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Institution

Washington State University

EducationPullman, Washington, United States
About: Washington State University is a education organization based out in Pullman, Washington, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Gene. The organization has 26947 authors who have published 57736 publications receiving 2341509 citations. The organization is also known as: WSU & Wazzu.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The ability of an environmental exposure to induce an epigenetic transgenerational adult onset disease phenotype is discussed in the current mini-review in the context of defining this phenomenon and the associated reproductive toxicology.

411 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Smart home activity recognition systems can learn generalized models for common activities that span multiple environment settings and resident types to help solve the challenge of integrating smart home technology into everyday life.
Abstract: Smart home activity recognition systems can learn generalized models for common activities that span multiple environment settings and resident types.

410 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is reported here that loading the arm reveals an important difference between cell activity in the two areas, which indicates that area 5 activity encodes the invariant spatial parameters (kinematics) of the movements.
Abstract: A previous study reported that proximal-arm related area 5 neurons showed continuously-graded changes in activity during unloaded arm movements in different directions (Kalaska et al. 1983), which resembled the responses of primary motor cortex cells in several respects (Georgopoulos et al. 1982). We report here that loading the arm reveals an important difference between cell activity in the two areas. Loads were continuously applied to the arm in different directions. The loads produced large continuously-graded changes in muscle activity but did not alter the handpath or joint angle changes of the arm during the movements. The activity of most area 5 cells was only weakly affected by the loads, and the overall pattern of population activity was virtually unaltered under all load conditions. This indicates that area 5 activity encodes the invariant spatial parameters (kinematics) of the movements. In contrast, many motor cortex cells showed large changes in activity during loading, and so signal the changing forces, torques or muscle activity (movement dynamics; Kalaska et al. 1989).

409 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 May 2008-Geology
TL;DR: The Qiangtang metamorphic belt (QMB) in central Tibet is one of the largest and most recently documented high pressure to near-ultra-high pressure (near-UHP) belts on Earth as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: The Qiangtang metamorphic belt (QMB) in central Tibet is one of the largest and most recently documented high-pressure (HP) to near-ultrahigh-pressure (near-UHP) belts on Earth. Lu-Hf ages of eclogite- and blueschist-facies rocks within the QMB are 244–223 Ma, indistinguishable from the age of UHP metamorphism in the Qinling-Dabie orogen. Results of a U-Pb detrital zircon study suggest that protoliths of the QMB include upper Paleozoic Qiangtang continental margin strata and sandstones that were derived from a Paleozoic arc terrane that developed within the Paleo-Tethys Ocean to the north. We attribute QMB HP metamorphism to continental collision between the Qiangtang terrane and a Paleo-Tethys arc terrane. This collision, and the coeval South China–North China collision, may have slowed convergence between Laurasia and Gondwana-derived terranes and initiated Mediterranean-style rollback and backarc basin development within much of the remnant Paleo-Tethys Ocean realm.

409 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A critical appraisal of food parenting practices, including clear terminology and definitions, by a working group of content experts and the development of a content map for future research that presents 3 overarching, higher-order food parenting constructs--coercive control, structure, and autonomy support--as well as specific practice subconstructs.
Abstract: Although research shows that "food parenting practices" can impact children's diet and eating habits, current understanding of the impact of specific practices has been limited by inconsistencies in terminology and definitions. This article represents a critical appraisal of food parenting practices, including clear terminology and definitions, by a working group of content experts. The result of this effort was the development of a content map for future research that presents 3 overarching, higher-order food parenting constructs--coercive control, structure, and autonomy support--as well as specific practice subconstructs. Coercive control includes restriction, pressure to eat, threats and bribes, and using food to control negative emotions. Structure includes rules and limits, limited/guided choices, monitoring, meal- and snacktime routines, modeling, food availability and accessibility, food preparation, and unstructured practices. Autonomy support includes nutrition education, child involvement, encouragement, praise, reasoning, and negotiation. Literature on each construct is reviewed, and directions for future research are offered. Clear terminology and definitions should facilitate cross-study comparisons and minimize conflicting findings resulting from previous discrepancies in construct operationalization.

408 citations


Authors

Showing all 27183 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Anil K. Jain1831016192151
Martin Karplus163831138492
Herbert A. Simon157745194597
Suvadeep Bose154960129071
Rajesh Kumar1494439140830
Kevin Murphy146728120475
Jonathan D. G. Jones12941780908
Douglas E. Soltis12761267161
Peter W. Kalivas12342852445
Chris Somerville12228445742
Pamela S. Soltis12054361080
Yuehe Lin11864155399
Howard I. Maibach116182160765
Jizhong Zhou11576648708
Farshid Guilak11048041327
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202398
2022344
20212,786
20202,783
20192,691
20182,370