NobleBlocks

Minnesota State University Moorhead

UniversityMoorhead, Minnesota, United States

Research output, citation impact, and the most-cited recent papers from Minnesota State University Moorhead (United States). Aggregated across the NobleBlocks index of 300M+ scholarly works.

Total works
2.2K
Citations
73.9K
h-index
95
i10-index
880
Also known as
Minnesota State University MoorheadMoorhead Normal SchoolMoorhead State CollegeMoorhead State Teachers CollegeMoorhead State UniversityUniversité d'État du minnesota

Top-cited papers from Minnesota State University Moorhead

The Astropy Project: Building an Open-science Project and Status of the v2.0 Core Package<sup>*</sup>
Adrian M. Price-Whelan, Brigitta Sipőcz, Hans Moritz Günther, Pey Lian Lim +4 more
2018· The Astronomical Journal7.2Kdoi:10.3847/1538-3881/aabc4f

Abstract The Astropy Project supports and fosters the development of open-source and openly developed Python packages that provide commonly needed functionality to the astronomical community. A key element of the Astropy Project is the core package astropy , which serves as the foundation for more specialized projects and packages. In this article, we provide an overview of the organization of the Astropy project and summarize key features in the core package, as of the recent major release, version 2.0. We then describe the project infrastructure designed to facilitate and support development for a broader ecosystem of interoperable packages. We conclude with a future outlook of planned new features and directions for the broader Astropy Project.

The Astropy Project: Sustaining and Growing a Community-oriented Open-source Project and the Latest Major Release (v5.0) of the Core Package
Adrian M. Price-Whelan, LIM, Pey Lian, A. Zonca, STARKMAN, Nathaniel +4 more
2022· Research Portal (Queen's University Belfast)4.5Kdoi:10.3847/1538-4357/ac7c74

Full list of authors: Price-Whelan, Adrian M.; Lim, Pey Lian; Earl, Nicholas; Starkman, Nathaniel; Bradley, Larry; Shupe, David L.; Patil, Aarya A.; Corrales, Lia; Brasseur, C. E.; Noethe, Maximilian; Donath, Axel; Tollerud, Erik; Morris, Brett M.; Ginsburg, Adam; Vaher, Eero; Weaver, Benjamin A.; Tocknell, James; Jamieson, William; van Kerkwijk, Marten H.; Robitaille, Thomas P.; Merry, Bruce; Bachetti, Matteo; Gunther, H. Moritz; Aldcroft, Thomas L.; Alvarado-Montes, Jaime A.; Archibald, Anne M.; Bodi, Attila; Bapat, Shreyas; Barentsen, Geert; Bazan, Juanjo; Biswas, Manish; Boquien, Mederic; Burke, D. J.; Cara, Daria; Cara, Mihai; Conroy, Kyle E.; Conseil, Simon; Craig, Matthew W.; Cross, Robert M.; Cruz, Kelle L.; D'Eugenio, Francesco; Dencheva, Nadia; Devillepoix, Hadrien A. R.; Dietrich, Jorg P.; Eigenbrot, Arthur Davis; Erben, Thomas; Ferreira, Leonardo; Foreman-Mackey, Daniel; Fox, Ryan; Freij, Nabil; Garg, Suyog; Geda, Robel; Glattly, Lauren; Gondhalekar, Yash; Gordon, Karl D.; Grant, David; Greenfield, Perry; Groener, Austen M.; Guest, Steve; Gurovich, Sebastian; Handberg, Rasmus; Hart, Akeem; Hatfield-Dodds, Zac; Homeier, Derek; Hosseinzadeh, Griffin; Jenness, Tim; Jones, Craig K.; Joseph, Prajwel; Kalmbach, J. Bryce; Karamehmetoglu, Emir; Kaluszynski, Mikolaj; Kelley, Michael S. P.; Kern, Nicholas; Kerzendorf, Wolfgang E.; Koch, Eric W.; Kulumani, Shankar; Lee, Antony; Ly, Chun; Ma, Zhiyuan; MacBride, Conor; Maljaars, Jakob M.; Muna, Demitri; Murphy, N. A.; Norman, Henrik; O'Steen, Richard; Oman, Kyle A.; Pacifici, Camilla; Pascual, Sergio; Pascual-Granado, J.; Patil, Rohit R.; Perren, Gabriel, I; Pickering, Timothy E.; Rastogi, Tanuj; Roulston, Benjamin R.; Ryan, Daniel F.; Rykoff, Eli S.; Sabater, Jose; Sakurikar, Parikshit; Salgado, Jesus; Sanghi, Aniket; Saunders, Nicholas; Savchenko, Volodymyr; Schwardt, Ludwig; Seifert-Eckert, Michael; Shih, Albert Y.; Jain, Anany Shrey; Shukla, Gyanendra; Sick, Jonathan; Simpson, Chris; Singanamalla, Sudheesh; Singer, Leo P.; Singhal, Jaladh; Sinha, Manodeep; Sipocz, Brigitta M.; Spitler, Lee R.; Stansby, David; Streicher, Ole; Sumak, Jani; Swinbank, John D.; Taranu, Dan S.; Tewary, Nikita; Tremblay, Grant R.; De Val-Borro, Miguel; Vasovic, Zlatan; Van Kooten, Samuel J.; Verma, Shresth; Cardoso, Jose Vinicius de Miranda; Williams, Peter K. G.; Wilson, Tom J.; Winkel, Benjamin; Wood-Vasey, W. M.; Xue, Rui; Yoachim, Peter; Zhang, Chen; Zonca, Andrea; Astropy Project Contributors; TARDIS Collaboration; Astropy Coordination Comm.--This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Chemical ecology of predator–prey interactions in aquatic ecosystems: a review and prospectusThe present review is one in the special series of reviews on animal–plant interactions.
Maud C. O. Ferrari, Brian D. Wisenden, Douglas P. Chivers
2010· Canadian Journal of Zoology914doi:10.1139/z10-029

The interaction between predator and prey is an evolutionary arms race, for which early detection by either party is often the key to success. In aquatic ecosystems, olfaction is an essential source of information for many prey and predators and a number of cues have been shown to play a key role in trait-mediated indirect interactions in aquatic communities. Here, we review the nature and role of predator kairomones, chemical alarm cues, disturbance cues, and diet cues on the behaviour, morphology, life history, and survival of aquatic prey, focusing primarily on the discoveries from the last decade. Many advances in the field have been accomplished: testing the survival value of those chemicals, providing field validation of laboratory results, understanding the extent to which chemically mediated learning may benefit the prey, understanding the role of these chemicals in mediating morphological and life-history adaptations, and most importantly, the selection pressures leading to the evolution of chemical alarm cues. Although considerable advances have been made, several key questions remain, the most urgent of which is to understand the chemistry behind these interactions.

<tt>astroquery</tt>: An Astronomical Web-querying Package in Python
Adam Ginsburg, Brigitta M. Sipőcz, C. E. Brasseur, Philip S. Cowperthwaite +4 more
2019· The Astronomical Journal760doi:10.3847/1538-3881/aafc33

Astroquery is a collection of tools for requesting data from databases hosted on remote servers with interfaces exposed on the Internet, including those with web pages but without formal application program interfaces. These tools are built on the Python requests package, which is used to make HTTP requests, and astropy, which provides most of the data parsing functionality. astroquery modules generally attempt to replicate the web page interface provided by a given service as closely as possible, making the transition from browser-based to command-line interaction easy. astroquery has received significant contributions from throughout the astronomical community, including several from telescope archives. astroquery enables the creation of fully reproducible workflows from data acquisition through publication. This paper describes the philosophy, basic structure, and development model of the astroquery package. The complete documentation for astroquery can be found at http://astroquery.readthedocs.io/.

Combining the Best of Online and Face-to-Face Learning: Hybrid and Blended Learning Approach for COVID-19, Post Vaccine, &amp; Post-Pandemic World
Jitendra Singh, Keely Steele, Lovely Singh
2021· Journal of Educational Technology Systems711doi:10.1177/00472395211047865

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has changed the landscape of higher education. As academic institutions across the world continue to deal with the global health crisis, there is a need to examine different instructional approaches including online, hybrid, and blended learning methods. This descriptive study provide an in-depth review of the history of blended learning, evolution of hybrid model of instruction, preparedness of faculty with minimal or no experience in online teaching, and lessons learned as faculty worked on navigating COVID-19 situation since early 2020. A fish-bone analysis, a visual and structured approach to identify possible causes of problem, has been used to present the problems faced by faculty during the pandemic. A detailed Strength–Weakness–Opportunities–Threat analysis of blended/hybrid learning has been presented. An evidence-based approach on how instructors can combine the best of both traditional and online instruction to offer engaging learning experiences for students has been described. This research provides valuable insights to faculty and administrators who are preparing to teach during a pandemic and making efforts to academically survive it.

The Illusion of Statistical Control
Kevin D. Carlson, Jinpei Wu
2011· Organizational Research Methods646doi:10.1177/1094428111428817

The authors extend previous recommendations for improved control variable (CV) practice in management research by mapping the objectives for using statistical control to recommendations for research practice. Including CVs in research designs to permit statistical control of “nuisance” variance is a common research practice that is subject to well-documented and potentially serious problems. Yet because CVs are frequently weakly related to focal variables, they rarely influence the interpretation of results. As a result, current practice offers an illusion of statistical control when in fact little control actually occurs. The authors extend the growing literature on CV practice by examining the ambiguity of researchers' stated purposes for using statistical control that makes it difficult to determine whether common CV practice accomplishes any of these intents effectively. Guidelines for improving research practice are offered, including adopting a conservative stance toward the inclusion of CVs in the analysis of quasiexperimental and correlational designs guided by the principle “When in doubt, leave them out.”

The Collected Dialogues of Plato, Including the Letters
Catherine D. Rau, Edith Hamilton, Huntington Cairns
1962· Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism526doi:10.2307/427222

All the writings of Plato generally considered to be authentic are here presented in the only complete one-volume Plato available in English. The editors set out to choose the contents of this collected edition from the work of the best British and American translators of the last 100 years, ranging from Jowett (1871) to scholars of the present day. The volume contains prefatory notes to each dialogue, by Edith Hamilton; an introductory essay on Plato's philosophy and writings, by Huntington Cairns; and a comprehensive index which seeks, by means of cross references, to assist the reader with the philosophical vocabulary of the different translators.

Olfactory assessment of predation risk in the aquatic environment
B. D. Wisenden
2000· Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences404doi:10.1098/rstb.2000.0668

The aquatic environment is well suited for the transmission of chemical information. Aquatic animals have evolved highly sensitive receptors for detecting these cues. Here, I review behavioural evidence for the use of chemical cues by aquatic animals for the assessment of predation risk. Chemical cues are released during detection, attack, capture and ingestion of prey. The nature of the cue released depends on the stage of the predation sequence in which cues are released. Predator odours, disturbance pheromones, injury-released chemical cues and dietary cues all convey chemical information to prey Prey use these cues to minimize their probability of being taken on to the next stage of the sequence. The evolution of specialized epidermal alarm substance cells in fishes in the superorder Ostariophysi represent an amplification of this general phenomenon. These cells carry a significant metabolic cost. The cost is offset by the fitness benefit of the chemical attraction of predators. Attempts of piracy by secondary predators interrupt predation events allowing prey an opportunity for escape. In conclusion, chemical cues are widely used by aquatic prey for risk assessment and this has resulted in the evolution of specialized structures among some taxa.

The incidence of bulimia in freshman college students
Richard L. Pyle, James E. Mitchell, Elke D. Eckert, Patricia A. Halvorson +2 more
1983· International Journal of Eating Disorders328doi:10.1002/1098-108x(198321)2:3<75::aid-eat2260020307>3.0.co;2-7

This paper reports the results of a questionnaire survey administered to 1355 college freshman (98.3% response rate) and to a comparison group of 37 female bulimic patients. Questions were contructed to elicit information which would allow identification of those respondents who would meet DSM-III requirements for diagnosis of bulimia. 2.1% of the student population (4.5% of females, 0.4% of males) met these modified criteria and the additional criterion of weekly binge-eating. The identified “bulimic” female students differed from female bulimic patients in their use of fasting instead of self-induced vomiting for weight control, and in their tendency to be overweight. “Bulimic” female students are also compared with nonbulimic students.

An Empirical Analysis of Stock Prices in Major Asian Markets and the United States
Kam C. Chan, Benton E. Gup, Ming‐Shiun Pan
1992· Financial Review284doi:10.1111/j.1540-6288.1992.tb01319.x

Abstract This study uses unit root and cointegration tests to examine the relationships among the stock markets in Hong Kong, South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, Japan, and the United States. All the stock prices are analyzed both individually and collectively to test for international market efficiency. Unit roots in stock prices are found. Pairwise and higher‐order cointegration tests indicate that there is no evidence of cointegration among the stock prices. The findings suggest that the stock prices in major Asian markets and the United States are weak‐form efficient individually and collectively in the long run. It also implies that international diversification among the markets is effective.

Acts of Compassion: Caring for Others and Helping Ourselves
Michael W. Hughey, Robert Wuthnow
1992· Sociological Analysis283doi:10.2307/3711445

Journal Article Acts of Compassion: Caring for Others and Helping Ourselves, by Robert Wuthnow. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1991, viii + 334 pp. $24.95 Get access Michael W. Hughey Michael W. Hughey Moorhead State University Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar Sociology of Religion, Volume 53, Issue 4, Winter 1992, Pages 460–461, https://doi.org/10.2307/3711445 Published: 01 December 1992

Hepatic iron stores and plasma ferritin concentration in patients with sickle cell anemia and thalassemia major
Gary M. Brittenham, Alan R. Cohen, Christine E. McLaren, Marie Martin +4 more
1993· American Journal of Hematology275doi:10.1002/ajh.2830420116

To examine the relationship between hepatic iron stores and plasma ferritin concentration in individuals treated with red cell transfusion and iron chelation therapy, 37 patients with sickle cell anemia and 74 patients with thalassemia major were studied. In each patient, hepatic iron stores were measured by an independently validated noninvasive magnetic method, and plasma ferritin was determined by immunoassay. The correlation between hepatic iron and plasma ferritin was significant both in patients with sickle cell anemia (R = 0.75, P < 0.0001) and in those with thalassemia major (R = 0.76, P < 0.0001). Regression analysis showed no significant difference between the two groups in the linear relationships between hepatic iron stores and plasma ferritin. Considering all 111 transfused patients as a group, the coefficient of correlation between hepatic iron stores and plasma ferritin was highly significant (R = 0.76, P < 0.0001). Regression analysis found that variation in body iron stores, as assessed by magnetic determinations of hepatic iron, accounted for only approximately 57% of the variation in plasma ferritin, suggesting that the remainder was the result of other factors, such as hemolysis, ineffective erythropoiesis, ascorbate deficiency, inflammation, and liver disease. The 95% prediction intervals for hepatic iron concentration, given the plasma ferritin, were so broad as to make a single determination of plasma ferritin an unreliable predictor of body iron stores. Variability resulting from factors other than iron status limits the clinical usefulness of the plasma ferritin concentration as a predictor of body iron stores.

astropy/photutils: 1.0.0
Larry Bradley, Brigitta Sipőcz, Thomas Robitaille, Erik Tollerud +4 more
2020· Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research)265doi:10.5281/zenodo.4044744

See <code>CHANGES.rst</code> for release notes.

Understanding Situational Online Information Disclosure as a Privacy Calculus
Han Li, Rathindra Sarathy, Heng Xu
2010· Journal of Computer Information Systems241doi:10.1080/08874417.2010.11645450

The effect of situational factors is largely ignored by current studies on information privacy. This paper theorized and empirically tested how an individual's decision-making on information disclosure is driven by competing situational benefits and risk factors. The results of this study indicate that, in the context of an e-commerce transaction with an unfamiliar vendor, information disclosure is the result of competing influences of exchange benefits and two types of privacy beliefs (privacy protection belief and privacy risk belief). In addition, the effect of monetary rewards is dependent upon the fairness of information exchange. Monetary rewards could undermine information disclosure when information collected has low relevance to the purpose of the e-commerce transaction.

New directions in earth system governance research
Sarah Burch, Aarti Gupta, Cristina Yumie Aoki Inoue, Agni Kalfagianni +4 more
2019· Earth System Governance223doi:10.1016/j.esg.2019.100006

The Earth System Governance project is a global research alliance that explores novel, effective governance mechanisms to cope with the current transitions in the biogeochemical systems of the planet. A decade after its inception, this article offers an overview of the project's new research framework (which is built upon a review of existing earth system governance research), the goal of which is to continue to stimulate a pluralistic, vibrant and relevant research community. This framework is composed of contextual conditions (transformations, inequality, Anthropocene and diversity), which capture what is being observed empirically, and five sets of research lenses (architecture and agency, democracy and power, justice and allocation, anticipation and imagination, and adaptiveness and reflexivity). Ultimately the goal is to guide and inspire the systematic study of how societies prepare for accelerated climate change and wider earth system change, as well as policy responses.

Freedom of the Press
Shelton A. Gunaratne
2002· Gazette (Leiden Netherlands)219doi:10.1177/174804850206400403

The world system theory can provide a refreshingly different perspective of global press freedom. The starting point of assessing press freedom should be the world system, not the ‘atomistic’ nation-state, because one cannot understand the part without knowing the whole, which is more than the sum of the parts. This article proposes the application of a revised formulation of the world system theory – which presumes a capitalist world-economy dominated by three competing center-clusters each associated with a dependent hinterland of peripheral economic clusters – to examine global press freedom. It proposes a three-tiered typology for measuring press freedom at the world system, nation-state and individual levels. It suggests that press freedom indices should factor in the power of the center-clusters, themselves led by a hegemon cluster, to flood the hinterlands technologically with a barrage of information-communication.

Effect of Iron Chelation Therapy on Recovery from Deep Coma in Children with Cerebral Malaria
Victor R. Gordeuk, Philip E. Thuma, Gary M. Brittenham, Christine E. McLaren +4 more
1992· New England Journal of Medicine217doi:10.1056/nejm199211193272101

BACKGROUND: Cerebral malaria is a severe complication of Plasmodium falciparum infection in children, with a mortality rate of 15 to 50 percent despite antimalarial therapy. METHODS: To determine whether combining iron chelation with quinine therapy speeds the recovery of consciousness, we conducted a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of the iron chelator deferoxamine in 83 Zambian children with cerebral malaria. To be enrolled, patients had to be less than six years old, have P. falciparum parasitemia, have normal cerebrospinal fluid without evidence of bacterial infection, and be in a coma from which they could not be aroused. Deferoxamine (100 mg per kilogram of body weight per day, infused intravenously for 72 hours) or placebo was added to standard therapy with quinine and sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine. The time to the recovery of full consciousness, time to parasite clearance, and mortality were examined with Cox proportional-hazards regression analysis. RESULTS: The rate of recovery of full consciousness among the 42 patients given deferoxamine was 1.3 times that among the 41 given placebo (95 percent confidence interval, 0.7 to 2.3); the median time to recovery was 20.2 hours in the deferoxamine group and 43.1 hours in the placebo group (P = 0.38). Among 50 patients with deep coma, the rate of recovery of full consciousness was increased 2.2-fold with deferoxamine (95 percent confidence interval, 1.1 to 4.7), decreasing the median recovery time from 68.2 to 24.1 hours (P = 0.03). Among 69 patients for whom data on parasite clearance were available, the rate of clearance with deferoxamine was 2.0 times that with placebo (95 percent confidence interval, 1.2 to 3.6). Among all 83 patients, mortality was 17 percent in the deferoxamine group and 22 percent in the placebo group (P = 0.52). CONCLUSIONS: Iron chelation therapy may hasten the clearance of parasitemia and enhance recovery from deep coma in cerebral malaria.

A reappraisal of the anatomical basis for speech in Middle Palaeolithic hominids
B. Arensburg, Lynne A. Schepartz, A. M. Tillier, Bernard Vandermeersch +1 more
1990· American Journal of Physical Anthropology208doi:10.1002/ajpa.1330830202

The recovery of a fossil hominid skeleton with a complete hyoid bone from Mousterian deposits in Kebara Cave, Israel, provides new evidence pertaining to the evolution of speech. Previous studies of speech in the Middle Palaeolithic (most notably those on Neandertals) have focused on the basicranium as an indicator of speech capabilities. This work critiques the use of the basicranium and instead presents the anatomical relations of the hyoid and adjacent structures in living humans as a basis for understanding the form of the vocal tract. The size and morphology of the hyoid from Kebara and its relations to other anatomical components are almost identical to those in modern humans, suggesting that Middle Palaeolithic populations were anatomically capable of fully modern speech.

Option Value: Empirical Evidence From a Case Study of Recreation and Water Quality
Douglas A. Greenley, Richard Walsh, Robert A. Young
1981· The Quarterly Journal of Economics199doi:10.2307/1880746

A procedure for measuring option value and other preservation values of water quality is developed and applied to a case study area in the South Platte River Basin, Colorado. Benefits from water-based recreation activities are the focus of the study. The results provide an empirical test and confirmation of Weisbrod's proposal that option value and other preservation values represent important social benefits, and should be added to the aggregate consumer surplus of recreation activities to determine the total benefit of environmental amenities to society. In the absence of such an estimate, insufficient resources would be allocated by society to preservation of unique environments such as pristine mountain streams where mineral and energy development may irreversibly degrade water quality.

Ethnographies of Archaeological Practice: Cultural Encounters, Material Transformations
Michael G. Michlovic
2007· American Anthropologist179doi:10.1525/aa.2007.109.2.373

Ethnographies of Archaeological Practice: Cultural Encounters, Material Transformations . Matt Edgeworth, ed. Lanham: AltaMira Press, 2006. 195 pages.