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Institution

Williams College

EducationWilliamstown, Massachusetts, United States
About: Williams College is a education organization based out in Williamstown, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Politics. The organization has 2257 authors who have published 5015 publications receiving 213160 citations. The organization is also known as: Williams.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate how the largest use of time (sleep) affects productivity and test a model in which sleep improves productivity, consistent with the results of previous studies.
Abstract: We investigate how the largest use of time—sleep—affects productivity. Time use data from the United States allow us to test a model in which sleep improves productivity. Consistent with t...

64 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a simple box model to quantify the rates of landscape change in the post-orogenic Rocky Mountains and showed that if a substantial fraction of void space is created by volume expansion in the weathering rock materials, ∼7 m of weathered rock materials could form in as little as 230 kyr.

64 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Phebe Cramer1
TL;DR: The identity status, narcissism, and use of defense mechanisms of 89 college seniors who had previously been assessed as they entered college (Cramer, 1995) was determined as discussed by the authors.

64 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, 79 college students and community adults filled out a questionnaire in which they reported whether they agreed or disagreed with 21 statements previously used in a survey of eyewitness experts (Kassin, Ellsworth, & Smith, 1989).
Abstract: To compare people's beliefs about eyewitness testimony with expert opinion, 79 college students and community adults filled out a questionnaire in which they reported whether they agreed or disagreed with 21 statements previously used in a survey of eyewitness experts (Kassin, Ellsworth, & Smith, 1989). The results indicated that there was a significant inter-item correlation of agreement rates but that subjects differed from the experts on 15 of these items. For courts seeking to determine the extent to which juries need assistance in their evaluations of eyewitness evidence, these findings offer a tentative list of topics worthy of either expert testimony or cautionary instructions from the judge.

63 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Meta-analytic evidence showed that alliance–outcome associations did not differ for couple versus family therapy, but correlations were significantly stronger in samples with younger problem children, older adults, proportionally more male youth and adults, and when the families voluntarily sought help (as compared with involuntary or mandated families).
Abstract: This article reviews meta-analytic evidence for the alliance-outcome relation in couple and family therapy (CFT), with implications for clinical practice. We begin by describing the unique features of CFT alliances and their measurement, followed by two case descriptions. We explain that due to the systemic context of CFT, each patient's personal alliance with the therapist affects and is affected by other family members' levels of collaboration. Because family members often seek help when they are in conflict with one another, "split" alliances are common, as are problematic within-system alliances, defined as the degree to which family members agree on the nature of their problems and value participating in therapy together to achieve shared goals. In our meta-analysis of 48 studies with 40 independent samples, we used a three-level random effects model (Ns = 2,568 families, 1,545 couples, and 491 effect sizes) and found r = .297. In another analysis with seven independent samples and 31 effect sizes, the split alliance-outcome association was also significant, r = .316, indicating that the more split or unbalanced the alliance, the poorer the outcome. Moderator analyses showed that alliance-outcome associations did not differ for couple versus family therapy, but correlations were significantly stronger in samples with younger problem children, older adults, proportionally more male youth and adults, and when the families voluntarily sought help (as compared with involuntary or mandated families). The article concludes with research-informed strategies for building and sustaining strong systemic alliances in CFT. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).

63 citations


Authors

Showing all 2291 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Alfred Kröner10137431665
Gabriel B. Brammer9133430335
William M. Tierney8442324235
Larry L. Jacoby7716625631
David P. DiVincenzo7128240038
James T. Carlton7019721690
Robert K. Merton6719074002
Allen Taylor6322216589
John A. Smolin6315024657
Qing Wang6254817215
Neal I. Lindeman6221731462
Michael I. Norton6027317597
Charles H. Bennett6011767435
Brian D. Fields5725063673
Hans C. Oettgen5712410056
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202313
202271
2021209
2020237
2019216
2018190