Now showing items 567-586 of 1413

    • Hands on Testing (HOT) Pilot Project: Recommendations and Findings Final Report 

      Miller-Cribbs, Julie; Havig, Kirsten; McLeod, David; Smith, Linda (2015-04-20)
      This report includes findings from a pilot project with three main objectives: (1) to develop standardized measures for the HOT test (child and adult interview), (2) to test of the reliability/validity of the newly developed ...
    • The “Hard Freight” Borne by the “Brave Child”: Theological Humanism in the Poetry of Charles Wright and Gregory Orr 

      Rebecca Huskey (Theology Today, 2012-04-01)
      Using Religion and the Human Future by Klemm and Schweiker as a reference point, I argue for the placement of the Appalachian poets Gregory Orr and Charles Wright within the emerging thought of theological humanism, which ...
    • HAVING A BABY 

      DEEANN WENK; PATRICIA GARRETT (Gender & Society, 1992-03-01)
      This analysis tests the influence of personal, job, and family status characteristics on maternal employment. We use the Merged Child/Mother File from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth to examine employment patterns ...
    • Health as Submission and Social Responsibilities: Embodied Experiences of Javanese Women With Type II Diabetes 

      Dyah Pitaloka; Elaine Hsieh (Qualitative Health Research, 2015-03-25)
      By examining women’s experiences with type II diabetes, we explore how illness can provide resources to construct meanings of everyday life in Javanese culture. We conducted in-depth interviews with 30 female participants ...
    • Hear Our Languages, Hear Our Voices: Storywork as Theory and Praxis in Indigenous-Language Reclamation 

      McCarty, Teresa L.; Nicholas, Sheilah E.; Chew, Kari A. B.; Diaz, Natalie G.; Leonard, Wesley Y.; White, Louellyn (2018)
      Storywork provides an epistemic, pedagogical, and methodological lens through which to examine Indigenous language reclamation in practice. We theorize the meaning of language reclamation in diverse Indigenous communities ...
    • Hegel on Right as Actualized Will 

      Unknown author (Political Theory, 1989-02-01)
    • Heme Regulates Exocrine Peptidase Precursor Genes in Zebrafish 

      Han Wang; Qingchun Zhou; Jason W. Kesinger; Chad Norris; Cammi Valdez (Experimental Biology and Medicine, 2007-10-01)
      We previously determined that yquem harbors a mutation in the gene encoding uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase (UROD), the fifth enzyme in heme biosynthesis, and established zebrafish yquem (yqetp61) as a vertebrate model for ...
    • Heterogeneous natural selection on oxidative phosphorylation genes among fishes with extreme high and low aerobic performance 

      Zhang, Feifei; Broughton, Richard E. (2015-08-26)
      Background: Oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) is the primary source of ATP in eukaryotes and serves as a mechanistic link between variation in genotypes and energetic phenotypes. While several physiological and anatomical ...
    • Hexavalent Chromium Reduction under Fermentative Conditions with Lactate Stimulated Native Microbial Communities 

      Anil C. Somenahally; Jennifer J. Mosher; Tong Yuan; Mircea Podar; Tommy J. Phelps; Steven D. Brown; Zamin K. Yang; Terry C. Hazen; Adam P. Arkin; Anthony V. Palumbo; Joy D. Van Nostrand; Jizhong Zhou; Dwayne A. Elias (PLos One, 2013-12-23)
      Microbial reduction of toxic hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) in-situ is a plausible bioremediation strategy in electron-acceptor limited environments. However, higher Cr(VI) may impose stress on syntrophic communities and ...
    • The Hidden Strengths in Family Business: Functional Conflict 

      Richard A. Cosier; Michael Harvey (Family Business Review, 1998-03-01)
      Conflict is likely in family businesses. Although some types of conflict are negative and should be minimized, other types are helpful and should be understood and encouraged to improve decisions. Using Jehn's (1997) ...
    • Hierarchical Approach to Corporate Advocacy: Corporate Advocacy as a Way of Guilt Redemption 

      Tsetsura, Katerina (Kenneth Burke Society, 2008)
      Building on Burke's and Gramsci's hierarchical perspectives, this essay examines the hierarchical nature of corporate advocacy and presents corporate advocacy as an inevitable outgrowth of the power relationship between ...
    • High Affinity Antibodies against Influenza Characterize the Plasmablast Response in SLE Patients After Vaccination 

      Kaval Kaur; Nai-Ying Zheng; Kenneth Smith; Min Huang; Lie Li; Noel T. Pauli; Carole J. Henry Dunand; Jane-Hwei Lee; Michael Morrissey; Yixuan Wu; Michelle L. Joachims; Melissa E. Munroe; Denise Lau; Xinyan Qu; Florian Krammer; Jens Wrammert; Peter Palese; Rafi Ahmed; Judith A. James; Patrick C. Wilson (PLos One, 2015-05-07)
      Breakdown of B cell tolerance is a cardinal feature of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Increased numbers of autoreactive mature naïve B cells have been described in SLE patients and autoantibodies have been shown to ...
    • High School Dropout Intentions of Seventh Grade Pupils 

      Unknown author (NASSP Bulletin, 1962-10-01)
    • Historical geography I: Vital traditions 

      Karl Offen (Progress in Human Geography, 2012-08-01)
      In the first of three reports outlining the current state of historical geography, I review recently published work from three research themes: the geographic imagination (maps and cartography), geographies of knowledge, ...
    • Historical geography II: Digital imaginations 

      Karl Offen (Progress in Human Geography, 2013-08-01)
      In my second report discussing the state of historical geography, I review some of the ways historical geographers have made use of digital technologies and digital media. I also highlight how digital data, research, and ...
    • Historical geography III: Climate matters 

      Karl Offen (Progress in Human Geography, 2014-06-01)
      My third report covering recent research in historical geography focuses on climate, and particularly scholarship that explores how the meaning of climate and climate change varies in distinct cultural and temporal contexts. ...
    • A Historiometric Examination of Machiavellianism and a New Taxonomy of Leadership 

      Katrina Bedell; Samuel Hunter; Amanda Angie; Andrew Vert (Journal of Leadership & Organizational Studies, 2006-06-01)
      Although researchers have extensively examined the relationship between charismatic leadership and Machiavellianism (Deluga, 2001; Gardner & Avolio, 1995; House & Howell, 1992), there has been a lack of investigation of ...
    • A History of Comparative Advertising in the United States 

      Fred K. Beard (Journalism & Communication Monographs, 2013-09-01)
      This historical monograph addresses a gap in the extensive scholarly research literature devoted to comparative advertising—especially that which contrasts the advertised product, service, or brand with an identifiable ...
    • Holden's Hold on the Censors 

      Ami E. Stearns (Contexts, 2011-10-01)
      J.D. Salinger’s novel The Catcher in the Rye has been on bookshelves since the 1950s—and its presence there has been protested for almost as long. This review explores why that Holden Caulfield can still elicit such social ...
    • Honor and the Stigma of Mental Healthcare 

      Ryan P. Brown; Mikiko Imura; Lara Mayeux (Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 2014-09-01)
      Most prior research on cultures of honor has focused on interpersonal aggression. The present studies examined the novel hypothesis that honor-culture ideology enhances the stigmatization of mental health needs and inhibits ...