11,075 research outputs found

    2020 Shukla Blue Waters Professor Report

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    2020 annual report for Diwakar Shukla Blue Waters Professor allocationOpen Restriction set for Item 116809 on 2020-12-22T21:26:52Z with date null by [email protected] by Susan Vinson ([email protected]) on 2020-12-22T21:30:52Z No. of bitstreams: 1 Shukla - BW-report-Shukla-2020.pdf: 1006947 bytes, checksum: 8ac4a77fa68b20ebf86c3f6d453f6da2 (MD5)Made available in DSpace on 2020-12-22T21:30:52Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Shukla - BW-report-Shukla-2020.pdf: 1006947 bytes, checksum: 8ac4a77fa68b20ebf86c3f6d453f6da2 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2020NSF OCI-0725070NSF ACI-1238993Ope

    2017 Shukla Blue Waters Professor Report

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    2017 annual report for Diwakar Shukla Blue Waters Professor allocation.Open Restriction set for Item 116725 on 2020-12-04T21:11:16Z with date null by [email protected] by Susan Vinson ([email protected]) on 2020-12-04T21:20:25Z No. of bitstreams: 1 bw_annual_report_shukla.pdf: 4936299 bytes, checksum: 905d7226f95e9717d1b11ed91cb9da33 (MD5)Made available in DSpace on 2020-12-04T21:20:25Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 bw_annual_report_shukla.pdf: 4936299 bytes, checksum: 905d7226f95e9717d1b11ed91cb9da33 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2017Ope

    2016 Shukla Blue Waters Professor Report

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    2016 annual report for Diwakar Shukla Blue Waters allocation.Open Restriction set for Item 116719 on 2020-12-04T20:13:29Z with date null by [email protected] by Susan Vinson ([email protected]) on 2020-12-04T20:16:31Z No. of bitstreams: 1 bw_progress_report_2016_Shukla.pdf: 1584023 bytes, checksum: fa1b6400e4515f52567ccd755325b98e (MD5)Made available in DSpace on 2020-12-04T20:16:31Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 bw_progress_report_2016_Shukla.pdf: 1584023 bytes, checksum: fa1b6400e4515f52567ccd755325b98e (MD5) Previous issue date: 2016Ope

    2018 Shukla Blue Waters Professor Report

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    2018 annual report for Diwakar Shukla Blue Waters Professor allocation.Open Restriction set for Item 116718 on 2020-12-04T20:06:09Z with date null by [email protected] by Susan Vinson ([email protected]) on 2020-12-04T20:10:00Z No. of bitstreams: 1 BW-jt3-extensionreport-March2018_Shukla.pdf: 287302 bytes, checksum: c9428417995656fac71d49312c6faafb (MD5)Made available in DSpace on 2020-12-04T20:10:00Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 BW-jt3-extensionreport-March2018_Shukla.pdf: 287302 bytes, checksum: c9428417995656fac71d49312c6faafb (MD5) Previous issue date: 2018-03-20NSF OCI-0725070NSF ACI-1238993Ope

    2016 Shukla Blue Waters Professor Report

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    Open2016 annual report for Diwakar Shukla Blue Waters Professor allocation.Open Restriction set for Item 116721 on 2020-12-04T20:35:48Z with date null by [email protected] by Susan Vinson ([email protected]) on 2020-12-04T20:40:22Z No. of bitstreams: 1 BW-2016-baaq-yearend-review_Shukla.pdf: 1196105 bytes, checksum: 71fa7e87923a484a02d3d4d62881874a (MD5)Made available in DSpace on 2020-12-04T20:40:22Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 BW-2016-baaq-yearend-review_Shukla.pdf: 1196105 bytes, checksum: 71fa7e87923a484a02d3d4d62881874a (MD5) Previous issue date: 2016NSF OCI-0725070NSF ACI-123899

    2019 Shukla Blue Waters Professor Report

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    2019 annual report for Diwakar Shukla Blue Waters Professor allocation.Open Restriction set for Item 116720 on 2020-12-04T20:20:11Z with date null by [email protected] by Susan Vinson ([email protected]) on 2020-12-04T20:28:53Z No. of bitstreams: 1 ILL_Jt3-report-Shukla_2019.docx: 2167861 bytes, checksum: 26ff10ee5a069be6217e55b66cda4af8 (MD5)Made available in DSpace on 2020-12-04T20:28:53Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 ILL_Jt3-report-Shukla_2019.docx: 2167861 bytes, checksum: 26ff10ee5a069be6217e55b66cda4af8 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2019NSF OCI-0725070NSF ACI-1238993Ope

    2018 Shukla Blue Waters Professor Report

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    2018 annual report for Diwakar Shukla Blue Waters Professor allocation.Open Restriction set for Item 116722 on 2020-12-04T20:52:55Z with date null by [email protected] by Susan Vinson ([email protected]) on 2020-12-04T20:56:32Z No. of bitstreams: 1 report-illinois-bw-2.pdf: 2838900 bytes, checksum: 86e841c1b2213a0b56e1d9899332ecb5 (MD5)Made available in DSpace on 2020-12-04T20:56:32Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 report-illinois-bw-2.pdf: 2838900 bytes, checksum: 86e841c1b2213a0b56e1d9899332ecb5 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2018NSF OCI-0725070NSF ACI-1238993Ope

    Retracted. Resilience, parenting style, and children’s eating behavior

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    At the request of the Journal Editors and SAGE Publishing, the following article has been retracted.Wood, M., & Shukla, P. (2019). Resilience, Parenting Style, and Children’s Eating Behavior. Social Marketing Quarterly, 25(2), 123–136. https://doi.org/10.1177/1524500419831084The article has been retracted after the journal became aware that substantial portions of the article were taken from the 2015 thesis titled ‘Is parental resilience associated with child feeding practices related to an authoritative parenting style and a reduced likelihood of childhood obesity?’ by Daisy Hopson, who was a student advisee of the first author, Matthew Wood, while he was a professor overseeing her writing of the thesis and Daisy was a student at the University of Brighton.The authors informed the journal that second author, Prof. Paurav Shukla, was responsible for additional data analysis, which was not part of Hopson’s thesis. The authors further informed us that the second author took no part in the article’s literature review and discussion.Original abstract:This study aims to gain a deeper understanding of the relationship between parental resilience and parenting styles and the impact of these characteristics on children’s eating behaviors and weight. Through a quantitative examination, we found parental concerns about their child’s weight positively relate to family attitudes toward fruits and vegetables but negatively relate to actual consumption of fruits and vegetables. Contrarily, advance planning of healthy meals among parents is negatively associated with family attitudes toward fruits and vegetables but positively associated with children’s consumption of fruits and vegetables. Family attitudes toward fruits and vegetables have a significant influence on children’s consumption of fruits and vegetables. The personal competence component of parental resilience has a significant moderating influence on the relationship between parental concerns about their child’s weight and his or her consumption of fruits and vegetables. The “acceptance of self and life” component of parental resilience has a significant moderating influence on the relationship between advance planning of healthy meals among parents and children’s consumption of fruits and vegetables

    Clustering of ions at atomic dimensions in quantum plasmas

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    By means of particle simulations of the equations of motion for ions interacting among themselves under the influence of newly discovered Shukla–Eliasson attractive force (SEAF) in a dense quantum plasma, we demonstrate that the SEAF can bring ions closer at atomic dimensions. We present simulation results of the dynamics of an ensemble of ions in the presence of the SEAF without and with confining external potentials and collisions between ions and degenerate electrons. Our particle simulations reveal that under the SEAF, ions attract each other, come closer, and form ionic clusters in the bath of degenerate electrons that shield ions. Furthermore, an external confining potential produces robust ion clusters that can have cigar- and ball-like shapes, which remain stable when the confining potential is removed. The stability of ion clusters is discussed. Our results may have applications to solid density plasmas (density exceeding 1023 per cm3), where the electrons will be degenerate and quantum forces due to the electron recoil effect caused by the overlapping of electron wave functions and electron tunneling through the Bohm potential, electron-exchange and electron-exchange and electron correlations associated with electron-1/2 spin effect, and the quantum statistical pressure of the degenerate electrons play a decisive role

    The changing landscape of JIBS authorship

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    In this study, we examine the landscape of JIBS authorship over time to assess: (1) the accessibility of JIBS to new contributors, and (2) the diversity of authors contributing to JIBS. Our analysis of author data from 1972 to 2014 shows that JIBS is becoming more accessible, as indicated by the high and sustained proportion of first-time contributors to the journal. This is also evident from the recent decline in the share of authors with multiple past JIBS publications. With regard to diversity, our findings show that JIBS has a much wider geographic scope of authors on its landscape in comparison to previous decades. This may be attributed partly to increasing travel and communication in scholarly communities, and partly to the increased migration of scholars in the recent decades. Our analysis of migration patterns of JIBS authors suggests that about 51 % of prominent international business scholars are employed outside their country of birth. Of the 49 % employed in their country of birth, 12 % are return migrants. In our sample, China, South Korea and Canada have the highest number of returnees. The USA, the UK, Germany, the Netherlands and China have the highest number of natives, whose country of birth, country of PhD-granting institution and country of university affiliation are identical.Peer reviewe
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