Harvard Dataverse
Not a member yet
92223 research outputs found
Sort by
PDB: 6BFS, Crystal structure of Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) (313K, 40°C, 500 ns): random seed #1
6BFS, Crystal structure of Granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) (313K, 40°C, 500 ns): random seed #1. PDBs obtained every 50 ns
Awareness of GMU Dental Students Regarding the Use of Artificial Intelligence in Dentistry
This contains the data set for the publication in submission entitled "Awareness of GMU Dental Students Regarding the Use of Artificial Intelligence in Dentistry
Bad Okra: An open dataset of bad Okra images for training machine vision algorithms for automated recognition and sorting based on produce visual characteristics.
Bad Okra: An open dataset of bad Okra images for training machine vision algorithms for automated recognition and sorting based on produce visual characteristics
Self-assessment of hearing quality by workers exposed to occupational noise
This research examines the self-perception of workers who are exposed to noise levels considered harmful to human hearing health. We offer a descriptive analysis and the data set of a large sample (N=955) of workers from all sectors of activity in Spain. The variables analyzed in this study are: the noise level of the workplace, the use of hearing protection or limitation of exposure time during the working day and the worker's own perception of the quality of their hearing
Machine Learning for Continuous-Time Finance Replication Data
Code and data to replicate the pape
SSG Byun Multimodal framing analysis data source & text data
SSG Byun Multimodal framing analysis data source & text dat
Clean and formated IWIN wheat breeding trial data - version 2
Clean and formatted IWIN wheat breeding trial data from 1979-2020, including six nurseries: ESWYT, HTWYT, IDYN, IWWYT_IRR, IWWYT_SA, and SAWYT
Us and Them: Foreign Threat and Domestic Polarization
Can foreign threats reduce domestic polarization and, if so, under what conditions? This is an important question for the United States given the severity of internal division and the emergence of China as a potentially unifying external peril. We offer a novel theoretical argument about when external danger will rally Americans based on the nexus between the vividness of foreign danger and bipartisan elite agreement about the threat. We test our theory through a series of pre-registered survey experiments. We find that vivid foreign threats do not reduce domestic polarization and therefore the danger from China alone may not be sufficient to spur domestic unity. However, vivid foreign threats in combination with policymaker agreement about the threat does significantly reduce domestic polarization. This reduction in polarization does come at a cost: increased public willingness to violate use of force norms against China. Overall, our study establishes that foreign peril can reduce domestic polarization under certain circumstances, and demonstrates that elite reactions to foreign threats are highly important in shaping wider domestic effects