{"data":[{"id":"10.6084/m9.figshare.3850842","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.6084/m9.figshare.3850842","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"name":"Hamou, Batel","givenName":"Batel","familyName":"Hamou","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"name":"Wainstock, Tamar","givenName":"Tamar","familyName":"Wainstock","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"name":"Mastrolia, Salvatore Andrea","givenName":"Salvatore Andrea","familyName":"Mastrolia","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"name":"Beer-Weisel, Ruthy","givenName":"Ruthy","familyName":"Beer-Weisel","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"name":"Staretz-Chacham, Orna","givenName":"Orna","familyName":"Staretz-Chacham","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"name":"Dukler, Doron","givenName":"Doron","familyName":"Dukler","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"name":"Rafaeli-Yehudai, Tal","givenName":"Tal","familyName":"Rafaeli-Yehudai","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"name":"Mazor, Moshe","givenName":"Moshe","familyName":"Mazor","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"name":"Erez, Offer","givenName":"Offer","familyName":"Erez","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]}],"titles":[{"title":"Induction of labor in twin gestation: lessons from a population based study"}],"publisher":"Taylor \u0026 Francis","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[{"subject":"Medicine"},{"subject":"Cell Biology"},{"subject":"Physiology"},{"subject":"FOS: Biological sciences","schemeUri":"http://www.oecd.org/science/inno/38235147.pdf","subjectScheme":"Fields of Science and Technology (FOS)"},{"subject":"Biotechnology"},{"subject":"Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified"},{"subject":"Science Policy"},{"subject":"Infectious Diseases"},{"subject":"FOS: Health sciences","schemeUri":"http://www.oecd.org/science/inno/38235147.pdf","subjectScheme":"Fields of Science and Technology (FOS)"}],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016-09-23","dateType":"Created"},{"date":"2026-04-08","dateType":"Updated"},{"date":"2017-02-10","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":null,"types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Journal contribution","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[{"relationType":"IsSupplementTo","relatedIdentifier":"10.3109/14767058.2016.1152252","relatedIdentifierType":"DOI"}],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":["216273 Bytes"],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[{"rights":"Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International","rightsUri":"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode","schemeUri":"https://spdx.org/licenses/","rightsIdentifier":"cc-by-4.0","rightsIdentifierScheme":"SPDX"}],"descriptions":[{"description":"\u003ci\u003eIntroduction:\u003c/i\u003e The route of delivery and the role of induction of labor in twin gestations are controversial. The aim of this study was to determine the efficacy of induction of labor in twin gestations. \u003ci\u003eMethods:\u003c/i\u003e This retrospective population based cohort study included 4605 twin gestations divided into following groups: 1) spontaneous parturition (\u003ci\u003en\u003c/i\u003e = 2937, 63.78%); 2) induction of labor (\u003ci\u003en\u003c/i\u003e = 653, 14.2%) and 3) elective cesarean delivery (\u003ci\u003en\u003c/i\u003e = 1015, 22.04%). \u003ci\u003eResults:\u003c/i\u003e The rate of vaginal delivery in the labor induction group was 81% (529/653). In comparison to the other study groups, induction of labor in twins was independently associated with a 77% reduction in the risk of cesarean delivery (OR 0.23; 95% CI 0.18–0.31) and a 78% reduction in the risk of postpartum death for the second twin (OR 0.22; 95% CI 0.05–0.94). The rate of nulliparity, term delivery and labor dystocia was higher in the induction of labor group (\u003ci\u003ep\u003c/i\u003e \u0026lt; 0.001 in all comparisons). \u003ci\u003eConclusions:\u003c/i\u003e Our results suggest that induction of labor in twin gestation is successful and is independently associated with substantial reduction in the risk of cesarean delivery and postpartum death of the second twin.","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://tandf.figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Induction_of_labor_in_twin_gestation_lessons_from_a_population_based_study/3850842","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":6,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"mds","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":1,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2016-09-23T03:45:00Z","registered":"2016-09-23T03:45:01Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-08T02:58:24Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"figshare.ars","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.6084/m9.figshare.3850842.v1","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.6084/m9.figshare.3850842.v1","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"name":"Hamou, Batel","givenName":"Batel","familyName":"Hamou","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"name":"Wainstock, Tamar","givenName":"Tamar","familyName":"Wainstock","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"name":"Mastrolia, Salvatore Andrea","givenName":"Salvatore Andrea","familyName":"Mastrolia","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"name":"Beer-Weisel, Ruthy","givenName":"Ruthy","familyName":"Beer-Weisel","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"name":"Staretz-Chacham, Orna","givenName":"Orna","familyName":"Staretz-Chacham","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"name":"Dukler, Doron","givenName":"Doron","familyName":"Dukler","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"name":"Rafaeli-Yehudai, Tal","givenName":"Tal","familyName":"Rafaeli-Yehudai","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"name":"Mazor, Moshe","givenName":"Moshe","familyName":"Mazor","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"name":"Erez, Offer","givenName":"Offer","familyName":"Erez","affiliation":[],"nameIdentifiers":[]}],"titles":[{"title":"Induction of labor in twin gestation: lessons from a population based study"}],"publisher":"Taylor \u0026 Francis","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[{"subject":"Medicine"},{"subject":"Cell Biology"},{"subject":"Physiology"},{"subject":"FOS: Biological sciences","schemeUri":"http://www.oecd.org/science/inno/38235147.pdf","subjectScheme":"Fields of Science and Technology (FOS)"},{"subject":"Biotechnology"},{"subject":"Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified"},{"subject":"Science Policy"},{"subject":"Infectious Diseases"},{"subject":"FOS: Health sciences","schemeUri":"http://www.oecd.org/science/inno/38235147.pdf","subjectScheme":"Fields of Science and Technology (FOS)"}],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016-09-23","dateType":"Created"},{"date":"2026-04-08","dateType":"Updated"},{"date":"2017-02-10","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":null,"types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Journal contribution","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[{"relationType":"IsIdenticalTo","relatedIdentifier":"10.6084/m9.figshare.3850842","relatedIdentifierType":"DOI"},{"relationType":"IsSupplementTo","relatedIdentifier":"10.3109/14767058.2016.1152252","relatedIdentifierType":"DOI"}],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":["216273 Bytes"],"formats":[],"version":"1","rightsList":[{"rights":"Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International","rightsUri":"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode","schemeUri":"https://spdx.org/licenses/","rightsIdentifier":"cc-by-4.0","rightsIdentifierScheme":"SPDX"}],"descriptions":[{"description":"\u003ci\u003eIntroduction:\u003c/i\u003e The route of delivery and the role of induction of labor in twin gestations are controversial. The aim of this study was to determine the efficacy of induction of labor in twin gestations. \u003ci\u003eMethods:\u003c/i\u003e This retrospective population based cohort study included 4605 twin gestations divided into following groups: 1) spontaneous parturition (\u003ci\u003en\u003c/i\u003e = 2937, 63.78%); 2) induction of labor (\u003ci\u003en\u003c/i\u003e = 653, 14.2%) and 3) elective cesarean delivery (\u003ci\u003en\u003c/i\u003e = 1015, 22.04%). \u003ci\u003eResults:\u003c/i\u003e The rate of vaginal delivery in the labor induction group was 81% (529/653). In comparison to the other study groups, induction of labor in twins was independently associated with a 77% reduction in the risk of cesarean delivery (OR 0.23; 95% CI 0.18–0.31) and a 78% reduction in the risk of postpartum death for the second twin (OR 0.22; 95% CI 0.05–0.94). The rate of nulliparity, term delivery and labor dystocia was higher in the induction of labor group (\u003ci\u003ep\u003c/i\u003e \u0026lt; 0.001 in all comparisons). \u003ci\u003eConclusions:\u003c/i\u003e Our results suggest that induction of labor in twin gestation is successful and is independently associated with substantial reduction in the risk of cesarean delivery and postpartum death of the second twin.","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://tandf.figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Induction_of_labor_in_twin_gestation_lessons_from_a_population_based_study/3850842/1","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":6,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"mds","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":1,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2016-09-23T03:44:59Z","registered":"2016-09-23T03:45:01Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-08T02:58:24Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"figshare.ars","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.5281/zenodo.19464053","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.5281/zenodo.19464053","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"name":"Romero Orduña, Linda Margarita","nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Linda Margarita","familyName":"Romero Orduña","affiliation":["Benemérita Universidad 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Virginia"],"nameIdentifiers":[{"schemeUri":"https://orcid.org","nameIdentifier":"https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8125-5918","nameIdentifierScheme":"ORCID"}]}],"titles":[{"title":"Information Quality Research Challenge: Information Quality in the Age of Ubiquitous Digital Intermediation"}],"publisher":"University of Virginia","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":null,"types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[{"rights":"Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY)"}],"descriptions":[{"description":"As information technology becomes an integral part of daily life, increasingly, people understand the world around them by turning to digital sources as opposed to directly interacting with objects in the physical world. This has ushered in the age of Ubiquitous Digital Intermediation (UDI). With the explosion of UDI, the scope of Information Quality (IQ) research is due to expand dramatically as the challenge becomes to capture the wealth and nuances of human experience. This article presents three key changes to the IQ landscape brought about by UDI, including expansion of the scope of traditional IQ dimensions, digital to physical mapping challenge, and the increased need to manage content authenticity. UDI generates many novel questions and opportunities for the IQ research community.","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://libraopen.library.virginia.edu/handle/item/9521","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":1,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"mds","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2022-09-03T18:36:05Z","registered":"2022-09-03T18:36:06Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T21:46:24Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"uva.libra","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.17613/d1zg9-cja20","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.17613/d1zg9-cja20","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"name":"GARCÍA LANDA, José Angel","nameType":"Personal","givenName":"José Angel","familyName":"GARCÍA LANDA","affiliation":["Universidad de Zaragoza"],"nameIdentifiers":[{"nameIdentifier":"joseangel","nameIdentifierScheme":"Other"},{"nameIdentifier":"0000-0001-7029-2174","nameIdentifierScheme":"ORCID"}]}],"titles":[{"title":"The Origin of the Human Mind in Infant Dramatism"}],"publisher":"Knowledge Commons","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016-07-11","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":"es","types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Journal article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[{"relationType":"HasVersion","relatedIdentifier":"10.17613/j57rp-7km14","relatedIdentifierType":"DOI"}],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[],"descriptions":[{"description":"George Herbert Mead's symbolic interactionalism provides a social behaviorist theory of the origin of role-playing. Being a perspective which stresses the inherent theatricality of human interaction and of the human mind, it is therefore, in an indirect way, a theory of the psychosocial roots of drama. Where we find the origin of language, and the origin of the human self, there we find, as well, the origin of drama. Besides, Mead's concept of self-interaction resulting from internalized interaction is crucial for an adequate understanding of the generative process which gives rise to the complexity of the human mind. \n_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________\n\nKeywords: George Herbert Mead, Dramatism, Social Psychology, Mind, Role-Playing, Internalization, Interactionism, Social Behaviorism, Drama, Self","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://works.hcommons.org/doi/10.17613/d1zg9-cja20","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":0,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"api","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":1,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2026-04-07T21:42:31Z","registered":"2026-04-07T21:42:31Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T21:42:31Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"msu.core","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.17613/j57rp-7km14","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.17613/j57rp-7km14","identifiers":[{"identifier":"oai:https://works.hcommons.org:j57rp-7km14","identifierType":"oai"}],"creators":[{"name":"GARCÍA LANDA, José Angel","nameType":"Personal","givenName":"José Angel","familyName":"GARCÍA LANDA","affiliation":["Universidad de Zaragoza"],"nameIdentifiers":[{"nameIdentifier":"joseangel","nameIdentifierScheme":"Other"},{"nameIdentifier":"0000-0001-7029-2174","nameIdentifierScheme":"ORCID"}]}],"titles":[{"title":"The Origin of the Human Mind in Infant Dramatism"}],"publisher":"Knowledge Commons","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016-07-11","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":"es","types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Journal article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[{"relationType":"IsVersionOf","relatedIdentifier":"10.17613/d1zg9-cja20","relatedIdentifierType":"DOI"}],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[],"descriptions":[{"description":"George Herbert Mead's symbolic interactionalism provides a social behaviorist theory of the origin of role-playing. Being a perspective which stresses the inherent theatricality of human interaction and of the human mind, it is therefore, in an indirect way, a theory of the psychosocial roots of drama. Where we find the origin of language, and the origin of the human self, there we find, as well, the origin of drama. Besides, Mead's concept of self-interaction resulting from internalized interaction is crucial for an adequate understanding of the generative process which gives rise to the complexity of the human mind. \n_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________\n\nKeywords: George Herbert Mead, Dramatism, Social Psychology, Mind, Role-Playing, Internalization, Interactionism, Social Behaviorism, Drama, Self","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://works.hcommons.org/doi/10.17613/j57rp-7km14","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":0,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"api","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":1,"created":"2026-04-07T21:42:30Z","registered":"2026-04-07T21:42:30Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T21:42:30Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"msu.core","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.18130/v3046z","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.18130/v3046z","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"John","familyName":"Scully","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"nameIdentifiers":[]}],"titles":[{"title":"The Corrosion Crisis in Flint, Michigan: A Call for Improvements in Technology Stewardship"}],"publisher":"National Academy of Engineering","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[{"subject":"Flint"},{"subject":"Michigan"},{"subject":"water contamination"},{"subject":"public policy"}],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":null,"types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[{"rights":"All rights reserved (no additional license for public reuse)"}],"descriptions":[{"description":"The water contamination crisis in Flint, Michigan, vividly demonstrates that the current approach to technology stewardship in the face of problems that may lead to calamity is not working. Lessons often are tragically not learned or used during decision making.\r\n\r\nA more proactive approach to technology stewardship, risk assessment, and public policy practice is recommended, drawing on lessons from previous experiences and supporting timely, data-driven decisions and actions by well-informed authorities. Without such cultural and behavioral change, there is the risk of repeating technological mistakes and encountering disasters again and again with enormous costs in public health and public trust and at great taxpayer expense (Koch et al. 2016).\r\n\r\nThis article suggests tools for anticipating and managing potential problems before they produce a calamity.","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://libraopen.library.virginia.edu/handle/item/8813","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":3,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"mds","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2017-06-27T12:19:02Z","registered":"2017-06-27T12:19:03Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T21:38:58Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"uva.libra","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.17613/har22-fcc50","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.17613/har22-fcc50","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"name":"Tugbokorowei, Martins Uze E.","nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Martins Uze E.","familyName":"Tugbokorowei","affiliation":["Delta State University, Abraka, Delta State, Nigeria"],"nameIdentifiers":[{"nameIdentifier":"tugbokorowei","nameIdentifierScheme":"Other"}]}],"titles":[{"title":"Indigenous Knowledge, Performance and Rehabilitation of the Dead: A Pathway for Sustainable Development"}],"publisher":"Faculty of Ars, Delta State University","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":"en","types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Journal article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[{"relationType":"HasVersion","relatedIdentifier":"10.17613/36am1-43e28","relatedIdentifierType":"DOI"},{"relationType":"IsPartOf","relatedIdentifier":"0795-1639","resourceTypeGeneral":"Collection","relatedIdentifierType":"ISSN"}],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[],"descriptions":[{"description":"Abstract\nThe African continent was for a very long time seen as the dark continent. By this, it was held that there was lack of knowledge and lack of the critlcal mind for inquiry. Thus Africans were believed to be impulsive, to be people who responded to stimuli much like lower animals without any conscious effort to advance themselves and their societies. The truth. however. is that the different societies and cultures that populate the African continent had their own indigenous knowledge systems that not only assured the sustenance but also promoted the advancement of the society. It is against this background that this paper investigates the practice of rehabilitating the dead as a means to ensuring the sustainable development of the society. The paper dovetails to the Ijaw culture and uses the performnance through which the dead is rehabilitated as captured by J. P Clark-Bekederemo in \"The Return Home\" as paradigm.\nKey Terms: Indigenous knowledge, performance, rehabilitation","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://works.hcommons.org/doi/10.17613/har22-fcc50","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":0,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"api","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":1,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2026-04-07T21:36:18Z","registered":"2026-04-07T21:36:19Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T21:36:19Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"msu.core","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.17613/36am1-43e28","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.17613/36am1-43e28","identifiers":[{"identifier":"oai:https://works.hcommons.org:36am1-43e28","identifierType":"oai"}],"creators":[{"name":"Tugbokorowei, Martins Uze E.","nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Martins Uze E.","familyName":"Tugbokorowei","affiliation":["Delta State University, Abraka, Delta State, Nigeria"],"nameIdentifiers":[{"nameIdentifier":"tugbokorowei","nameIdentifierScheme":"Other"}]}],"titles":[{"title":"Indigenous Knowledge, Performance and Rehabilitation of the Dead: A Pathway for Sustainable Development"}],"publisher":"Faculty of Ars, Delta State University","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":"en","types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Journal article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[{"relationType":"IsVersionOf","relatedIdentifier":"10.17613/har22-fcc50","relatedIdentifierType":"DOI"},{"relationType":"IsPartOf","relatedIdentifier":"0795-1639","resourceTypeGeneral":"Collection","relatedIdentifierType":"ISSN"}],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[],"descriptions":[{"description":"Abstract\nThe African continent was for a very long time seen as the dark continent. By this, it was held that there was lack of knowledge and lack of the critlcal mind for inquiry. Thus Africans were believed to be impulsive, to be people who responded to stimuli much like lower animals without any conscious effort to advance themselves and their societies. The truth. however. is that the different societies and cultures that populate the African continent had their own indigenous knowledge systems that not only assured the sustenance but also promoted the advancement of the society. It is against this background that this paper investigates the practice of rehabilitating the dead as a means to ensuring the sustainable development of the society. The paper dovetails to the Ijaw culture and uses the performnance through which the dead is rehabilitated as captured by J. P Clark-Bekederemo in \"The Return Home\" as paradigm.\nKey Terms: Indigenous knowledge, performance, rehabilitation","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://works.hcommons.org/doi/10.17613/36am1-43e28","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":0,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"api","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2026-04-07T21:36:17Z","registered":"2026-04-07T21:36:18Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T21:36:18Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"msu.core","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.18130/v3vb41","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.18130/v3vb41","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Noni","familyName":"Gaylord-Harden","affiliation":["Lyola University Chicago"],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Suzanna","familyName":"So","affiliation":["Lyola University Chicago"],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Grace J.","familyName":"Bai","affiliation":["Lyola University Chicago"],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"David B.","familyName":"Henry","affiliation":["University of Illinois at Chicago"],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Patrick","familyName":"Tolan","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"nameIdentifiers":[]}],"titles":[{"title":"Examining the Pathologic Adaptation Model of Community Violence Exposure in Male Adolescents of Color"}],"publisher":"Taylor \u0026 Francis","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[{"subject":"males of color"},{"subject":"depressive symptoms"},{"subject":"community violence exposure"},{"subject":"desensitization"},{"subject":"violent behaviors"}],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":null,"types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[{"rights":"All rights reserved (no additional license for public reuse)"}],"descriptions":[{"description":"The current study examined a model of desensitization to community violence exposure, the Pathologic Adaptation Model, in adolescent males of color. Method: The current study included 285 African American (61%) and Latino (39%) male adolescents (W1 mean age = 12.41) from the Chicago Youth Development Study to examine the longitudinal associations between community violence exposure, depressive symptoms, and violent behavior. Results: Consistent with the Pathologic Adaptation Model, results indicated a linear, positive association between community violence exposure in middle adolescence and violent behavior in late adolescence, as well as a curvilinear association between community violence exposure in middle adolescence and depressive symptoms in late adolescence, suggesting emotional desensitization. Further, these effects were specific to cognitive-affective symptoms of depression and not somatic symptoms. Conclusion: Emotional desensitization outcomes, as assessed by depressive symptoms, can occur in male adolescents of color exposed to community violence and these effects extend from middle adolescence to late adolescence.","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[{"funderName":"National Institute for Child Health and Human Development."}],"url":"https://libraopen.library.virginia.edu/handle/item/8494","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":3,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"mds","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2017-06-27T12:19:02Z","registered":"2017-06-27T12:19:03Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T21:36:11Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"uva.libra","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.17613/bb7ty-kvh83","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.17613/bb7ty-kvh83","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"name":"Tugbokorowei, Martins Uze E.","nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Martins Uze E.","familyName":"Tugbokorowei","affiliation":["Delta State University, Abraka, Delta State, Nigeria"],"nameIdentifiers":[{"nameIdentifier":"tugbokorowei","nameIdentifierScheme":"Other"}]}],"titles":[{"title":"Indigenous Knowledge, Performance and Rehabilitation of the Dead: A Pathway for Sustainable Development"}],"publisher":"Faculty of Ars, Delta State University","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":"en","types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Journal article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[{"relationType":"HasVersion","relatedIdentifier":"10.17613/9098b-kan96","relatedIdentifierType":"DOI"},{"relationType":"IsPartOf","relatedIdentifier":"0795-1639","resourceTypeGeneral":"Collection","relatedIdentifierType":"ISSN"}],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[],"descriptions":[{"description":"Abstract\nThe African continent was for a very long time seen as the dark continent. By this, it was held that there was lack of knowledge and lack of the critlcal mind for inquiry. Thus Africans were believed to be impulsive, to be people who responded to stimuli much like lower animals without any conscious effort to advance themselves and their societies. The truth. however. is that the different societies and cultures that populate the African continent had their own indigenous knowledge systems that not only assured the sustenance but also promoted the advancement of the society. It is against this background that this paper investigates the practice of rehabilitating the dead as a means to ensuring the sustainable development of the society. The paper dovetails to the Ijaw culture and uses the performnance through which the dead is rehabilitated as captured by J. P Clark-Bekederemo in \"The Return Home\" as paradigm.\nKey Terms: Indigenous knowledge, performance, rehabilitation","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://works.hcommons.org/doi/10.17613/bb7ty-kvh83","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":0,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"api","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":1,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2026-04-07T21:36:07Z","registered":"2026-04-07T21:36:08Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T21:36:08Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"msu.core","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.17613/9098b-kan96","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.17613/9098b-kan96","identifiers":[{"identifier":"oai:https://works.hcommons.org:9098b-kan96","identifierType":"oai"}],"creators":[{"name":"Tugbokorowei, Martins Uze E.","nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Martins Uze E.","familyName":"Tugbokorowei","affiliation":["Delta State University, Abraka, Delta State, Nigeria"],"nameIdentifiers":[{"nameIdentifier":"tugbokorowei","nameIdentifierScheme":"Other"}]}],"titles":[{"title":"Indigenous Knowledge, Performance and Rehabilitation of the Dead: A Pathway for Sustainable Development"}],"publisher":"Faculty of Ars, Delta State University","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":"en","types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Journal article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[{"relationType":"IsVersionOf","relatedIdentifier":"10.17613/bb7ty-kvh83","relatedIdentifierType":"DOI"},{"relationType":"IsPartOf","relatedIdentifier":"0795-1639","resourceTypeGeneral":"Collection","relatedIdentifierType":"ISSN"}],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[],"descriptions":[{"description":"Abstract\nThe African continent was for a very long time seen as the dark continent. By this, it was held that there was lack of knowledge and lack of the critlcal mind for inquiry. Thus Africans were believed to be impulsive, to be people who responded to stimuli much like lower animals without any conscious effort to advance themselves and their societies. The truth. however. is that the different societies and cultures that populate the African continent had their own indigenous knowledge systems that not only assured the sustenance but also promoted the advancement of the society. It is against this background that this paper investigates the practice of rehabilitating the dead as a means to ensuring the sustainable development of the society. The paper dovetails to the Ijaw culture and uses the performnance through which the dead is rehabilitated as captured by J. P Clark-Bekederemo in \"The Return Home\" as paradigm.\nKey Terms: Indigenous knowledge, performance, rehabilitation","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://works.hcommons.org/doi/10.17613/9098b-kan96","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":0,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"api","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":1,"created":"2026-04-07T21:36:07Z","registered":"2026-04-07T21:36:07Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T21:36:07Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"msu.core","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.17613/4vk89-1ct16","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.17613/4vk89-1ct16","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"name":"Tugbokorowei, Martins Uze E.","nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Martins Uze E.","familyName":"Tugbokorowei","affiliation":["Delta State University, Abraka, Delta State, Nigeria"],"nameIdentifiers":[{"nameIdentifier":"tugbokorowei","nameIdentifierScheme":"Other"}]}],"titles":[{"title":"Liberation Theology: Egbesu and the Quest for Emancipation in the Niger Delta"}],"publisher":"University of Uyo","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016-03","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":"en","types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Journal article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[{"relationType":"HasVersion","relatedIdentifier":"10.17613/v7svr-q9837","relatedIdentifierType":"DOI"},{"relationType":"IsPartOf","relatedIdentifier":"1597-2143","resourceTypeGeneral":"Collection","relatedIdentifierType":"ISSN"}],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[],"descriptions":[{"description":"The Niger Delta has been a source of global attraction for countless number of years. Right from the pre-colonial era down to the period of colonization, it was a major- source of palm oil which helped to drive European industrial progress. Eventually, crude oil was discovered and the region again became a golden goose to Europe and America. In all of these, the well-being of the inhabitants of this region was not given the attention it deserved thus turning them to slaves in their own land. The region consequently became a hot bed of intellectual activism and militancy which has once again thrown it on the consciousness of the world stage and made it a focus of the global media as the struggle for economic and political emancipation is embarked upon by its citizens/inhabitants. In the prosecution of this militant struggle, what has been the place of mythology and religion? This paper attempts to answer this question by investigating Egbesu, the Izon god of war. Adopting a comparative approach, the paper shall delve into the realm of liberation theology and interrogate the connection between Egbesu and the cult of its followership, and the quest to emancipate the Niger Delta. We shall highlight the manners in which Egbesu was a\npropelling force in the galvanization of the Niger Delta militants towards attaining the goals that they set for themselves.","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://works.hcommons.org/doi/10.17613/4vk89-1ct16","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":0,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"api","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":1,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2026-04-07T21:35:18Z","registered":"2026-04-07T21:35:18Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T21:35:18Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"msu.core","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.17613/v7svr-q9837","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.17613/v7svr-q9837","identifiers":[{"identifier":"oai:https://works.hcommons.org:v7svr-q9837","identifierType":"oai"}],"creators":[{"name":"Tugbokorowei, Martins Uze E.","nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Martins Uze E.","familyName":"Tugbokorowei","affiliation":["Delta State University, Abraka, Delta State, Nigeria"],"nameIdentifiers":[{"nameIdentifier":"tugbokorowei","nameIdentifierScheme":"Other"}]}],"titles":[{"title":"Liberation Theology: Egbesu and the Quest for Emancipation in the Niger Delta"}],"publisher":"University of Uyo","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016-03","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":"en","types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Journal article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[{"relationType":"IsVersionOf","relatedIdentifier":"10.17613/4vk89-1ct16","relatedIdentifierType":"DOI"},{"relationType":"IsPartOf","relatedIdentifier":"1597-2143","resourceTypeGeneral":"Collection","relatedIdentifierType":"ISSN"}],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[],"descriptions":[{"description":"The Niger Delta has been a source of global attraction for countless number of years. Right from the pre-colonial era down to the period of colonization, it was a major- source of palm oil which helped to drive European industrial progress. Eventually, crude oil was discovered and the region again became a golden goose to Europe and America. In all of these, the well-being of the inhabitants of this region was not given the attention it deserved thus turning them to slaves in their own land. The region consequently became a hot bed of intellectual activism and militancy which has once again thrown it on the consciousness of the world stage and made it a focus of the global media as the struggle for economic and political emancipation is embarked upon by its citizens/inhabitants. In the prosecution of this militant struggle, what has been the place of mythology and religion? This paper attempts to answer this question by investigating Egbesu, the Izon god of war. Adopting a comparative approach, the paper shall delve into the realm of liberation theology and interrogate the connection between Egbesu and the cult of its followership, and the quest to emancipate the Niger Delta. We shall highlight the manners in which Egbesu was a\npropelling force in the galvanization of the Niger Delta militants towards attaining the goals that they set for themselves.","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://works.hcommons.org/doi/10.17613/v7svr-q9837","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":0,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"api","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":1,"created":"2026-04-07T21:35:17Z","registered":"2026-04-07T21:35:17Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T21:35:17Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"msu.core","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.18130/v3gz1p","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.18130/v3gz1p","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Herbert","familyName":"Tucker","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"nameIdentifiers":[]}],"titles":[{"title":"Shock Troupers: Browning, Bidart, and the Drama of Prosody"}],"publisher":"University of Virginia","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[{"subject":"Robert Browning"},{"subject":"Frank Bidart"},{"subject":"shock"},{"subject":"modern poetry"},{"subject":"prosody"},{"subject":"dramatic monologue"}],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":null,"types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[{"rights":"All rights reserved (no additional license for public reuse)"}],"descriptions":[{"description":"First, a trigger-alerted disclaimer. This paper on the role of shock in poetic innovation should acknowledge at the outset one conspicuous kind of shock that will be of only incidental concern. Ladies and gentlemen, your attention, please, to the following two exhibits. Prepare to avert your imagination as needed.","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://libraopen.library.virginia.edu/handle/item/8507","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":3,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"mds","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2017-07-17T14:18:10Z","registered":"2017-07-17T14:18:11Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T21:28:20Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"uva.libra","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.18130/v37p8tc65","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.18130/v37p8tc65","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Waitman","familyName":"Beorn","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"nameIdentifiers":[{"schemeUri":"https://orcid.org","nameIdentifier":"https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4467-9628","nameIdentifierScheme":"ORCID"}]}],"titles":[{"title":"New Paths, New Directions: Reflections on Forty Years of Holocaust Studies and the GSA"}],"publisher":"German Studies Review","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[{"subject":"German History"},{"subject":"Holocaust"},{"subject":"Historiography"}],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":null,"types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[{"rights":"All rights reserved (no additional license for public reuse)"}],"descriptions":[{"description":"The Western Association for German Studies (WAGS) was founded in 1976 on the\r\ncusp of a public reawakening to the horrors of the Holocaust. A year later, neo-Nazis\r\nin the United States argued before the Supreme Court for the right to march in\r\nSkokie, IL (a right they won in 1978, though the march took place in Chicago). This\r\nspurred the creation of a Holocaust museum there and led many survivors to begin\r\nbreaking their silence. In that same year, the massively successful TV miniseries\r\nHolocaust was released, winning an Emmy, and airing on German television in 1979.\r\nAlso in 1978, the Office of Special Investigations was created to track down Nazi war\r\ncriminals living in the US. Finally, President Jimmy Carter created a commission on\r\nthe Holocaust which resulted in the establishment of the United States Holocaust\r\nMemorial Museum (USHMM).\r\n\r\nThese public events should not, of course, obscure the fact that scholars had been\r\nresearching the Holocaust prior to this point. Raul Hilberg published his groundbreaking\r\nDestruction of the European Jews in 1961 and Lucy Dawidowicz published her\r\nequally important work, The War Against the Jews, 1933–1945, in 1975. It was in this\r\nscholarly and popular moment for Holocaust consciousness that the nascent Western\r\nAssociation for German Studies held its first conference in 1977. There, for a seven\r\ndollar conference registration fee, attendees could attend a panel entitled simply\r\n“The Third Reich.” One of the presenters was a young assistant professor at Pacific\r\nLutheran University named Christopher R. Browning who spoke on “Ribbentrop and\r\nThe Final Solution,” material drawn from his dissertation on the German Foreign\r\nOffice and the Holocaust. His advisor had told him there was no future in Holocaust\r\nstudies. Indeed, it might have looked that way at the time. For Browning and others,\r\nthe WAGS Conference (which later became the GSA) was a vital component of the\r\ngrowing field of Holocaust studies. Indeed, it was the only academic venue for those\r\nworking on the Holocaust to present their work. The first Lessons and Legacies\r\nConference, sponsored by the Holocaust Educational Foundation, would not be\r\nheld until 1989. By and large, the Holocaust was not taught at the university level,\r\nlet alone in secondary schools. There were no centers for the study of the Holocaust\r\nand genocide. In addition, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum did not\r\nexist and could not support Holocaust scholarship.\r\n\r\nClearly, however, there was a future in Holocaust studies, which, along with\r\ngenocide studies, represents an important area of historical scholarship. Courses in\r\nthe Holocaust now routinely fill classrooms and most positions in the area of modern\r\nGerman History require the ability to teach this course. Since the GSA began meeting\r\n(and publishing the German Studies Review), the field of Holocaust studies has\r\nexpanded almost exponentially and produced an incredible diversity of philosophical\r\npositions, topics of study, and methodologies. In this short essay, I will seek to illustrate\r\nsome of the important trajectories of Holocaust studies over the past forty years of\r\nthe GSA’s existence and the connections between the development of the discipline\r\nand the organization.","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://libraopen.library.virginia.edu/handle/item/9439","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":2,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"mds","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2017-10-26T17:10:11Z","registered":"2017-10-26T17:10:12Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T21:09:39Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"uva.libra","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.18130/v3mz9z","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.18130/v3mz9z","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Marlen","familyName":"Gonzalez","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"nameIdentifiers":[{"schemeUri":"https://orcid.org","nameIdentifier":"https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5077-2522","nameIdentifierScheme":"ORCID"}]},{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Joseph","familyName":"Allen","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"nameIdentifiers":[]},{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"James","familyName":"Coan","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"nameIdentifiers":[]}],"titles":[{"title":"Lower neighborhood quality in adolescence predicts higher mesolimbic sensitivity to reward anticipation in adulthood"}],"publisher":"University of Virginia","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[{"subject":"life history theory, neighborhood quality, adaptive calibration, adolescence, reward sensitivity"}],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":null,"types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[{"rights":"CC0 1.0 Universal"}],"descriptions":[{"description":"Life history theory suggests that adult reward sensitivity should be best explained by childhood, but not current, socioeconomic conditions. In this functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study, 83 participants from a larger longitudinal sample completed the monetary incentive delay (MID) task in adulthood (∼25 years old). Parent-reports of neighborhood quality and parental SES were collected when participants were 13 years of age. Current income level was collected concurrently with scanning. Lower adolescent neighborhood quality, but neither lower current income nor parental SES, was associated with heightened sensitivity to the anticipation of monetary gain in putative mesolimbic reward areas. Lower adolescent neighborhood quality was also associated with heightened sensitivity to the anticipation of monetary loss activation in visuo-motor areas. Lower current income was associated with heightened sensitivity to anticipated loss in occipital areas and the operculum. We tested whether externalizing behaviors in childhood or adulthood could better account for neighborhood quality findings, but they did not. Findings suggest that neighborhood ecology in adolescence is associated with greater neural reward sensitivity in adulthood above the influence of parental SES or current income and not mediated through impulsivity and externalizing behaviors.","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://libraopen.library.virginia.edu/handle/item/8253","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":3,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"mds","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2017-08-30T15:03:27Z","registered":"2017-08-30T15:03:28Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T21:08:29Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"uva.libra","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.18130/v3c50f","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.18130/v3c50f","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Herbert","familyName":"Tucker","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"nameIdentifiers":[]}],"titles":[{"title":"Fretted Lines: Di-versification in Augusta Webster’s Dramatic Monologues"}],"publisher":"(:unav)","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[{"subject":"Augusta Webster"},{"subject":"dramatic monologue"},{"subject":"prosody"},{"subject":"Portraits"}],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":null,"types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[{"rights":"All rights reserved (no additional license for public reuse)"}],"descriptions":[{"description":"(:unav)","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://libraopen.library.virginia.edu/handle/item/8988","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":2,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"mds","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2017-07-17T14:18:17Z","registered":"2017-07-17T14:18:18Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T21:07:49Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"uva.libra","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.18130/7xbk-1z49","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.18130/7xbk-1z49","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Roman","familyName":"Lukyanenko","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"nameIdentifiers":[{"schemeUri":"https://orcid.org","nameIdentifier":"https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8125-5918","nameIdentifierScheme":"ORCID"}]}],"titles":[{"title":"Data quality in citizen science – a research study"}],"publisher":"University of Virginia","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":null,"types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[{"rights":"Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY)"}],"descriptions":[{"description":"Citizen science can involve lay people participating in many types of research projects, including medicine, environmental science, astronomy, geology, biochemistry, ecology and earth science, and has many benefits. These include educating and engaging the public on scientific issues, as well as the generation of large data sets for scientific work. Citizen science projects vary in terms of the tasks they ask the public to complete, but most projects involve citizens collecting, processing or analysing data.\r\nCitizen science seems like a natural win-win for all involved – citizens get the fun and learning experience by being engaged with science and scientists get the free labour. However, some people question whether lay people can actually contribute meaningfully to science. A concern frequently expressed is the quality of the data. This is particularly true when all or part of the citizen science project is online (e.g., eBird and Snapshot Serengeti), as participants may be anonymous and the risk of sabotage is higher than when scientists are in direct contact with citizen participants.","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://libraopen.library.virginia.edu/handle/item/8776","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":8,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"mds","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2022-09-03T18:33:48Z","registered":"2022-09-03T18:33:48Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T20:58:37Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"uva.libra","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.18130/v33t8j","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.18130/v33t8j","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Sierra","familyName":"Eisen","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"nameIdentifiers":[{"schemeUri":"https://orcid.org","nameIdentifier":"https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7450-6344","nameIdentifierScheme":"ORCID"}]},{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Angeline","familyName":"Lillard","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"nameIdentifiers":[]}],"titles":[{"title":"Just Google It: Young Children’s Preferences for Touchscreens versus Books in Hypothetical Learning Tasks"}],"publisher":"University of Virginia","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[{"subject":"children’s education"},{"subject":"learning"},{"subject":"books"},{"subject":"touchscreen devices"},{"subject":"educational tools"}],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":null,"types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[{"rights":"All rights reserved (no additional license for public reuse)"}],"descriptions":[{"description":"Children today regularly interact with touchscreen devices (Rideout, 2013) and thousands of “educational” mobile applications are marketed to them (Shuler, 2012). Understanding children’s own ideas about optimal learning has important implications for education, which is being transformed by electronic mobile devices, yet we know little about how children think about such devices, including what children think touchscreens are useful for. Based on a prior result that children prefer a book over a touchscreen for learning about dogs, the present study explored how children view touchscreens versus books for learning an array of different types of information. Seventy children ages 3– 6 were presented with six different topics (cooking, today’s weather, trees, vacuums, Virginia, and yesterday’s football game) and chose whether a book or a touchscreen device would be best to use to learn about each topic. Some of this information was time-sensitive, like the current weather; we predicted that children would prefer a touchscreen for time-sensitive information. In addition, each child’s parent was surveyed about the child’s use of books and touchscreens for educational purposes, both at home and in school. Results indicated that younger children had no preference between books and touchscreen devices across learning tasks. However, 6-year-olds were significantly more likely to choose the touchscreen for several topics. Surprisingly, 6- year-olds chose a touchscreen device to learn about time-sensitive weather conditions, but not yesterday’s football. Children’s choices were not associated with their use of books and touchscreens at home and school.","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://libraopen.library.virginia.edu/handle/item/6741","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":6,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"mds","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2017-06-27T12:18:55Z","registered":"2017-06-27T12:18:56Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T20:56:59Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"uva.libra","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.18130/v3-908h-sp20","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.18130/v3-908h-sp20","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Charles","familyName":"Holt","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"nameIdentifiers":[]}],"titles":[{"title":"Belief Elicitation with a Synchronized Lottery Choice Menu that is Invariant to Risk Attitudes"}],"publisher":"University of Virginia","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[{"subject":"belief elicitation, BDM, Lottery Choice, BDM, risk aversion"}],"contributors":[{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Charles","familyName":"Holt","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"contributorType":"Other","nameIdentifiers":[]}],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":null,"types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[{"rights":"Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY)"}],"descriptions":[{"description":"Belief Elicitation with a Synchronized Lottery Choice Menu\r\nthat is Invariant to Risk Attitudes\r\n\r\nBy Charles A. Holt and Angela M. Smith\r\n\r\nThis paper uses a Bayesian information processing task to compare belief elicitation mechanisms including a quadratic scoring rule, a Becker-DeGroot-Marschak pricing procedure, and a two-stage menu of lottery choices that is structured to identify a precise point of probability indifference.  The choice menu yields a higher incidence of correct Bayesian responses and lower belief error averages.  Unlike the quadratic scoring rule, the binary payoffs for the lottery choice mechanism are synchronized to provide theoretical incentive-compatibility regardless of risk attitudes.  In addition, the choice menu structure is more transparent and intuitive than the Becker-DeGroot-Marschak procedure.\r\n","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://libraopen.library.virginia.edu/handle/item/7598","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":2,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"mds","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2019-08-19T03:08:56Z","registered":"2019-08-19T03:08:57Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T20:32:39Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"uva.libra","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.18130/v3745r","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.18130/v3745r","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Ira","familyName":"Bashkow","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"nameIdentifiers":[]}],"titles":[{"title":"Voicing the ancestors: Readings in memory of George Stocking"}],"publisher":"HAU","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[{"subject":"Igor Kopytoff"},{"subject":"Lamarkianism"},{"subject":"History of Anthropology"},{"subject":"George Stocking"},{"subject":"Alex Haley"},{"subject":"Culture concept"},{"subject":"Xenophanes"},{"subject":"Franz Boas"},{"subject":"George Lincoln"}],"contributors":[{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Richard","familyName":"Handler","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"contributorType":"Other","nameIdentifiers":[]}],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":null,"types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[{"rights":"Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY)"}],"descriptions":[{"description":"In this Forum, four anthropologists have chosen an “ancestral” figure to give voice to. Anthropologists’ ancestors are generally teachers, mentors, or, less proximally, canonized scholars of prior generations. Anthropologists draw on their ancestors for theoretical wisdom and practical guidance. Yet ancestors are not always shared broadly across our discipline, and they can easily fall into oblivion. Giving voice to them, publicly, allows each contributor to comment on an important scholar and invites readers to renew their acquaintance with disciplinary ghosts who still have much to teach us.","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[{"funderName":"SOAS, University of London"},{"funderName":"University of Virginia Open Access Fund"}],"url":"https://libraopen.library.virginia.edu/handle/item/9622","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":5,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"mds","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2017-07-11T15:41:01Z","registered":"2017-07-11T15:41:02Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T20:26:22Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"uva.libra","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.18130/gkkw-xb24","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.18130/gkkw-xb24","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Roman","familyName":"Lukyanenko","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"nameIdentifiers":[{"schemeUri":"https://orcid.org","nameIdentifier":"https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8125-5918","nameIdentifierScheme":"ORCID"}]}],"titles":[{"title":"Emerging problems of quality in citizen science"}],"publisher":"University of Virginia","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":null,"types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[{"rights":"Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY)"}],"descriptions":[{"description":"The role of citizen science in research and natural resource monitoring and management is increasing, as evidenced by the growing number of peer-reviewed publications (including a special section in this journal)and calls for involving citizens in monitoring and governance (through, for example, “participatory research”[Danielsen et al. 2014] and “participatory monitoring”[Kennett et al. 2015]). Citizen science projects can be targeted to a specific research question (and thus involve very specific data-collection protocols) or can be more open-ended (giving rise to a need to collect data for which the uses may be unknown or changing)(Wiersma 2010). Advances in online content production and sharing technologies (i.e., Web 2.0), mobile computing, and sensor-equipped devices have contributed to adramatic rise in online citizen science projects, in whichcitizens contribute sightings (e.g., eBird [Sullivan et al.2009]), transcribe data (e.g., Old Weather [Eveleigh et al.2013]), or classify phenomena (e.g., Galaxy Zoo [Hop-kin 2007]). It is these online projects, also referred to as crowdsourcing (Franzoni \u0026 Sauermann 2014), which have been the focus of our research and that inform the opinions presented here.","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://libraopen.library.virginia.edu/handle/item/8561","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":9,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"mds","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2022-09-03T18:30:41Z","registered":"2022-09-03T18:30:42Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T20:19:12Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"uva.libra","type":"clients"}}}},{"id":"10.18130/v3qn0c","type":"dois","attributes":{"doi":"10.18130/v3qn0c","identifiers":[],"creators":[{"nameType":"Personal","givenName":"Richard","familyName":"Handler","affiliation":["University of Virginia"],"nameIdentifiers":[]}],"titles":[{"title":"Mining the Time-Space Matrix: Commemorative Postage Stamps and US World's Fairs, 1893-1915"}],"publisher":"Haujournal.org","container":{},"publicationYear":2016,"subjects":[{"subject":"time-space matrix"},{"subject":"national commemoration"},{"subject":"world’s fairs"},{"subject":"postage stamps"}],"contributors":[],"dates":[{"date":"2016","dateType":"Issued"}],"language":null,"types":{"ris":"JOUR","bibtex":"article","citeproc":"article-journal","schemaOrg":"ScholarlyArticle","resourceType":"Article","resourceTypeGeneral":"JournalArticle"},"relatedIdentifiers":[],"relatedItems":[],"sizes":[],"formats":[],"version":null,"rightsList":[{"rights":"All rights reserved (no additional license for public reuse)"}],"descriptions":[{"description":"This paper examines turn-of-the-twentieth-century United States world’s fairs and the postage stamps that were issued in their honor.  The fairs celebrated the progress of industrial civilization, in part by anchoring themselves to a historical origin point (such as Columbus’ voyages), and the post office designed the accompanying stamps to commemorate a historical story deemed to be nationally significant.  Both the origin point and the history associated with it were located within a time-space matrix defined by prior processes of mapping the national territory and standardizing time reckoning within it.  The commemorative stamps were sold on the fairgrounds, where they could be postmarked to locate them precisely in time and space as souvenirs of what would become past events that would have value in the future.  These overlain commemorative practices reveal how the raw materials of history—time and space—have to be manipulated before the history-making practices of modern societies can even begin.","descriptionType":"Abstract"}],"geoLocations":[],"fundingReferences":[],"url":"https://libraopen.library.virginia.edu/handle/item/9707","contentUrl":null,"metadataVersion":5,"schemaVersion":"http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4","source":"mds","isActive":true,"state":"findable","reason":null,"viewCount":0,"downloadCount":0,"referenceCount":0,"citationCount":0,"partCount":0,"partOfCount":0,"versionCount":0,"versionOfCount":0,"created":"2017-06-27T12:19:07Z","registered":"2017-06-27T12:19:08Z","published":null,"updated":"2026-04-07T20:18:09Z"},"relationships":{"client":{"data":{"id":"uva.libra","type":"clients"}}}}],"meta":{"total":149035,"totalPages":400,"page":1},"links":{"self":"https://api.datacite.org/dois?query=publicationYear%3A2016+AND+types.resourceTypeGeneral%3A%28Preprint+OR+JournalArticle%29","next":"https://api.datacite.org/dois?page%5Bnumber%5D=2\u0026page%5Bsize%5D=25\u0026query=publicationYear%3A2016+AND+types.resourceTypeGeneral%3A%28Preprint+OR+JournalArticle%29"}}