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2003

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Articles 3151 - 3180 of 7819

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Can Policy Changes Be Treated As Natural Experiments? Evidence From Cigarette Excise Taxes, Jeffrey D. Kubik, John R. Moran May 2003

Can Policy Changes Be Treated As Natural Experiments? Evidence From Cigarette Excise Taxes, Jeffrey D. Kubik, John R. Moran

Economics - All Scholarship

An important issue in public policy analysis is the potential endogeneity of the policies under study. We examine the extent to which such political endogeneity biases estimates of behavioral parameters by identifying the elasticity of demand for cigarettes using the timing of state legislative elections as an instrument for changes in cigarette excise taxes. We find sizable differences between our estimates and those cited in Chaloupka and Warner (2000), which treat cigarette taxes as exogenous. Our results add to a growing body of evidence that policy changes may be codetermined with the outcomes they are thought to influence.


Health Centers As Safety Net Providers: An Overview And Assessment Of Medicaid's Role, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Peter Shin May 2003

Health Centers As Safety Net Providers: An Overview And Assessment Of Medicaid's Role, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Peter Shin

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

In 2001, health centers provided health care services to nearly 12 million people at more than 4,000 sites across the United States. As such, the health center program is a crucial part of the health care safety net for low-income individuals and medically underserved communities. This policy brief looks at health centers in detail in order to illuminate the role they play as providers of care and to document the important nexus between health centers and Medicaid.


Medicare+Choice In Phoenix, Arizona: So Far So Good? Maricopa County Site Visit Report, May 7-9, 2003, Lauren Hersch Nicholas, Geraldine Dallek, Brian Biles May 2003

Medicare+Choice In Phoenix, Arizona: So Far So Good? Maricopa County Site Visit Report, May 7-9, 2003, Lauren Hersch Nicholas, Geraldine Dallek, Brian Biles

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

There is significant variation in experiences with M+C across the United States. In some areas of the country, beneficiaries have a choice of multiple managed care plans and M+C market penetration rates remain well above the national average. Phoenix, Arizona is one of the markets where M+C appears to be successful. Thirty-seven percent of eligible beneficiaries are enrolled in a managed care plan and beneficiaries can choose from eight plans offered by six firms. Success of M+C in Phoenix has been partially attributed to a long history of managed care in Maricopa County, especially in the Medicaid program. The new …


Maximizing Access To Medications Through Efficient Use Of Care Act Resources, Jeffrey Levi, Julia Hidalgo, John Palen, Blaine Parrish, Kendra Williams, Anthony Lara May 2003

Maximizing Access To Medications Through Efficient Use Of Care Act Resources, Jeffrey Levi, Julia Hidalgo, John Palen, Blaine Parrish, Kendra Williams, Anthony Lara

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

HRSA's HIV/AIDS Bureau (HAB) contracted with the George Washington University to conduct a series of studies regarding various aspects of HIV medications funding through the Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency (CARE) Act, including the Title II-funded AIDS Drug Assistance Program and Title I-funded AIDS Pharmaceutical Assistance Programs. The goal of the studies was to inform HAB regarding (1) opportunities to promote more efficient use of scarce resources for HIV-related medications and (2) policy options that might ensure equitable access to life-saving therapies for low-income people living with HIV (PLWH). The three key issues addressed and the related study questions …


Online Requests: Toward Expanded And Efficient Management, Michael Acadia, Natalie Collins, Patricia Wilson May 2003

Online Requests: Toward Expanded And Efficient Management, Michael Acadia, Natalie Collins, Patricia Wilson

Himmelfarb Library Faculty Posters and Presentations

In 2003, Himmelfarb Health Sciences Library converted all interlibrary loan (ILL) and course reserve services to electronic format. This poster presentation is a synopsis of the steps taken to complete automation of the two (2) departments.


Testing Search Skills In A Real-Time, Cased-Based Setting, Patricia Wilson, Alexandra Gomes, Anne Linton May 2003

Testing Search Skills In A Real-Time, Cased-Based Setting, Patricia Wilson, Alexandra Gomes, Anne Linton

Himmelfarb Library Faculty Posters and Presentations

Using the web-based course management system, Prometheus, the librarians of Himmelfarb Health Sciences Library gave a real-time skills testing exam to 48 medical students. This poster presentation explores the goals and results the exam.


Mapping The Republic - Conflicting Concepts Of The Territory And Character Of The U.S.A., 1790-1900, Osher Map Library And Smith Center For Cartographic Education May 2003

Mapping The Republic - Conflicting Concepts Of The Territory And Character Of The U.S.A., 1790-1900, Osher Map Library And Smith Center For Cartographic Education

Osher Map Library Exhibition Catalogs

Mapping the Republic.

May 13, 2003 to May 29, 2004

Nineteenth-century maps of the U.S.A. embodied a truly important conflict in how Americans understood the republic: is it a collection of sovereign states or an expansive Union?

Curated by Prof. Matthew H. Edney.


The Syracuse University Library Radius Project: Development Of A Non-Destructive Playback System For Cylinder Recordings, William A. Penn, Martha J. Hanson May 2003

The Syracuse University Library Radius Project: Development Of A Non-Destructive Playback System For Cylinder Recordings, William A. Penn, Martha J. Hanson

Libraries' and Librarians' Publications

Syracuse University Library's Belfer Audio Laboratory and Archive (Belfer) holds nearly 20,000 cylinder recordings produced during the 'cylinder era' of 1895-1929. Many cylinders have become deteriorated over the past one hundred years and cannot be played without suffering serious physical damage inflicted by the sharp styli (needles) of traditional mechanical playback machines. In some cases, even one pass of a stylus may irrevocably damage a cylinder. In response to the playback challenges of cylinder recordings, Syracuse University Library developed the Radius Project: Development of a Non-Destructive Playback System for Cylinder Recordings, funded by the Institute of Museum and Library Services. …


Cedarville Vs. Concordia, Cedarville University May 2003

Cedarville Vs. Concordia, Cedarville University

Baseball Statistics

No abstract provided.


Printing And The Renaissance World, University Libraries--University Of South Carolina May 2003

Printing And The Renaissance World, University Libraries--University Of South Carolina

Rare Books & Special Collections Publications

This catalog accompanied the exhibit which illustrated the development and impact of printing, from Johann Gutenberg's mid-fifteenth century invention in Germany of moveable type, through its effects for the Renaissance in classical learning, for the Reformation in religion, for science and geography during the age of exploration, and (more briefly) for illustration, science, and literature. Among the items on display are an illuminated medieval manuscript codex from c. 1420; an early printed book from 1483, with hand-colored initials, and its original wooden binding; a wood-engraving by the German artist Albrecht Durer; a leaf from the 1611 first edition of the …


Patterns Of Journal Use By Scientists Through Three Evolutionary Phases., Carol Tenopir, Matt Grayson, Yan Zhang, Mercy Ebuen, Donald W. King, Peter B. Boyce May 2003

Patterns Of Journal Use By Scientists Through Three Evolutionary Phases., Carol Tenopir, Matt Grayson, Yan Zhang, Mercy Ebuen, Donald W. King, Peter B. Boyce

School of Information Sciences -- Faculty Publications and Other Works

Access to electronic journals and articles has involved three system phases: an early phase following introduction of electronic journals; an evolving phase in which a majority of scientific journals are available in electronic format, new features are added to some journals, and some individual articles are made available through preprint archives, author web sites, etc; and an advanced phase in which searching capabilities, advanced features, and individual articles are integrated in a complete system along with full text of core journals available back to their origin. This article provides some evidence of how scientists' information seeking and reading patterns are …


Questioning The Superstructure: A Marxist Critique Of The Rainbow And Women In Love, Diantha Acevedo May 2003

Questioning The Superstructure: A Marxist Critique Of The Rainbow And Women In Love, Diantha Acevedo

Seton Hall University Dissertations and Theses (ETDs)

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Modeling Correlated Time-Varying Covariate Effects In A Cox-Type Regression Model, Mourad Tighiouart May 2003

Modeling Correlated Time-Varying Covariate Effects In A Cox-Type Regression Model, Mourad Tighiouart

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

In this paper, I extend the proposed model by McKeague and Tighiouart (2000) to handle time-varying correlated covariate effects for the analysis of survival data. I use the conditional predictive ordinates (CPO’s) for model comparison and the methodology is illustrated by an application to nasopharynx cancer survival data. A reversible jump MCMC sampler to estimate the CPO’s will be presented.


Incorporating Sampling Weights Into The Generalizability Theory For Large-Scale Analyses, Christopher W. T. Chiu, Ronald S. Fesco May 2003

Incorporating Sampling Weights Into The Generalizability Theory For Large-Scale Analyses, Christopher W. T. Chiu, Ronald S. Fesco

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

Large scale studies frequently use complex sampling procedures, disproportionate sampling weights, and adjustment techniques to account for potential bias due to nonresponses and to ensure that results from the sample can be generalized to a larger population. Survey researchers are concerned about measurement error and the use of weights in developing models. Consequently, multiple weighting factors are used and these weighting factors are manifested as a final survey (composite) weight available for analysis. We developed a method to incorporate an external weighting factor like this for analyses of measurement errors in the theory of generalizability to provide researchers with a …


A More Efficient Way Of Obtaining A Unique Median Estimate For Circular Data, B. Sango Otieno, Christine M. Anderson-Cook May 2003

A More Efficient Way Of Obtaining A Unique Median Estimate For Circular Data, B. Sango Otieno, Christine M. Anderson-Cook

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

The procedure for computing the sample circular median occasionally leads to a non-unique estimate of the population circular median, since there can sometimes be two or more diameters that divide data equally and have the same circular mean deviation. A modification in the computation of the sample median is suggested, which not only eliminates this non-uniqueness problem, but is computationally easier and faster to work with than the existing alternative.


A Semiparametric Regression Model For Oligonucleotide Arrays, Jianhua Hu, Guosheng Yin May 2003

A Semiparametric Regression Model For Oligonucleotide Arrays, Jianhua Hu, Guosheng Yin

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

A semiparametric model incorporating the spline smoothing technique is proposed to study oligonucleotide gene expression data. No specific parametric functional form is assumed for mismatch probe intensities, which allows much more flexibility in the fitted model. The new approach improves the model fitting, hence the estimation of expression indexes. The method is applied to a data set of 18 HuGeneFL arrays.


The Way Ahead In Qualitative Computing, Tom Richards, Lyn Richards May 2003

The Way Ahead In Qualitative Computing, Tom Richards, Lyn Richards

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

Specialized computer programs for Qualitative Research in social sciences have greatly changed ways of doing QR, the reliability and comprehensiveness of results, the ability to inspect and challenge a researcher’s working, and the relationship with quantitative methods in social research. This article explores these claims in the context of N6 (NUD*IST) and NVivo, the two programs designed by the authors; and considers possible future developments in the field.


Research Proposal: Gender Stereotypes Within Children‘S Play, Melani Saito May 2003

Research Proposal: Gender Stereotypes Within Children‘S Play, Melani Saito

Undergraduate Psychology Research Methods Journal

For my research I will study the interaction habits of boys and girls. I wanted to watch these children and observe this behavior: to see if girls interacted with girls more than boys, and boys would play with boys more than girls. Bigler & Liben and Fagot & Hagan‘s Journal articles support my hypothesis of the children interacting with their own sex more. But Shirley and Heywood would disagree and support the idea that there is no difference. I wanted to study this because I think that it would be interesting to find that children really do play with their …


Research Proposal: The Effects Of Alcohol On The Social Aspects Of High School Students, Katherine Friedhoff May 2003

Research Proposal: The Effects Of Alcohol On The Social Aspects Of High School Students, Katherine Friedhoff

Undergraduate Psychology Research Methods Journal

Although the legal drinking age is twenty-one, the age that a person begins to consume alcohol is decreasing. In a study in 1997, the average age of first alcohol use was 13.2 years old ( Maney, Higham-Gardill, & Mahoney, 2002). Drinking alcohol at a young age can lead to social problems and even delinquent behavior. It has been said that adolescent alcohol misuse has been shown to be part of a constellation of problem behaviors including delinquency and illicit drug use (Barnes, Welte, & Hoffman, 2002). Not only does it aid in future delinquency but also antisocial personality and health …


2003 Nccaa Track & Field Championships, Cedarville University May 2003

2003 Nccaa Track & Field Championships, Cedarville University

Men's Track & Field Statistics

No abstract provided.


Media Consumption And Male Body Image, Catherine A. Larsen May 2003

Media Consumption And Male Body Image, Catherine A. Larsen

Undergraduate Honors Capstone Projects

The purpose of our proposed research is to examine the relationship between media consumption and self-appraised body image in male college students. That is, does a correlation exist between the amount and type of media consumed (magazines in particular) and how males perceive their own body. Our hypothesis postulates that since magazines often portray unrealistic and "ideal" physiques, men that purchase and read body-oriented magazines will be have a more negative body image than those who do not.


Artifacts And Cultures-Of-Use In Intercultural Communication, Steven L. Thorne May 2003

Artifacts And Cultures-Of-Use In Intercultural Communication, Steven L. Thorne

World Languages and Literatures Faculty Publications and Presentations

This article develops a conceptual framework for understanding how intercultural communication, mediated by cultural artifacts (i.e., Internet communication tools), creates compelling, problematic, and surprising conditions for additional language learning. Three case studies of computer-mediated intercultural engagement draw together correlations between discursive orientation, communicative modality, communicative activity, and emergent interpersonal dynamics. These factors contribute to varying qualities and quantities of participation in the intercultural partnerships. Case one, "Clashing Frames of Expectation -- Differing Cultures-of-Use," suggests that the cultures-of-use of Internet communication tools, their perceived existence and on-going construction as distinctive cultural artifacts, differs interculturally just as communicative genre, pragmatics, and institutional …


The Lonely Pragmatist: Humanitarian Intervention In An Imperfect World, David Vessel May 2003

The Lonely Pragmatist: Humanitarian Intervention In An Imperfect World, David Vessel

Brigham Young University Journal of Public Law

No abstract provided.


Homogeneous Markov Processes For Breast Cancer Analysis, Ricardo Ocaña-Rilola, Emilio Sanchez-Cantalejo, Carmen Martinez-Garcia May 2003

Homogeneous Markov Processes For Breast Cancer Analysis, Ricardo Ocaña-Rilola, Emilio Sanchez-Cantalejo, Carmen Martinez-Garcia

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

Sometimes, the introduction of covariates in stochastic processes is required to study their effect on disease history events. However these types of models increase the complexity of analysis, even for simpler processes, and standard software to analyse stochastic processes is limited. In this paper, a method for fitting homogeneous Markov models with covariates is proposed for analysing breast cancer data. Specific software for this purpose has been implemented.


Reconstructing Cetacean Brain Evolution Using Computed Tomography, Lori Marino, Mark D. Uhen, Nicholas D. Pyenson, Bruno Frohlich May 2003

Reconstructing Cetacean Brain Evolution Using Computed Tomography, Lori Marino, Mark D. Uhen, Nicholas D. Pyenson, Bruno Frohlich

Veterinary Science and Medicine Collection

Until recently, there have been relatively few studies of brain mass and morphology in fossil cetaceans (dolphins, whales, and porpoises) because of difficulty accessing the matrix that fills the endocranial cavity of fossil cetacean skulls. As a result, our knowledge about cetacean brain evolution has been quite limited. By applying the noninvasive technique of computed tomography (CT) to visualize, measure, and reconstruct the endocranial morphology of fossil cetacean skulls, we can gain vastly more information at an unprecedented rate about cetacean brain evolution. Here, we discuss our method and demonstrate it with several examples from our fossil cetacean database. This …


Signs Of Faith, May 2003 May 2003

Signs Of Faith, May 2003

Signs of Faith

A newsletter published for Deaf Catholics in Paterson, NJ

Signs of Faith Finding Aid


Catholic Deaf And Hard Of Hearing Society Of Madison, May-June 2003 May 2003

Catholic Deaf And Hard Of Hearing Society Of Madison, May-June 2003

Catholic Deaf and Hard of Hearing Society of Madison

A newsletter published for Deaf Catholics in Madison, WI

Catholic Deaf and Hard of Hearing Society of Madison Finding Aid


An Assessment Of Marital Satisfaction, Marital Adjustment, And Problematic Areas During The First Few Months Of Marriage Among A Sample Of Newlyweds In Utah, David G. Schramm May 2003

An Assessment Of Marital Satisfaction, Marital Adjustment, And Problematic Areas During The First Few Months Of Marriage Among A Sample Of Newlyweds In Utah, David G. Schramm

All Graduate Theses and Dissertations, Spring 1920 to Summer 2023

A self-selected sample of 232 newlywed husbands and wives in Utah was surveyed to assess marital satisfaction, marital adjustment, and problematic areas during the first few months of marriage. The study utilized the Kansas Marital Satisfaction Scale (KMSS) and the Revised Dyadic Adjustment Scale (RDAS), in addition to a list of30 potential problematic areas created by Creighton University to measure these constructs.

Although the majority of the newlyweds in this sample were fairly satisfied and well adjusted, 11% of both husbands and wives scored in the distressed range on the RDAS, signaling that the first few months of marriage can …


Maternal Involvement In Preschoolers' Sexuality Education: A Comparison Of Single And Married Mothers, Ginger S. Sandweg May 2003

Maternal Involvement In Preschoolers' Sexuality Education: A Comparison Of Single And Married Mothers, Ginger S. Sandweg

All Graduate Theses and Dissertations, Spring 1920 to Summer 2023

This study examined the responses to a sexuality education questionnaire completed by 30 single mothers and 43 married mothers with preschool-aged children. Chi-square analyses were used to examine differences between married mothers and single mothers; mothers of males and mothers of females; and married mothers of males, married mothers of females, single mothers of males and single mothers of females. Age at which their preschool children first exhibited behaviors, frequency of that behavior, and comfort level of mothers' responses to those behaviors were addressed for each topic: male-female differences, reproduction and birth, privacy or modesty, taboo or obscene words, genital …


Amenity Migration And Social Change: Expanding The Concept Of Community Attachment And Its Relationship To Dimensions Of Well-Being In The Rural West, Joan M. Brehm May 2003

Amenity Migration And Social Change: Expanding The Concept Of Community Attachment And Its Relationship To Dimensions Of Well-Being In The Rural West, Joan M. Brehm

All Graduate Theses and Dissertations, Spring 1920 to Summer 2023

Most sociological analyses of community attachment have focused on the strength of attachment, with little concern for the qualities or attributes of a place to which people become attached. In cases where dimensions of attachment are the focus of analysis, the literature is rather narrowly focused on social dimensions, referring most often to connections with family, friends, and other social networks and largely ignoring the realm of natural environment factors. Two primary premises motivated this study. First, sociological understandings of community attachment would benefit from an expanded analytic framework that incorporates more complex arrays of both social and natural environment …