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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TL;DR: This article found that if individuals opposed to gay and lesbian rights are able to expand the scope of the conflict, the pattern of politics conforms to morality politics, while interest group theory suggests that these policies will correspond with interest group resources, elite values, and past policy actions.
Abstract: Morality politics theory predicts that gay rights policy will reflect the influence of religious groups, party competition, and partisanship while interest group theory suggests that these policies will correspond with interest group resources, elite values, and past policy actions. Using multiple regression on a 50-state data set and a county-level data set for gay rights initiatives in Oregon and Colorado, we found gay and lesbian politics are no different from those for other policy issues. When gay and lesbian rights are not salient, the pattern of politics resembles that of interest group politics. If individuals opposed to gay and lesbian rights are able to expand the scope of the conflict, the pattern of politics conforms to morality politics.
329 citations
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University of British Columbia1, Columbia University2, California Institute of Technology3, McGill University4, Lafayette College5, National Radio Astronomy Observatory6, Goddard Space Flight Center7, Hillsdale College8, Cornell University9, Université de Montréal10, Vancouver Coastal Health11, West Virginia University12, University of Manchester13, University of New Mexico14, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee15, Max Planck Society16
TL;DR: In this article, a wide range of binary pulsar masses and orbital inclination were derived from the NANOGrav nine-year data set, with values as low as 1.41^{+0.21}-0.09}
Abstract: We analyze 24 binary radio pulsars in the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves (NANOGrav) nine-year data set. We make fourteen significant measurements of Shapiro delay, including new detections in four pulsar-binary systems (PSRs J0613$-$0200, J2017+0603, J2302+4442, and J2317+1439), and derive estimates of the binary-component masses and orbital inclination for these MSP-binary systems. We find a wide range of binary pulsar masses, with values as low as $m_{\rm p} = 1.18^{+0.10}_{-0.09}\text{M}_{\odot}$ for PSR J1918$-$0642 and as high as $m_{\rm p} = 1.928^{+0.017}_{-0.017}\text{M}_{\odot}$ for PSR J1614$-$2230 (both 68.3\% credibility). We make an improved measurement of the Shapiro timing delay in the PSR J1918$-$0642 and J2043+1711 systems, measuring the pulsar mass in the latter system to be $m_{\rm p} = 1.41^{+0.21}_{-0.18}\text{M}_{\odot}$ (68.3\% credibility) for the first time. We measure secular variations of one or more orbital elements in many systems, and use these measurements to further constrain our estimates of the pulsar and companion masses whenever possible. In particular, we used the observed Shapiro delay and periastron advance due to relativistic gravity in the PSR J1903+0327 system to derive a pulsar mass of $m_{\rm p} = 1.65^{+0.02}_{-0.02}\text{M}_{\odot}$ (68.3\% credibility). We discuss the implications that our mass measurements have on the overall neutron-star mass distribution, and on the "mass/orbital-period" correlation due to extended mass transfer.
329 citations
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TL;DR: Ivermectin, a broadly used anti-helminthic drug, proved to be a highly potent inhibitor of YFV replication and inhibited, although less efficiently, the replication of several other flaviviruses, i.e. dengue fever, Japanese encephalitis and tick-borne encephalopathy viruses.
Abstract: Objectives
Infection with yellow fever virus (YFV), the prototypic mosquito-borne flavivirus, causes severe febrile disease with haemorrhage, multi-organ failure and a high mortality. Moreover, in recent years the Flavivirus genus has gained further attention due to re-emergence and increasing incidence of West Nile, dengue and Japanese encephalitis viruses. Potent and safe antivirals are urgently needed.
327 citations
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TL;DR: A meta-analyses of Fimbriae, Flagella, and Glycocalyx, as well as genetic Approaches to the Study of Xenorhabdus and PhotorhabDus spp, show clear trends in pathogenicity, gene recognition, and antibiotic resistance.
326 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied four types of business ecosystems (Orchestra, Creative Bazaar, Jam Central, and MOD Station) and determined the success and failures of new ventures and established companies.
325 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 |