574 research outputs found
Online Supplement for Han & Pollock (2021)
Online supplement for the manuscript: Han, Jung-Hoon & Timothy G. Pollock. 2021. The Two Towers (or Somewhere in Between): The Behavioral Consequences of Positional Inconsistency Across Status Hierarchies. Academy of Management Journal, 64(1): 86-113.
Appendix A provides information about an alternative testing of our hypotheses using polynomial regression.
Appendix B provides an example of high-artistic/commercial-status Hollywood professionals using out measurement.
</p
Lashley_Pollock_Final_online_supp – Supplemental material for Waiting to Inhale: Reducing Stigma in the Medical Cannabis Industry
Supplemental material, Lashley_Pollock_Final_online_supp for Waiting to Inhale: Reducing Stigma in the Medical Cannabis Industry by Kisha Lashley and Timothy G. Pollock in Administrative Science Quarterly</p
Roccapriore & Pollock, 2023 - AMJ - Online Supplement.docx.pdf
This online supplement provides additional reference material for the journal article published at AMJ with the following citation:
Roccapriore, A.Y. & Pollock, T.G. 2023. I Don’t Need A Degree, I’ve Got Abs: Competence, Warmth, and the Influence of Multimode Communication On Social Media. Academy of Management Journal. https://doi.org/10.5465/amj.2020.1546.</p
TD_Supplement_Final – Supplemental material for A Hierarchical Integration of Normal and Abnormal Personality Dimensions: Structure and Predictive Validity in a Heterogeneous Sample of Psychiatric Outpatients
Supplemental material, TD_Supplement_Final for A Hierarchical Integration of Normal and Abnormal Personality Dimensions: Structure and Predictive Validity in a Heterogeneous Sample of Psychiatric Outpatients by Timothy A. Allen, Colin G. DeYoung, R. Michael Bagby, Bruce G. Pollock and Lena C. Quilty in Assessment</p
Online Supplement for Han et al. (2024)
Online supplement for the manuscript: Han, Jung-Hoon, Timothy G. Pollock, & Scott d. Graffin. 2024. Now You See Me: How Status and Categorical Proximity Shape Misconduct Scandalization. Academy of Management Journal, 67(1): 208-231.Please refer to the manuscript for detailed explanations of the tables.</p
Online Supplement for Han et al. (2025)
Online supplement for the manuscript: Han, Jung-Hoon, Timothy G. Pollock, & Srikanth Paruchuri. 2025. Public Enemies? The Differential Effects of Reputation and Celebrity on Corporate Misconduct Scandalization. Strategic Management Journal, Forthcoming.Please refer to the manuscript for detailed explanations of the tables.</p
Contract, Race, and Freedom of Labor in the Constitutional Law of “Involuntary Servitude”
The Supreme Court has yet to adopt and apply a standard for assessing labor rights claims under the Involuntary Servitude Clause of the Thirteenth Amendment. This Article suggests that one may be found in the leading decision of Pollock v. Williams (1944), which contains the Court’s most thorough discussion of the interpretive issues. Under Pollock, a claimed right should be protected if it is necessary to provide workers with the “power below” and employers the “incentive above” to prevent “a harsh overlordship or unwholesome conditions of work.” Although this is not the only conceivable standard, it does fit well with the text, history, and case law of the Amendment. The absence of any racial element, which might appear dishonest in light of the fact that most of the leading cases involved workers of color, nevertheless corresponds to the Amendment’s original meaning and appears to have important advantages from a doctrinal point of view. The Article discusses the legal and philosophical justifications of various labor rights in relation to the Pollock standard, including the right to quit, the right to change employers, the right to name the wages for which one is willing to work, and the right to strike.Peer reviewe
Simulation of a Mixer - Settler Liquid Extraction Column
Title: Simulation of a Mixer - Settler Liquid Extraction Column, Author: Gary G. Pollock, Location: ThodeLagrangian interpolation and the Fibonacci search scheme were used in the steady - state simulation of a Scheibel extraction column on the IBM 7040 computer. The first technique allowed easy representation of graphical data in a form suitable for the digital computer while the second provided a powerful sequential search plan to carry out the trial and error
material balance calculation. The features of equilibrium and non-equilibrium models which utilized the above techniques are discussed and compared. The non-equilibrium model was also used to calculate the transient response which was then compared with experimental results. The Runge-Kutta-Gill process was used to integrate the transient
equations while Lagrangian interpolation was used to remove the restriction of a linear equilibrium relationship. Steady - state and transient experimental results used in the above calculations were obtained from the Scheibel extraction column in the Operations Laboratory.ThesisMaster of Engineering (ME
Characteristics of trypsin from the pyloric ceca of walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma)
Trypsin was purified from the pyloric ceca of walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma) by gel filtration on Sephacryl S-200 and Sephadex G-50. The final enzyme preparation was nearly homogeneous in sodium dodecyl sulfate–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS–PAGE) and the molecular mass of the enzyme was estimated to be 24 kDa by SDS–PAGE. Trypsin activity was effectively inhibited by serine protease inhibitors, such as soybean trypsin inhibitor and TLCK. Trypsin had maximal activities at around pH 8.0 and 50 °C for the hydrolysis of Nα-p-tosyl-l-arginine methyl ester hydrochloride. Trypsin was unstable above 30 °C and below pH 5.0, and was stabilized by calcium ions. Walleye pollock trypsin was more thermally unstable than trypsin from the Temperate Zone fish and Tropical Zone fish. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the trypsin, IVGGYECTKHSQAHQVSLNS, was found, and the sequential identity between the walleye pollock trypsin and Frigid Zone fish trypsin was higher (85–100%) than with Temperate Zone fish trypsin (75–90%), Tropical Zone fish trypsin (75–85%), or mammalian trypsin (60–65%)
User involvement in a Cochrane systematic review: using structured methods to enhance the clinical relevance, usefulness and usability of a systematic review update
Background: This paper describes the structured methods used to involve patients, carers and health professionals in an update of a Cochrane systematic review relating to physiotherapy after stroke and explores the perceived impact of involvement.Methods: We sought funding and ethical approval for our user involvement. We recruited a stakeholder group comprising stroke survivors, carers, physiotherapists and educators and held three pre-planned meetings during the course of updating a Cochrane systematic review. Within these meetings, we used formal group consensus methods, based on nominal group techniques, to reach consensus decisions on key issues relating to the structure and methods of the review.Results: The stakeholder group comprised 13 people, including stroke survivors, carers and physiotherapists with a range of different experience, and either 12 or 13 participated in each meeting. At meeting 1, there was consensus that methods of categorising interventions that were used in the original Cochrane review were no longer appropriate or clinically relevant (11/13 participants disagreed or strongly disagreed with previous categories) and that international trials (which had not fitted into the original method of categorisation) ought to be included within the review (12/12 participants agreed or strongly agreed these should be included). At meeting 2, the group members reached consensus over 27 clearly defined treatment components, which were to be used to categorise interventions within the review (12/12 agreed or strongly agreed), and at meeting 3, they agreed on the key messages emerging from the completed review. All participants strongly agreed that the views of the group impacted on the review update, that the review benefited from the involvement of the stakeholder group, and that they believed other Cochrane reviews would benefit from the involvement of similar stakeholder groups.Conclusions: We involved a stakeholder group in the update of a Cochrane systematic review, using clearly described structured methods to reach consensus decisions. The involvement of stakeholders impacted substantially on the review, with the inclusion of international studies, and changes to classification of treatments, comparisons and subgroup comparisons explored within the meta-analysis. We argue that the structured approach which we adopted has implications for other systematic reviews.</p
- …
