Institution
Wichita State University
Education•Wichita, Kansas, United States•
About: Wichita State University is a education organization based out in Wichita, Kansas, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 4988 authors who have published 9563 publications receiving 253824 citations. The organization is also known as: WSU & Fairmount College.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Relay, Vortex, Bit error rate
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) was used to characterize and quantify oxygen functionality present in a synthetic mesophase pitch in an oxygen-rich atmosphere.
113 citations
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TL;DR: Inclusion of joint mobilization in a rehabilitation program created trends toward increased shoulder internal rotation mobility, and internal rotation increased in both groups.
Abstract: Background:Posterior shoulder tightness, as demonstrated by limited internal rotation range of motion, is a suggested factor in many shoulder pathologies. Methods to increase posterior shoulder mob...
113 citations
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TL;DR: The authors present a model that explains how subordinates perceive the power of their supervisors and the causal mechanisms by which these perceptions translate into subordinate outcomes.
Abstract: The authors present a model that explains how subordinates perceive the power of their supervisors and the causal mechanisms by which these perceptions translate into subordinate outcomes. Drawing on identity and resource-dependence theories, the authors propose that supervisors have power over their subordinates when they control resources needed for the subordinates' enactment and maintenance of current and desired identities. The joint effect of perceptions of supervisor power and supervisor intentions to provide such resources leads to 4 conditions ranging from highly functional to highly dysfunctional: confirmation, hope, apathy, and progressive withdrawal. Each of these conditions is associated with specific outcomes such as the quality of the supervisor-subordinate relationship, turnover, and changes in the type and centrality of various subordinate identities.
113 citations
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TL;DR: The Dartmouth Stellar Evolution Database as discussed by the authors is a collection of stellar evolution tracks and isochrones that spans a range of [Fe/H] from -2.5 to +0.5, [alpha/Fe] from −0.2 to + 0.8, and initial He mass fractions from Y=0.245 to 0.40.
Abstract: The ever-expanding depth and quality of photometric and spectroscopic observations of stellar populations increase the need for theoretical models in regions of age-composition parameter space that are largely unexplored at present. Stellar evolution models that employ the most advanced physics and cover a wide range of compositions are needed to extract the most information from current observations of both resolved and unresolved stellar populations. The Dartmouth Stellar Evolution Database is a collection of stellar evolution tracks and isochrones that spans a range of [Fe/H] from -2.5 to +0.5, [alpha/Fe] from -0.2 to +0.8 (for [Fe/H] 0), and initial He mass fractions from Y=0.245 to 0.40. Stellar evolution tracks were computed for masses between 0.1 and 4 Msun, allowing isochrones to be generated for ages as young as 250 Myr. For the range in masses where the core He flash occurs, separate He-burning tracks were computed starting from the zero age horizontal branch. The tracks and isochrones have been transformed to the observational plane in a variety of photometric systems including standard UBV(RI)c, Stromgren uvby, SDSS ugriz, 2MASS JHKs, and HST ACS-WFC and WFPC2. The Dartmouth Stellar Evolution Database is accessible through a website at this http URL where all tracks, isochrones, and additional files can be downloaded.
113 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the effect of Ricianness on the capacity of multiple antenna systems is investigated under the assumption that channel state information (CSI) is available only at the receiver, and the exact capacity is given for the former case while capacity bounds are derived for the latter case.
Abstract: The effect of Rician-ness on the capacity of multiple antenna systems is investigated under the assumption that channel state information (CSI) is available only at the receiver. The average-power-constrained capacity of such systems is considered under two different assumptions on the knowledge about the fading available at the transmitter: the case in which the transmitter has no knowledge of fading at all, and the case in which the transmitter has knowledge of the distribution of the fading process but not the instantaneous CSI. The exact capacity is given for the former case while capacity bounds are derived for the latter case. A new signalling scheme is also proposed for the latter case and it is shown that by exploiting the knowledge of Rician-ness at the transmitter via this signalling scheme, significant capacity gain can be achieved. The derived capacity bounds are evaluated explicitly to provide numerical results in some representative situations.
113 citations
Authors
Showing all 5021 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Herbert A. Simon | 157 | 745 | 194597 |
Rui Zhang | 151 | 2625 | 107917 |
Frederick Wolfe | 119 | 417 | 101272 |
Shunichi Fukuzumi | 111 | 1256 | 52764 |
Robert Y. Moore | 95 | 245 | 35941 |
Maurizio Salaris | 76 | 417 | 20927 |
Annie K. Powell | 73 | 486 | 22020 |
Gunther Uhlmann | 72 | 444 | 19560 |
Danielle S. McNamara | 70 | 539 | 22142 |
Jonathan P. Hill | 67 | 367 | 19271 |
Francis D'Souza | 66 | 477 | 16662 |
Osamu Ito | 65 | 549 | 17035 |
Louis J. Guillette | 64 | 338 | 20263 |
Karl A. Gschneidner | 64 | 675 | 22712 |
Robert Reid | 59 | 215 | 12097 |