Institution
University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
Education•Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States•
About: University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee is a education organization based out in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Gravitational wave. The organization has 11839 authors who have published 28034 publications receiving 936438 citations. The organization is also known as: UWM & University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
Topics: Population, Gravitational wave, Poison control, LIGO, Health care
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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Charles University in Prague1, Durham University2, Memorial University of Newfoundland3, McGill University4, Dalhousie University5, Minnesota Department of Natural Resources6, Alberta Geological Survey7, University of Wisconsin-Madison8, Laurentian University9, Université du Québec à Rimouski10, University of Exeter11, Geological Survey of Canada12, University of Maine13, University at Buffalo14, Université du Québec à Montréal15, Laval University16, Oregon State University17, Simon Fraser University18, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign19, Government of Quebec20, Western Washington University21, State University of New York at Plattsburgh22, University of Copenhagen23, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee24, University of Minnesota25, University of Gothenburg26, Western Michigan University27, University College Dublin28, Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland29, Indiana University30, University of Cincinnati31, Norwegian University of Science and Technology32, Université de Montréal33, Tufts University34, University of Waterloo35, University of Manitoba36, Alberta Environment37
TL;DR: The most up-to-date and authoritative margin chronology for the entire ice sheet complex is featured in two publications (Geological Survey of Canada Open File 1574 [Dyke et al., 2003] and as mentioned in this paper ).
171 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a case study of urban community gardening in the context of neoliberal economic restructuring is presented, where the authors examine the impacts of community gardening on citizenship practice and the effects of volunteerism on the development of community gardens.
Abstract: A growing body of literature conceptualizes urban agriculture and community gardens as spaces of democratic citizenship and radical political practice. Urban community gardens are lauded as spaces through which residents can alleviate food insecurity and claim rights to the city. However, discussions of citizenship practice more broadly challenge the notion that citizen participation is inherently transformative or empowering, particularly in the context of neoliberal economic restructuring. This paper investigates urban community gardens as spaces of citizenship through a case study of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It examines the impacts of community gardens on citizenship practice and the effects of volunteerism on the development of community gardens. It explores how grassroots community gardens simultaneously contest and reinforce local neoliberal policies. This research contributes empirically and theoretically to scholarship on urban food movements, neoliberal urbanization, collaborative governance, and citizenship practice.
171 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors study the relationship between the underground economy and financial development in a model of tax evasion and bank intermediation and show that the marginal net benefit of income disclosure increases with the level of financial development.
Abstract: We study the relationship between the underground economy and financial development in a model of tax evasion and bank intermediation. Agents with heterogeneous skills seek loans in order to undertake risky investment projects. Asymmetric information between borrowers and lenders implies a menu of loan contracts that induce self-selection in a separating equilibrium. Faced with these contracts, agents choose how much of their income to declare by trading off their incentives to offer collateral against their disincentives to comply with tax obligations. The key implication of the analysis is that the marginal net benefit of income disclosure increases with the level of financial development. Thus, in accordance with empirical observation, we establish the result that the lower is the stage of such development, the higher is the incidence of tax evasion and the greater is the size of the underground economy.
171 citations
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TL;DR: An unshared object can be accessed without regard to possible conflicts with other parts of a system, whether concurrent or single‐threaded.
Abstract: An unshared object can be accessed without regard to possible conflicts with other parts of a system, whether concurrent or single-threaded. A unique variable (sometimes known as a ‘free’ or ‘linear’ variable) is one that either is null or else refers to an unshared object. Being able to declare and check which variables are unique improves a programmer's ability to avoid program faults.
In previously described uniqueness extensions to imperative languages, a unique variable can be accessed only with a destructive read, which nullifies it after the value is obtained. This approach suffers from several disadvantages: the use of destructive reads increases the complexity of the program which must continually restore nullified values; adding destructive reads changes the semantics of the programming language; and many of the nullifications are actually unnecessary.
We demonstrate instead that uniqueness can be preserved through the use of existing language features. We give a modular static analysis that checks (nonexecutable) uniqueness annotations superimposed on an imperative programming language without destructive reads. The ‘alias-burying’ intuition is that aliases that are ‘dead’ (will never be used again) can be safely ‘buried’ (made undefined). Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
170 citations
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11 Feb 2013TL;DR: In this article, a self-contained treatment of the structure, stability, and oscillations of rotating neutron stars is provided, including key approximations, including slow rotation and perturbations of spherical and rotating stars, and numerical methods for computing equilibrium configurations and the nonlinear evolution of their oscillations.
Abstract: The masses of neutron stars are limited by an instability to gravitational collapse and an instability driven by gravitational waves limits their spin Their oscillations are relevant to x-ray observations of accreting binaries and to gravitational wave observations of neutron stars formed during the coalescence of double neutron-star systems This volume includes more than forty years of research to provide graduate students and researchers in astrophysics, gravitational physics and astronomy with the first self-contained treatment of the structure, stability and oscillations of rotating neutron stars This monograph treats the equations of stellar equilibrium; key approximations, including slow rotation and perturbations of spherical and rotating stars; stability theory and its applications, from convective stability to the r-mode instability; and numerical methods for computing equilibrium configurations and the nonlinear evolution of their oscillations The presentation of fundamental equations, results and applications is accessible to readers who do not need the detailed derivations
170 citations
Authors
Showing all 11948 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Caroline S. Fox | 155 | 599 | 138951 |
Mark D. Griffiths | 124 | 1238 | 61335 |
Benjamin William Allen | 124 | 807 | 87750 |
James A. Dumesic | 118 | 615 | 58935 |
Richard O'Shaughnessy | 114 | 462 | 77439 |
Patrick Brady | 110 | 442 | 73418 |
Laura Cadonati | 109 | 450 | 73356 |
Stephen Fairhurst | 109 | 426 | 71657 |
Benno Willke | 109 | 508 | 74673 |
Benjamin J. Owen | 108 | 351 | 70678 |
Kenneth H. Nealson | 108 | 483 | 51100 |
P. Ajith | 107 | 372 | 70245 |
Duncan A. Brown | 107 | 567 | 68823 |
I. A. Bilenko | 105 | 393 | 68801 |
F. Fidecaro | 105 | 569 | 74781 |