginning to examine how and why maternal GCs translate ecological and environmental stressors into preparative stress axis programming in free-living systems.
Abstract: Summary 1. Biomedical researchers have long appreciated that maternal stressors can induce preparative and adaptive programming in offspring via exposure to maternal Glucocorticoids (GCs). However, few ecologists are aware of the capacity for maternal GC exposure to translate ecological and environmental stressors into preparative and adaptive programmed offspring responses in free-living systems. We review a growing body of experimental work indicating that circulating maternal GCs link ecological stressors with adaptive programming of the stress axis. Throughout, we emphasise that natural and human-induced ecological stressors play a fundamental role in programming the capacity of individuals, populations and communities to respond to both predictable and unpredictable ecological change via translating maternal adversity into responsive programming of the vertebrate stress axis. 2. To encourage rigorous testing of this paradigm in a broad range of ecological systems, we introduce the principal extrinsic stressors with a recognised potential to alter maternal circulating GC levels. We then review from the biomedical literature regarding the underlying physiological and epigenetic mechanisms of stress-induced programming of individual phenotypes to predict how variation in ecological stressors can produce individual variation in stress axis management. 3. To appreciate the potential evolutionary inertia (i.e. adaptive value) of maternally programmed individual variation, we review key recent studies in free-living systems that test its adaptive function, and then discuss how variation in stress-axis programming may scale up to influence populations and ecological communities. 4. Given the huge potential of this field, it is encouraging that ecologists are beginning to examine how and why maternal GCs translate ecological and environmental stressors into preparative stress axis programming in free-living systems.

196 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In nature, the aggressive habits of round gobies will likely result in the demise of mottled sculpins.

196 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of the existing literature on the subtyping of PGs based on psychopathology, personality, and/or motivation for gambling concludes that three PG subtypes consistently emerge from the empirical literature, and should be the focus of future study.

194 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article provides a survey of recent research on fault prognosis and reports on some of the significant application domains where prognosis techniques are employed.
Abstract: Fault diagnosis and prognosis are some of the most crucial functionalities in complex and safety-critical engineering systems, and particularly fault diagnosis, has been a subject of intensive research in the past four decades. Such capabilities allow for detection and isolation of early developing faults as well as prediction of fault propagation, which can allow for preventive maintenance, or even serve as a countermeasure to the possibility of catastrophic incidence as a result of a failure. Following a short preliminary overview and definitions, this article provides a survey of recent research on fault prognosis. Additionally, we report on some of the significant application domains where prognosis techniques are employed. Finally, some potential directions for future research are outlined.

194 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