241 results on '"Greene RL"'
Search Results
2. Author Correction: A consensus-based transparency checklist.
- Author
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Aczel, B, Szaszi, B, Sarafoglou, A, Kekecs, Z, Kucharský, Š, Benjamin, D, Chambers, CD, Fisher, A, Gelman, A, Gernsbacher, MA, Ioannidis, JP, Johnson, E, Jonas, K, Kousta, S, Lilienfeld, SO, Lindsay, DS, Morey, CC, Munafò, M, Newell, BR, Pashler, H, Shanks, DR, Simons, DJ, Wicherts, JM, Albarracin, D, Anderson, ND, Antonakis, J, Arkes, HR, Back, MD, Banks, GC, Beevers, C, Bennett, AA, Bleidorn, W, Boyer, TW, Cacciari, C, Carter, AS, Cesario, J, Clifton, C, Conroy, RM, Cortese, M, Cosci, F, Cowan, N, Crawford, J, Crone, EA, Curtin, J, Engle, R, Farrell, S, Fearon, P, Fichman, M, Frankenhuis, W, Freund, AM, Gaskell, MG, Giner-Sorolla, R, Green, DP, Greene, RL, Harlow, LL, de la Guardia, FH, Isaacowitz, D, Kolodner, J, Lieberman, D, Logan, GD, Mendes, WB, Moersdorf, L, Nyhan, B, Pollack, J, Sullivan, C, Vazire, S, Wagenmakers, E-J, Aczel, B, Szaszi, B, Sarafoglou, A, Kekecs, Z, Kucharský, Š, Benjamin, D, Chambers, CD, Fisher, A, Gelman, A, Gernsbacher, MA, Ioannidis, JP, Johnson, E, Jonas, K, Kousta, S, Lilienfeld, SO, Lindsay, DS, Morey, CC, Munafò, M, Newell, BR, Pashler, H, Shanks, DR, Simons, DJ, Wicherts, JM, Albarracin, D, Anderson, ND, Antonakis, J, Arkes, HR, Back, MD, Banks, GC, Beevers, C, Bennett, AA, Bleidorn, W, Boyer, TW, Cacciari, C, Carter, AS, Cesario, J, Clifton, C, Conroy, RM, Cortese, M, Cosci, F, Cowan, N, Crawford, J, Crone, EA, Curtin, J, Engle, R, Farrell, S, Fearon, P, Fichman, M, Frankenhuis, W, Freund, AM, Gaskell, MG, Giner-Sorolla, R, Green, DP, Greene, RL, Harlow, LL, de la Guardia, FH, Isaacowitz, D, Kolodner, J, Lieberman, D, Logan, GD, Mendes, WB, Moersdorf, L, Nyhan, B, Pollack, J, Sullivan, C, Vazire, S, and Wagenmakers, E-J
- Abstract
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
- Published
- 2020
3. A consensus-based transparency checklist
- Author
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Aczel, B, Szaszi, B, Sarafoglou, A, Kekecs, Z, Kucharsky, S, Benjamin, D, Chambers, CD, Fisher, A, Gelman, A, Gernsbacher, MA, Ioannidis, JP, Johnson, E, Jonas, K, Kousta, S, Lilienfeld, SO, Lindsay, DS, Morey, CC, Munafo, M, Newell, BR, Pashler, H, Shanks, DR, Simons, DJ, Wicherts, JM, Albarracin, D, Anderson, ND, Antonakis, J, Arkes, HR, Back, MD, Banks, GC, Beevers, C, Bennett, AA, Bleidorn, W, Boyer, TW, Cacciari, C, Carter, AS, Cesario, J, Clifton, C, Conroy, RM, Cortese, M, Cosci, F, Cowan, N, Crawford, J, Crone, EA, Curtin, J, Engle, R, Farrell, S, Fearon, P, Fichman, M, Frankenhuis, W, Freund, AM, Gaskell, MG, Giner-Sorolla, R, Green, DP, Greene, RL, Harlow, LL, De la Guardia, FH, Isaacowitz, D, Kolodner, J, Lieberman, D, Logan, GD, Mendes, WB, Moersdorf, L, Nyhan, B, Pollack, J, Sullivan, C, Vazire, S, Wagenmakers, E-J, Aczel, B, Szaszi, B, Sarafoglou, A, Kekecs, Z, Kucharsky, S, Benjamin, D, Chambers, CD, Fisher, A, Gelman, A, Gernsbacher, MA, Ioannidis, JP, Johnson, E, Jonas, K, Kousta, S, Lilienfeld, SO, Lindsay, DS, Morey, CC, Munafo, M, Newell, BR, Pashler, H, Shanks, DR, Simons, DJ, Wicherts, JM, Albarracin, D, Anderson, ND, Antonakis, J, Arkes, HR, Back, MD, Banks, GC, Beevers, C, Bennett, AA, Bleidorn, W, Boyer, TW, Cacciari, C, Carter, AS, Cesario, J, Clifton, C, Conroy, RM, Cortese, M, Cosci, F, Cowan, N, Crawford, J, Crone, EA, Curtin, J, Engle, R, Farrell, S, Fearon, P, Fichman, M, Frankenhuis, W, Freund, AM, Gaskell, MG, Giner-Sorolla, R, Green, DP, Greene, RL, Harlow, LL, De la Guardia, FH, Isaacowitz, D, Kolodner, J, Lieberman, D, Logan, GD, Mendes, WB, Moersdorf, L, Nyhan, B, Pollack, J, Sullivan, C, Vazire, S, and Wagenmakers, E-J
- Abstract
We present a consensus-based checklist to improve and document the transparency of research reports in social and behavioural research. An accompanying online application allows users to complete the form and generate a report that they can submit with their manuscript or post to a public repository.
- Published
- 2020
4. Evidence of apical oxygen in Nd2CuOy determined by single-crystal neutron diffraction
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Radaelli, PG, Jorgensen, JD, Schultz, AJ, Peng, JL, and Greene, RL
- Abstract
The defect structure of oxygenated and reduced Nd2CuOy (y4) was investigated by single-crystal neutron diffraction. Structural refinements indicate the presence of interstitial oxygen atoms in the apical O(3) position, directly above or below the copper atoms. The occupancy of the apical oxygen site is ∼0.10 (per formula unit) for the oxygenated sample and ∼0.04 for the reduced one. Both the in-plane O(1) and the out-of-plane O(2) oxygen sites were found to be deficient, but their occupancy did not vary, within the error bars, between the two crystals. The difference in oxygen content between the two crystals, as calculated from the structural refinements, is consistent, within the error bars, with the thermogravimetric analysis values reported in the literature. © 1994 The American Physical Society.
- Published
- 2016
5. Performance of a Thin-Surfaced, Crushed-Stone Base Pavement
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Barksdale, RD, primary, Greene, RL, additional, Bush, AJ, additional, and Machemehl, CA, additional
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6. Ferromagnetic Resonance and Magnetization Studies on Ferrimagnetic Double Perovskites A $_{2}$ FeReO $_{6}$ (A = Ca, Sr, Ba)
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Lofland, SE, Scabarozi, T, Kale, S, Bhagat, SM, Ogale, SB, Venkatesan, T, Greene, RL, Gopalakrishnan, J, and Ramesha, K
- Subjects
Condensed Matter::Materials Science ,Solid State & Structural Chemistry Unit ,Condensed Matter::Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
We present the results of an investigation of the magnetic properties A $_{2}$ FeReO $_{6}$ (A = Ca, Sr, Ba). We have studied the magnetization, high-temperature susceptibility and the ferromagnetic resonance response. The Ba and Sr systems are conducting while the Ca material is an insulator. The ordering temperature of the Ca materials is highest (\sim 540 K) and decreases to 315 K for the Ba system. The high-temperature susceptibilit suggests a large moment, and the Curie-Weiss temperature is very close to the ordering temperature, as expected for a simple ferromagnet, although the ferromagnetic moment is somewhat less than expected. The spin dynamics are rather peculiar: the ferromagnetic resonance results suggest a magnetically inhomogeneous material. We discuss these results in terms of cation disorder.
- Published
- 2001
7. Magnetoresistance of the metallic perovskite oxide LaNiO3-delta
- Author
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Gayathri, N, Raychaudhuri, AK, Xu, XQ, Peng, JL, and Greene, RL
- Subjects
Physics - Abstract
We report a study of the magnetoresistance (MR) of the metallic perovskite oxide LaNiO3-delta as a function of the oxygen stoichiometry delta (delta less than or equal to 0.14), magnetic field (H less than or equal to 6 T) and temperature (1.5 K less than or equal to T less than or equal to 25 K). We find a strong dependence of the nature of the MR on the oxygen stoichiometry. The MR at low temperatures changes from positive to negative as the sample becomes more oxygen deficient (i.e. delta increases). Some of the samples, which are more resistive, show resistivity minima at T-min approximate to 20 K. We find that in these samples the MR is positive for T > T-min and negative for T < T-min. We conclude that in the absence of strong magnetic interaction, the negative MR in these oxides can arise from weak-localization effects.
- Published
- 1999
8. Electronic conduction in LaNiO3-delta: the dependence on the oxygen stoichiometry delta
- Author
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Gayathri, N, Raychaudhuri, AK, XQ, Xu, Peng, JL, and Greene, RL
- Subjects
Physics - Abstract
We report a systematic study of the electronic transport properties of the metallic perovskite oxide LaNiO3-delta as a function of the oxygen stoichiometry delta (delta less than or equal to 0.14). The electrical resistivity, magnetoresistance, susceptibility, Hall effect and thermopower have been studied, All of the transport coefficients are dependent on the value of delta. The resistivity increases almost exponentially as delta increases. We relate this increase in rho to the creation of Ni2+ with square-planar coordination. We find that there is a distinct T-1.5-contribution to the resistivity over the whole temperature range. The thermopower is negative, as expected for systems with electrons as the carrier, but the Hall coefficient is positive. We have given a qualitative and quantitative explanation for the different quantities observed and their systematic variation with the stoichiometry delta.
- Published
- 1998
9. 1/ f electrical noise in epitaxial thin films of the manganite oxides $La_0_._6_7Ca_0_._3_3MnO_3$ and $Pr_0_._6_7Sr_0_._3_3MnO_3$
- Author
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Rajeswari, M, Goyal, A, Raychaudhuri, AK, Robson, MC, Xiong, GC, Kwon, C, Ramesh, R, Greene, RL, Venkatesan, T, and Lakeou, S
- Subjects
Physics - Abstract
We report measurements of 1/f electrical noise in two hole doped manganite perovskite oxides, $La_0_._6_7Ca_0_._3_3MnO_3$ and $Pr_0_._6_7Sr_0_._3_3MnO_3$, which exhibit colossal magnetoresistance. The noise magnitude represented by the Hooge parameter is nearly 8 orders of magnitude larger than that observed in ordinary metals (and semiconductors) and nearly 5–6 orders of magnitude larger than that observed in epitaxial films of the perovskite oxide $YBa_2Cu_3O_7$ in the normal state. The normalized noise spectral density increases with decreasing temperature below the resistivity peak, suggestive of the presence of additional low energy noise processes in the ferromagnetic metallic state.
- Published
- 1996
10. Orthographic neighborhood size effects in recognition memory.
- Author
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Glanc GA and Greene RL
- Abstract
This study argues for the importance of physical word features in recognition memory by investigating the influence of orthographic distinctiveness. Experiment 1 demonstrated a mirror effect in ayes/no recognition test by manipulating orthographic neighborhood size. Words with small neighborhoods showed more hits and fewer false alarms than did words with larger neighborhoods. Experiment 2 replicated the neighborhood size mirror effect using null pairs in a forced choice recognition test. Experiment 3 required remember/know judgments in a yes/no recognition task. Experiment 4 used the same yes/no test as did Experiment 1, adding a study task that drew attention away from orthographic information in the study list. The mirror pattern disappeared with the addition of the study task. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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11. Hassles, hardiness and absenteeism: results of a 3-year longitudinal study.
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Greene RL and Nowack KM
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- 1995
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12. Melting of monolayer xenon on silver: The hexatic phase in the weak-substrate limit
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Paul M. Horn, Held Ga, Frahm R, Greene Rl, Robert M. Suter, and Greiser N
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Fusion ,Materials science ,Condensed matter physics ,General Physics and Astronomy ,High resolution ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Xenon ,chemistry ,Chemical physics ,X-ray crystallography ,Monolayer ,ddc:550 ,Hexatic phase - Abstract
Physical review letters 59(15), 1706 - 1709 (1987). doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.59.1706, Published by APS, College Park, Md.
- Published
- 1987
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13. ELECTRO-CRYSTALLIZATION OF TETRAMETHYLTETRASELENAFULVALENIUM SALTS (TMTSF)2-X - SYSTEMATIC CHEMICAL MODIFICATIONS
- Author
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ENGLER, EM, TOMKIEWICZ, Y, Mortensen, Kell, GREENE, RL, ENGLER, EM, TOMKIEWICZ, Y, Mortensen, Kell, and GREENE, RL
- Published
- 1981
14. The Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory
- Author
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Dennis, Greene Rl, Hartman Jt, and Farr Sp
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Clinical interview ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Interpretation (philosophy) ,General Medicine ,Hysteria ,medicine.disease ,Low back pain ,Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory ,Intervention (counseling) ,Orthopedic surgery ,Medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Surgery ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Psychiatry ,California Psychological Inventory - Abstract
The MMPI is a valuable source of additional information for the orthopedist faced with trying to manage patients who may have hysterical or hypochondriacal tendencies. The presence of elevations on scales 1 (hypochondriasis) and 3 (hysteria) markedly reduces the chances for successful therapeutic intervention, whether it be surgical or conservative. A clinical interview by a psychologist in conjunction with the MMPI has improved diagnosis and management programs for patients with low back pain.
- Published
- 1980
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15. Estimating Trunk Angle Kinematics During Lifting Using a Computationally Efficient Computer Vision Method.
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Greene RL, Lu ML, Barim MS, Wang X, Hayden M, Hu YH, and Radwin RG
- Subjects
- Biomechanical Phenomena, Computers, Humans, Posture, Lifting, Torso
- Abstract
Objective: A computer vision method was developed for estimating the trunk flexion angle, angular speed, and angular acceleration by extracting simple features from the moving image during lifting., Background: Trunk kinematics is an important risk factor for lower back pain, but is often difficult to measure by practitioners for lifting risk assessments., Methods: Mannequins representing a wide range of hand locations for different lifting postures were systematically generated using the University of Michigan 3DSSPP software. A bounding box was drawn tightly around each mannequin and regression models estimated trunk angles. The estimates were validated against human posture data for 216 lifts collected using a laboratory-grade motion capture system and synchronized video recordings. Trunk kinematics, based on bounding box dimensions drawn around the subjects in the video recordings of the lifts, were modeled for consecutive video frames., Results: The mean absolute difference between predicted and motion capture measured trunk angles was 14.7°, and there was a significant linear relationship between predicted and measured trunk angles ( R
2 = .80, p < .001). The training error for the kinematics model was 2.3°., Conclusion: Using simple computer vision-extracted features, the bounding box method indirectly estimated trunk angle and associated kinematics, albeit with limited precision., Application: This computer vision method may be implemented on handheld devices such as smartphones to facilitate automatic lifting risk assessments in the workplace.- Published
- 2022
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16. Spoken narrative comprehension for young adult listeners: effects of competing voices and noise.
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Wasiuk PA, Radvansky GA, Greene RL, and Calandruccio L
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- Comprehension, Humans, Noise adverse effects, Speech, Young Adult, Speech Perception, Voice
- Abstract
Objective: To examine the influence of competing voices or noise on the comprehension of spoken narratives for young adults., Design: First, an intelligibility assessment of the target narratives was conducted to establish a signal-to-noise ratio ensuring accurate initial speech recognition. Then, narrative comprehension for two target types ( fixed and varied target talker ) was measured in four listening conditions ( quiet, one-talker speech, speech babble, speech-shaped noise ). After hearing target narratives in each listening condition, participants completed a visual recognition memory task that assessed the comprehension of the narrative materials at three levels of representation ( surface form, propositional, event model )., Study Sample: Seventy adults (18-32 years of age)., Results: Narrative comprehension results revealed a main effect of listening condition at the event model level, indicating poorer narrative memory of described situations for all noise conditions compared to quiet. Increased positive responses to thematically consistent but situationally "wrong" memory probes drove this effect. No other significant effects were observed., Conclusion: Despite near-perfect speech recognition, background noise negatively influenced aspects of spoken narrative comprehension and memory. Specifically, noise did not disrupt memory for what was said (surface form and propositional memory), but only memory for what was talked about (event model memory).
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- 2021
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17. Ferromagnetic order beyond the superconducting dome in a cuprate superconductor.
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Sarkar T, Wei DS, Zhang J, Poniatowski NR, Mandal PR, Kapitulnik A, and Greene RL
- Abstract
According to conventional wisdom, the extraordinary properties of the cuprate high-temperature superconductors arise from doping a strongly correlated antiferromagnetic insulator. The highly overdoped cuprates-whose doping lies beyond the dome of superconductivity-are considered to be conventional Fermi liquid metals. We report the emergence of itinerant ferromagnetic order below 4 kelvin for doping beyond the superconducting dome in thin films of electron-doped La
2- x Cex CuO4 (LCCO). The existence of this ferromagnetic order is evidenced by negative, anisotropic, and hysteretic magnetoresistance, hysteretic magnetization, and the polar Kerr effect, all of which are standard signatures of itinerant ferromagnetism in metals. This surprising result suggests that the overdoped cuprates are strongly influenced by electron correlations., (Copyright © 2020 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works.)- Published
- 2020
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18. A syringe adapter for reduced muscular strain and fatigue.
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Ulbrich J, Swader R, Petry G, Cox BL, Greene RL, Eliceiri KW, and Radwin RG
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- Biomechanical Phenomena, Cumulative Trauma Disorders etiology, Cumulative Trauma Disorders prevention & control, Electromyography, Female, Fingers physiology, Hand physiology, Humans, Laboratory Personnel, Male, Muscle Fatigue physiology, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Musculoskeletal Diseases etiology, Musculoskeletal Diseases prevention & control, Occupational Diseases etiology, Sprains and Strains etiology, Young Adult, Equipment Design, Ergonomics, Occupational Diseases prevention & control, Sprains and Strains prevention & control, Syringes adverse effects
- Abstract
Workers in hospitals, clinics, and contract research organizations who repetitively use syringes have an increased risk for musculoskeletal disorders. This study developed and tested a novel syringe adapter designed to reduce muscle strain associated with repetitive fluid draws. Three syringe plunger extension methods (ring-finger, middle-finger, and syringe adapter) were studied across twenty participants. Electromyogram signals for the flexor digitorum superficialis and extensor digitorum muscles were recorded. The syringe adapter required 31% of the 90th percentile flexor muscle activity as compared to the ring-finger syringe extension method, and 45% the 90th percentile flexor muscle activity as compared to the middle-finger method (p < 0.001). The greatest differences were observed when the syringe was near full extension. Although the syringe adapter took more time than the other syringe extension methods (1.5 times greater), it greatly helped reduce physical stress associated with repetitive, awkward syringe procedures., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest A patent for the syringe adapter presented was filed by the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2020
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19. A consensus-based transparency checklist.
- Author
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Aczel B, Szaszi B, Sarafoglou A, Kekecs Z, Kucharský Š, Benjamin D, Chambers CD, Fisher A, Gelman A, Gernsbacher MA, Ioannidis JP, Johnson E, Jonas K, Kousta S, Lilienfeld SO, Lindsay DS, Morey CC, Munafò M, Newell BR, Pashler H, Shanks DR, Simons DJ, Wicherts JM, Albarracin D, Anderson ND, Antonakis J, Arkes HR, Back MD, Banks GC, Beevers C, Bennett AA, Bleidorn W, Boyer TW, Cacciari C, Carter AS, Cesario J, Clifton C, Conroy RM, Cortese M, Cosci F, Cowan N, Crawford J, Crone EA, Curtin J, Engle R, Farrell S, Fearon P, Fichman M, Frankenhuis W, Freund AM, Gaskell MG, Giner-Sorolla R, Green DP, Greene RL, Harlow LL, de la Guardia FH, Isaacowitz D, Kolodner J, Lieberman D, Logan GD, Mendes WB, Moersdorf L, Nyhan B, Pollack J, Sullivan C, Vazire S, and Wagenmakers EJ
- Subjects
- Delphi Technique, Guidelines as Topic, Humans, Information Dissemination, Periodicals as Topic, Behavioral Research standards, Checklist, Consensus, Social Sciences standards
- Published
- 2020
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20. Author Correction: A consensus-based transparency checklist.
- Author
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Aczel B, Szaszi B, Sarafoglou A, Kekecs Z, Kucharský Š, Benjamin D, Chambers CD, Fisher A, Gelman A, Gernsbacher MA, Ioannidis JP, Johnson E, Jonas K, Kousta S, Lilienfeld SO, Lindsay DS, Morey CC, Munafò M, Newell BR, Pashler H, Shanks DR, Simons DJ, Wicherts JM, Albarracin D, Anderson ND, Antonakis J, Arkes HR, Back MD, Banks GC, Beevers C, Bennett AA, Bleidorn W, Boyer TW, Cacciari C, Carter AS, Cesario J, Clifton C, Conroy RM, Cortese M, Cosci F, Cowan N, Crawford J, Crone EA, Curtin J, Engle R, Farrell S, Fearon P, Fichman M, Frankenhuis W, Freund AM, Gaskell MG, Giner-Sorolla R, Green DP, Greene RL, Harlow LL, de la Guardia FH, Isaacowitz D, Kolodner J, Lieberman D, Logan GD, Mendes WB, Moersdorf L, Nyhan B, Pollack J, Sullivan C, Vazire S, and Wagenmakers EJ
- Abstract
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
- Published
- 2020
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21. Perfect Andreev reflection due to the Klein paradox in a topological superconducting state.
- Author
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Lee S, Stanev V, Zhang X, Stasak D, Flowers J, Higgins JS, Dai S, Blum T, Pan X, Yakovenko VM, Paglione J, Greene RL, Galitski V, and Takeuchi I
- Abstract
In 1928, Dirac proposed a wave equation to describe relativistic electrons
1 . Shortly afterwards, Klein solved a simple potential step problem for the Dirac equation and encountered an apparent paradox: the potential barrier becomes transparent when its height is larger than the electron energy. For massless particles, backscattering is completely forbidden in Klein tunnelling, leading to perfect transmission through any potential barrier2,3 . The recent advent of condensed-matter systems with Dirac-like excitations, such as graphene and topological insulators, has opened up the possibility of observing Klein tunnelling experimentally4-6 . In the surface states of topological insulators, fermions are bound by spin-momentum locking and are thus immune from backscattering, which is prohibited by time-reversal symmetry. Here we report the observation of perfect Andreev reflection in point-contact spectroscopy-a clear signature of Klein tunnelling and a manifestation of the underlying 'relativistic' physics of a proximity-induced superconducting state in a topological Kondo insulator. Our findings shed light on a previously overlooked aspect of topological superconductivity and can serve as the basis for a unique family of spintronic and superconducting devices, the interface transport phenomena of which are completely governed by their helical topological states.- Published
- 2019
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22. Correlation between scale-invariant normal-state resistivity and superconductivity in an electron-doped cuprate.
- Author
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Sarkar T, Mandal PR, Poniatowski NR, Chan MK, and Greene RL
- Abstract
An understanding of the normal state in the high-temperature superconducting cuprates is crucial to the ultimate understanding of the long-standing problem of the origin of the superconductivity itself. This so-called "strange metal" state is thought to be associated with a quantum critical point (QCP) hidden beneath the superconductivity. In electron-doped cuprates-in contrast to hole-doped cuprates-it is possible to access the normal state at very low temperatures and low magnetic fields to study this putative QCP and to probe the T ➔ 0 K state of these materials. We report measurements of the low-temperature normal-state magnetoresistance (MR) of the n-type cuprate system La
2- x Cex CuO4 and find that it is characterized by a linear-in-field behavior, which follows a scaling relation with applied field and temperature, for doping ( x ) above the putative QCP ( x = 0.14). The magnitude of the unconventional linear MR decreases as Tc decreases and goes to zero at the end of the superconducting dome ( x ~ 0.175) above which a conventional quadratic MR is found. These results show that there is a strong correlation between the quantum critical excitations of the strange metal state and the high- Tc superconductivity.- Published
- 2019
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23. Anomalous quantum criticality in the electron-doped cuprates.
- Author
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Mandal PR, Sarkar T, and Greene RL
- Abstract
In the physics of condensed matter, quantum critical phenomena and unconventional superconductivity are two major themes. In electron-doped cuprates, the low critical field (H
C2 ) allows one to study the putative quantum critical point (QCP) at low temperature and to understand its connection to the long-standing problem of the origin of the high- TC superconductivity. Here we present measurements of the low-temperature normal-state thermopower ( S ) of the electron-doped cuprate superconductor La2- x Cex CuO4 (LCCO) from x = 0.11-0.19. We observe quantum critical [Formula: see text] versus [Formula: see text] behavior over an unexpectedly wide doping range x = 0.15-0.17 above the QCP ( x = 0.14), with a slope that scales monotonically with the superconducting transition temperature ( TC with H = 0). The presence of quantum criticality over a wide doping range provides a window on the criticality. The thermopower behavior also suggests that the critical fluctuations are linked with TC Above the superconductivity dome, at x = 0.19, a conventional Fermi-liquid [Formula: see text] behavior is found for [Formula: see text] 40 K., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.- Published
- 2019
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24. Using the MMPI-2 in Forensic Assessment: Response to Criticism About a Case Study.
- Author
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Butcher JN, Hass GA, Greene RL, Nelson LD, Nichols DS, and Williams CL
- Subjects
- Humans, Malingering, Forensic Psychiatry, MMPI
- Published
- 2019
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25. Predicting Sagittal Plane Lifting Postures From Image Bounding Box Dimensions.
- Author
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Greene RL, Hu YH, Difranco N, Wang X, Lu ML, Bao S, Lin JH, and Radwin RG
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Biomechanical Phenomena, Decision Trees, Humans, Manikins, Reproducibility of Results, Video Recording, Lifting, Posture physiology, Task Performance and Analysis
- Abstract
Objective: A method for automatically classifying lifting postures from simple features in video recordings was developed and tested. We explored if an "elastic" rectangular bounding box, drawn tightly around the subject, can be used for classifying standing, stooping, and squatting at the lift origin and destination., Background: Current marker-less video tracking methods depend on a priori skeletal human models, which are prone to error from poor illumination, obstructions, and difficulty placing cameras in the field. Robust computer vision algorithms based on spatiotemporal features were previously applied for evaluating repetitive motion tasks, exertion frequency, and duty cycle., Methods: Mannequin poses were systematically generated using the Michigan 3DSSPP software for a wide range of hand locations and lifting postures. The stature-normalized height and width of a bounding box were measured in the sagittal plane and when rotated horizontally by 30°. After randomly ordering the data, a classification and regression tree algorithm was trained to classify the lifting postures., Results: The resulting tree had four levels and four splits, misclassifying 0.36% training-set cases. The algorithm was tested using 30 video clips of industrial lifting tasks, misclassifying 3.33% test-set cases. The sensitivity and specificity, respectively, were 100.0% and 100.0% for squatting, 90.0% and 100.0% for stooping, and 100.0% and 95.0% for standing., Conclusions: The tree classification algorithm is capable of classifying lifting postures based only on dimensions of bounding boxes., Applications: It is anticipated that this practical algorithm can be implemented on handheld devices such as a smartphone, making it readily accessible to practitioners.
- Published
- 2019
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26. Three-dimensional collective charge excitations in electron-doped copper oxide superconductors.
- Author
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Hepting M, Chaix L, Huang EW, Fumagalli R, Peng YY, Moritz B, Kummer K, Brookes NB, Lee WC, Hashimoto M, Sarkar T, He JF, Rotundu CR, Lee YS, Greene RL, Braicovich L, Ghiringhelli G, Shen ZX, Devereaux TP, and Lee WS
- Abstract
High-temperature copper oxide superconductors consist of stacked CuO
2 planes, with electronic band structures and magnetic excitations that are primarily two-dimensional1,2 , but with superconducting coherence that is three-dimensional. This dichotomy highlights the importance of out-of-plane charge dynamics, which has been found to be incoherent in the normal state3,4 within the limited range of momenta accessible by optics. Here we use resonant inelastic X-ray scattering to explore the charge dynamics across all three dimensions of the Brillouin zone. Polarization analysis of recently discovered collective excitations (modes) in electron-doped copper oxides5-7 reveals their charge origin, that is, without mixing with magnetic components5-7 . The excitations disperse along both the in-plane and out-of-plane directions, revealing its three-dimensional nature. The periodicity of the out-of-plane dispersion corresponds to the distance between neighbouring CuO2 planes rather than to the crystallographic c-axis lattice constant, suggesting that the interplane Coulomb interaction is responsible for the coherent out-of-plane charge dynamics. The observed properties are hallmarks of the long-sought 'acoustic plasmon', which is a branch of distinct charge collective modes predicted for layered systems8-12 and argued to play a substantial part in mediating high-temperature superconductivity10-12 .- Published
- 2018
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27. Visualizing stressful aspects of repetitive motion tasks and opportunities for ergonomic improvements using computer vision.
- Author
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Greene RL, Azari DP, Hu YH, and Radwin RG
- Subjects
- Biomechanical Phenomena, Cumulative Trauma Disorders etiology, Hand physiology, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Motion, Movement physiology, Occupational Diseases etiology, Ergonomics methods, Task Performance and Analysis, Video Recording methods
- Abstract
Patterns of physical stress exposure are often difficult to measure, and the metrics of variation and techniques for identifying them is underdeveloped in the practice of occupational ergonomics. Computer vision has previously been used for evaluating repetitive motion tasks for hand activity level (HAL) utilizing conventional 2D videos. The approach was made practical by relaxing the need for high precision, and by adopting a semi-automatic approach for measuring spatiotemporal characteristics of the repetitive task. In this paper, a new method for visualizing task factors, using this computer vision approach, is demonstrated. After videos are made, the analyst selects a region of interest on the hand to track and the hand location and its associated kinematics are measured for every frame. The visualization method spatially deconstructs and displays the frequency, speed and duty cycle components of tasks that are part of the threshold limit value for hand activity for the purpose of identifying patterns of exposure associated with the specific job factors, as well as for suggesting task improvements. The localized variables are plotted as a heat map superimposed over the video, and displayed in the context of the task being performed. Based on the intensity of the specific variables used to calculate HAL, we can determine which task factors most contribute to HAL, and readily identify those work elements in the task that contribute more to increased risk for an injury. Work simulations and actual industrial examples are described. This method should help practitioners more readily measure and interpret temporal exposure patterns and identify potential task improvements., (Copyright © 2017. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
28. Question order bias in retrospective evaluations of item and associative recognition.
- Author
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Jackson A and Greene RL
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult, Bias, Cognition physiology, Memory, Mental Recall physiology, Recognition, Psychology
- Abstract
Previous research has demonstrated a retrospective memory bias in metacognitive judgments regarding performance on general knowledge questions: Test-takers rate their own performance more optimistically when tests begin with easy questions than when tests begin with hard questions. An anchoring heuristic has been proposed to explain this finding, in which experience with the early questions constrains global performance evaluations of the test. In the current study we report on two experiments using tasks of item recognition and associative recognition to investigate the generality of question order bias. As predicted by an anchoring explanation, participants' estimates of performance were higher for item recognition tests beginning with easy items. However, the effect was reversed in the associative recognition task: Participants' estimates of performance were higher for tests beginning with hard items. Specific recollections, if present, may have a greater impact on test performance perception than more general global impressions.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Religiosity in black and white older Americans: Measure adaptation, psychometric validation, and racial difference.
- Author
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Yang C, Ford ME, Tilley BC, and Greene RL
- Subjects
- Black or African American, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, White People, Psychometrics, Religion and Psychology
- Abstract
Racial difference of religiosity in a heterogeneous older population had long been a focal point of gerontological research. However, most religiosity measures were developed from homogenous sample, few underwent rigorous psychometric validation, and studies on racial difference of religiosity had been obstructed. This cross-sectional study adapted a religiosity measure originally designed for blacks only to a heterogeneous older population of blacks and whites, validated its psychometric properties, and examined racial difference of religiosity. Based on qualitative research of concepts, intensive literature review, and abundant experiences in this field, we adapted the original measure. Then, using the data collected from a survey of 196 black and white Americans 55 years and older in Charlotte, North Carolina, we investigated full-scale psychometric properties of the adapted measure at the item-, domain-, and measure- level. These psychometric validations included item analysis, item-scale correlations, correlation matrix among items, confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) to determine if the original factor structure held after adaptation, and reliability analysis using Cronbach's alpha. Finally, using Multiple Indicators and MultIple Causes (MIMIC) models, we examined racial difference of religiosity through regression with latent variables, while potential measurement bias by race through differential item functioning (DIF) was adjusted in the MIMIC models. In result, we successfully adapted the original 12-item religiosity measure for blacks into an 8-item version for blacks and whites. Although sacrificed few reliability for brevity, the adapted measure demonstrated sound psychometric properties, and retained the original factor structure. We also found racial differences of religiosity in all three domains of the measure, even after adjustment of the detected measurement biases in two domains. In conclusion, the original measure can be adapted to and validated for a heterogeneous older population of blacks and whites. Although the adapted measure can be used to measure the three domains of religiosity in blacks and whites, the observed racial differences of religiosity need to be adjusted for measurement biases before meaningful comparisons.
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
30. Doping-dependent charge order correlations in electron-doped cuprates.
- Author
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da Silva Neto EH, Yu B, Minola M, Sutarto R, Schierle E, Boschini F, Zonno M, Bluschke M, Higgins J, Li Y, Yu G, Weschke E, He F, Le Tacon M, Greene RL, Greven M, Sawatzky GA, Keimer B, and Damascelli A
- Subjects
- Temperature, Electric Conductivity, Electrons, Models, Theoretical
- Abstract
Understanding the interplay between charge order (CO) and other phenomena (for example, pseudogap, antiferromagnetism, and superconductivity) is one of the central questions in the cuprate high-temperature superconductors. The discovery that similar forms of CO exist in both hole- and electron-doped cuprates opened a path to determine what subset of the CO phenomenology is universal to all the cuprates. We use resonant x-ray scattering to measure the CO correlations in electron-doped cuprates (La2-x Ce x CuO4 and Nd2-x Ce x CuO4) and their relationship to antiferromagnetism, pseudogap, and superconductivity. Detailed measurements of Nd2-x Ce x CuO4 show that CO is present in the x = 0.059 to 0.166 range and that its doping-dependent wave vector is consistent with the separation between straight segments of the Fermi surface. The CO onset temperature is highest between x = 0.106 and 0.166 but decreases at lower doping levels, indicating that it is not tied to the appearance of antiferromagnetic correlations or the pseudogap. Near optimal doping, where the CO wave vector is also consistent with a previously observed phonon anomaly, measurements of the CO below and above the superconducting transition temperature, or in a magnetic field, show that the CO is insensitive to superconductivity. Overall, these findings indicate that, although verified in the electron-doped cuprates, material-dependent details determine whether the CO correlations acquire sufficient strength to compete for the ground state of the cuprates.
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
31. Evolution of electronic states in n-type copper oxide superconductor via electric double layer gating.
- Author
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Jin K, Hu W, Zhu B, Kim D, Yuan J, Sun Y, Xiang T, Fuhrer MS, Takeuchi I, and Greene RL
- Abstract
The occurrence of electrons and holes in n-type copper oxides has been achieved by chemical doping, pressure, and/or deoxygenation. However, the observed electronic properties are blurred by the concomitant effects such as change of lattice structure, disorder, etc. Here, we report on successful tuning the electronic band structure of n-type Pr2-xCexCuO4 (x = 0.15) ultrathin films, via the electric double layer transistor technique. Abnormal transport properties, such as multiple sign reversals of Hall resistivity in normal and mixed states, have been revealed within an electrostatic field in range of -2 V to + 2 V, as well as varying the temperature and magnetic field. In the mixed state, the intrinsic anomalous Hall conductivity invokes the contribution of both electron and hole-bands as well as the energy dependent density of states near the Fermi level. The two-band model can also describe the normal state transport properties well, whereas the carrier concentrations of electrons and holes are always enhanced or depressed simultaneously in electric fields. This is in contrast to the scenario of Fermi surface reconstruction by antiferromagnetism, where an anti-correlation is commonly expected.
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
32. Anomalous magnetoresistance in the spinel superconductor LiTi2O4.
- Author
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Jin K, He G, Zhang X, Maruyama S, Yasui S, Suchoski R, Shin J, Jiang Y, Yu HS, Yuan J, Shan L, Kusmartsev FV, Greene RL, and Takeuchi I
- Abstract
LiTi2O4 is a unique compound in that it is the only known spinel oxide superconductor. The lack of high quality single crystals has thus far prevented systematic investigations of its transport properties. Here we report a careful study of transport and tunnelling spectroscopy in epitaxial LiTi2O4 thin films. An unusual magnetoresistance is observed which changes from nearly isotropic negative to prominently anisotropic positive as the temperature is decreased. We present evidence that shows that the negative magnetoresistance likely stems from the suppression of local spin fluctuations or spin-orbit scattering centres. The positive magnetoresistance suggests the presence of an orbital-related state, also supported by the fact that the superconducting energy gap decreases as a quadratic function of magnetic field. These observations indicate that the spin-orbital fluctuations play an important role in LiTi2O4 in a manner similar to high-temperature superconductors.
- Published
- 2015
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33. The phase diagram of electron-doped La(2-x)Ce(x)CuO(4-δ).
- Author
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Saadaoui H, Salman Z, Luetkens H, Prokscha T, Suter A, MacFarlane WA, Jiang Y, Jin K, Greene RL, Morenzoni E, and Kiefl RF
- Abstract
Superconductivity is a striking example of a quantum phenomenon in which electrons move coherently over macroscopic distances without scattering. The high-temperature superconducting oxides (cuprates) are the most studied class of superconductors, composed of two-dimensional CuO2 planes separated by other layers that control the electron concentration in the planes. A key unresolved issue in cuprates is the relationship between superconductivity and magnetism. Here we report a sharp phase boundary of static three-dimensional magnetic order in the electron-doped superconductor La(2-x)Ce(x)CuO(4-δ), where small changes in doping or depth from the surface switch the material from superconducting to magnetic. Using low-energy spin-polarized muons, we find that static magnetism disappears close to where superconductivity begins and well below the doping level at which dramatic changes in the transport properties are reported. These results indicate a higher degree of symmetry between the electron and hole-doped cuprates than previously thought.
- Published
- 2015
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34. Charge ordering in the electron-doped superconductor Nd(2-x)Ce(x)CuO₄.
- Author
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da Silva Neto EH, Comin R, He F, Sutarto R, Jiang Y, Greene RL, Sawatzky GA, and Damascelli A
- Abstract
In cuprate high-temperature superconductors, an antiferromagnetic Mott insulating state can be destabilized toward unconventional superconductivity by either hole or electron doping. In hole-doped (p-type) cuprates, a charge ordering (CO) instability competes with superconductivity inside the pseudogap state. We report resonant x-ray scattering measurements that demonstrate the presence of charge ordering in the n-type cuprate Nd(2-x)Ce(x)CuO4 near optimal doping. We find that the CO in Nd(2-x)Ce(x)CuO4 occurs with similar periodicity, and along the same direction, as in p-type cuprates. However, in contrast to the latter, the CO onset in Nd(2-x)Ce(x)CuO4 is higher than the pseudogap temperature, and is in the temperature range where antiferromagnetic fluctuations are first detected. Our discovery opens a parallel path to the study of CO and its relationship to antiferromagnetism and superconductivity., (Copyright © 2015, American Association for the Advancement of Science.)
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
35. Experimental demonstration of superconducting critical temperature increase in electromagnetic metamaterials.
- Author
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Smolyaninova VN, Yost B, Zander K, Osofsky MS, Kim H, Saha S, Greene RL, and Smolyaninov II
- Abstract
A recent proposal that the metamaterial approach to dielectric response engineering may increase the critical temperature of a composite superconductor-dielectric metamaterial has been tested in experiments with compressed mixtures of tin and barium titanate nanoparticles of varying composition. An increase of the critical temperature of the order of ΔT ~ 0.15 K compared to bulk tin has been observed for 40% volume fraction of barium titanate nanoparticles. Similar results were also obtained with compressed mixtures of tin and strontium titanate nanoparticles.
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
36. Impression formation of tests: retrospective judgments of performance are higher when easier questions come first.
- Author
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Jackson A and Greene RL
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Time Factors, Young Adult, Educational Measurement, Judgment physiology, Mental Recall physiology
- Abstract
Four experiments are reported on the importance of retrospective judgments of performance (postdictions) on tests. Participants answered general knowledge questions and estimated how many questions they answered correctly. They gave higher postdictions when easy questions preceded difficult questions. This was true when time to answer each question was equalized and constrained, when participants were instructed not to write answers, and when questions were presented in a multiple-choice format. Results are consistent with the notion that first impressions predominate in overall perception of test difficulty.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Superconducting anisotropy in the electron-doped high-Tc superconductors Pr2-xCexCuO4-y.
- Author
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Wu G, Greene RL, Reyes AP, Kuhns PL, Moulton WG, Wu B, Wu F, and Clark WG
- Abstract
We report superconducting anisotropy measurements in the electron-doped high-Tc superconductors (HTSCs) Pr(2-x)Ce(x)C(u)O(4-y) (PCCO, x = 0.15 and 0.17) with an applied magnetic field (H0) up to 28 T. Our results show that the upper critical field [H(c2)(T)] of PCCO is highly anisotropic and as the temperature T → 0, the value of it at H0 ∥ c [H(c2,∥c)(0)] is far less than the Pauli limit. The low temperature anisotropic character of PCCO is found to be rather similar to that of hole-doped cuprate HTSCs, but apparently larger than that of typical Fe-based superconductors. This study also proves a new sensitive probe of detecting rich properties of unconventional superconductors with the use of the resonant frequency of an NMR probe circuit.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Intention-based therapy for autism spectrum disorder: promising results of a wait-list control study in children.
- Author
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Weiner RH and Greene RL
- Subjects
- Child, Female, Humans, Male, Treatment Outcome, Waiting Lists, Autistic Disorder therapy, Child Development Disorders, Pervasive therapy, Intention, Mind-Body Therapies
- Abstract
Background: Autism is a complex neurodevelopmental disability that usually manifests during the first three years of life and typically lasts throughout a person's lifetime. The purpose of this study is to investigate the efficacy of NeuroModulation Technique (NMT), a form of intention-based therapy, in improving functioning in children diagnosed with autism., Methods: A total of 18 children who met the study criteria were selected to participate. All children completed baseline measures. The children in the experimental group (n = 9) received two sessions a week of NMT for six weeks. Then, children in the wait-list control group (n = 9) received two sessions a week of NMT for six weeks. Primary efficacy outcome measures included the Pervasive Developmental Disorder Behavioral Inventory Autism Composite Index, the Aberrant Behavior Checklist-Community Total Score, and the Autism Treatment Evaluation Checklist Total Score. Our hypotheses were that children in both groups would show significant improvement over their respective baseline scores following NMT treatment, which would reflect an improvement in adaptive behaviors as well as a decrease in maladaptive behaviors., Results: Statistical analysis indicates a significant improvement in both the experimental and wait-list control group on all primary outcome measures following NMT treatment. The wait-list control group demonstrated no significant improvement on test measures over baseline scores during the wait period. No adverse reactions were reported., Conclusions: These findings suggest that NMT is a promising intervention for autism that has the potential to produce a significant reduction in maladaptive behaviors and a significant increase in adaptive behaviors within a relatively short period of time., (© 2013 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. High-pressure resistivity technique for quasi-hydrostatic compression experiments.
- Author
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Rotundu CR, Ćuk T, Greene RL, Shen ZX, Hemley RJ, and Struzhkin VV
- Abstract
Diamond anvil cell techniques are now well established and powerful methods for measuring materials properties to very high pressure. However, high pressure resistivity measurements are challenging because the electrical contacts attached to the sample have to survive to extreme stress conditions. Until recently, experiments in a diamond anvil cell were mostly limited to non-hydrostatic or quasi-hydrostatic pressure media other than inert gases. We present here a solution to the problem by using focused ion beam ultrathin lithography for a diamond anvil cell loaded with inert gas (Ne) and show typical resistivity data. These ultrathin leads are deposited on the culet of the diamond and are attaching the sample to the anvil mechanically, therefore allowing for measurements in hydrostatic or nearly hydrostatic conditions of pressure using noble gases like Ne or He as pressure transmitting media.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Quantum critical scaling at the edge of Fermi liquid stability in a cuprate superconductor.
- Author
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Butch NP, Jin K, Kirshenbaum K, Greene RL, and Paglione J
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Chemical Phenomena, Electric Conductivity, Electrons, Models, Chemical, Thermodynamics, Transition Temperature, Copper chemistry, Magnetic Fields, Phase Transition, Quantum Theory
- Abstract
In the high-temperature cuprate superconductors, the pervasiveness of anomalous electronic transport properties suggests that violation of conventional Fermi liquid behavior is closely tied to superconductivity. In other classes of unconventional superconductors, atypical transport is well correlated with proximity to a quantum critical point, but the relative importance of quantum criticality in the cuprates remains uncertain. Here, we identify quantum critical scaling in the electron-doped cuprate material La(2-x)Ce(x)CuO(4) with a line of quantum critical points that surrounds the superconducting phase as a function of magnetic field and charge doping. This zero-temperature phase boundary, which delineates a metallic Fermi liquid regime from an extended non-Fermi liquid ground state, closely follows the upper critical field of the overdoped superconducting phase and gives rise to an expanse of distinct non-Fermi liquid behavior at finite temperatures. Together with signatures of two distinct flavors of quantum fluctuations, these facts suggest that quantum criticality plays a significant role in shaping the anomalous properties of the cuprate phase diagram.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Link between spin fluctuations and electron pairing in copper oxide superconductors.
- Author
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Jin K, Butch NP, Kirshenbaum K, Paglione J, and Greene RL
- Abstract
Although it is generally accepted that superconductivity is unconventional in the high-transition-temperature copper oxides, the relative importance of phenomena such as spin and charge (stripe) order, superconductivity fluctuations, proximity to a Mott insulator, a pseudogap phase and quantum criticality are still a matter of debate. In electron-doped copper oxides, the absence of an anomalous pseudogap phase in the underdoped region of the phase diagram and weaker electron correlations suggest that Mott physics and other unidentified competing orders are less relevant and that antiferromagnetic spin fluctuations are the dominant feature. Here we report a study of magnetotransport in thin films of the electron-doped copper oxide La(2 - x)Ce(x)CuO(4). We show that a scattering rate that is linearly dependent on temperature--a key feature of the anomalous normal state properties of the copper oxides--is correlated with the electron pairing. We also show that an envelope of such scattering surrounds the superconducting phase, surviving to zero temperature when superconductivity is suppressed by magnetic fields. Comparison with similar behaviour found in organic superconductors strongly suggests that the linear dependence on temperature of the resistivity in the electron-doped copper oxides is caused by spin-fluctuation scattering.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Two-Fermi-surface superconducting state and a nodal d-wave energy gap of the electron-doped Sm1.85Ce0.15CuO(4-δ) cuprate superconductor.
- Author
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Santander-Syro AF, Ikeda M, Yoshida T, Fujimori A, Ishizaka K, Okawa M, Shin S, Liang B, Zimmers A, Greene RL, and Bontemps N
- Abstract
We report on laser-excited angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy in the electron-doped cuprate Sm1.85Ce0.15CuO(4-δ). The data show the existence of a nodal hole-pocket Fermi surface both in the normal and superconducting states. We prove that its origin is long-range antiferromagnetism by an analysis of the coherence factors in the main and folded bands. This coexistence of long-range antiferrmagnetism and superconductivity implies that electron-doped cuprates are two-Fermi-surface superconductors. The measured superconducting gap in the nodal hole pocket is compatible with a d-wave symmetry.
- Published
- 2011
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- View/download PDF
43. 2010 Bruno Klopfer Distinguished Contribution Award. Some considerations for enhancing psychological assessment.
- Author
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Greene RL
- Subjects
- Awards and Prizes, Clinical Competence, Humans, Psychology education, Psychology methods, Psychology standards, Psychometrics, Societies, Personality Assessment, Practice Guidelines as Topic
- Abstract
The field of psychological assessment appears to be bogged down in recent decades on refining existing measures and techniques to the detriment of real change. This article attempts to highlight some of the changes that need to take place in psychological assessment in the next few decades if real progress is to be achieved: (a) developing guidelines for psychological tests and measures; (b) establishing explicit criteria for training; (c) establishing guidelines for competencies; (d) recognizing the impact of marketing; (e) embracing electronic technology; and (f) implementing computer adaptive testing.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Observation of the Josephson effect in Pb/Ba1-xKxFe2As2 single crystal junctions.
- Author
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Zhang X, Oh YS, Liu Y, Yan L, Kim KH, Greene RL, and Takeuchi I
- Abstract
We have fabricated c-axis Josephson junctions on single crystals of Ba1-xKxFe2As2 by using Pb as the counterelectrode in two geometries, planar and point contact. Junctions in both geometries show resistively shunted junction I-V curves below the T{C} of the counterelectrode. Microwave induced steps were observed in the I-V curves, and the critical currents are suppressed with an in-plane magnetic field with well-defined modulation periods indicating that the Josephson current is flowing in a manner consistent with the small to intermediate sized junction limit. I{C}R{N} products of up to 0.3 mV have been observed in these junctions at 4.2 K. The observation of Josephson coupling along the c axis between Ba1-xKxFe2As2 and a conventional superconductor suggests the existence of an s-wave symmetry in this class of iron pnictide superconductors.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Orthographic neighborhood size effects and associative recognition.
- Author
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Glanc GA and Greene RL
- Subjects
- Attention, Humans, Recognition, Psychology, Mental Recall, Paired-Associate Learning, Semantics
- Abstract
Three experiments on the role of orthographic distinctiveness (as measured by neighborhood size [N]) in associative recognition are reported. A mirror effect was obtained, with high-N words receiving more hits and fewer false alarms than low-N words. This pattern was replicated in Experiment 2, where participants carried out a relational orienting task. However, the high-N advantage in hit rates was eliminated in Experiment 3 when subjects carried out an item-processing orienting task. The high-N advantage in associative recognition contrasts with the low-N advantage found in item recognition. This reversal of mirror effects between item and associative recognition is empirically similar to patterns found in studies of normative word frequency.
- Published
- 2009
46. What do the MMPI-2 restructured clinical scales reliably measure? Answers from multiple research settings.
- Author
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Rouse SV, Greene RL, Butcher JN, Nichols DS, and Williams CL
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Personality Disorders classification, Research, MMPI standards, Reproducibility of Results
- Abstract
The Restructured Clinical (RC; Tellegen et al., 2003) scales were developed to improve measurement of the core constructs of the MMPI-2 (Butcher et al., 2001) Clinical scales by removing "demoralization," hypothesized to affect these scales adversely. Using 25 samples with MMPI-2 responses from 78,159 subjects across diverse clinical settings, we found that each RC scale was highly correlated with a Supplementary, Content, or Personality Psychopathology 5 (PSY-5; Harkness, McNulty, & Ben-Porath, 1995) scale: higher, in fact, than the correlation between the RC scale and its parent scale. Furthermore, for over half the RC scales (i.e., RC1, RC3, RC7, RC8, and RCd), the correlations were strong enough to conclude that the RC scales replicate MMPI-2 scales with rich empirical foundations; the remaining RC scales were not redundant. Next, we examined reliability estimates using alpha coefficients and interitem correlations and did not reveal superior reliability for most of the RC scales over existing MMPI-2 scales.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Observation of a 500 meV collective mode in La2-xSrxCuO4 and Nd2CuO4 using resonant inelastic X-ray scattering.
- Author
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Hill JP, Blumberg G, Kim YJ, Ellis DS, Wakimoto S, Birgeneau RJ, Komiya S, Ando Y, Liang B, Greene RL, Casa D, and Gog T
- Abstract
Utilizing resonant inelastic x-ray scattering, we report a previously unobserved mode in the excitation spectrum of La2-xSrxCuO4 and Nd2CuO4 at 500 meV. The mode is peaked around the (pi, 0) point in reciprocal space and is observed to soften, and broaden, away from this point. Samples with x=0, 0.01, 0.05, and 0.17 were studied. The new mode is found to be rapidly suppressed with increasing Sr content and is absent at x=0.17, where it is replaced by a continuum of excitations. This mode is only observed when the incident x-ray polarization is normal to the CuO planes.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Dirty superconductivity in the electron-doped cuprate Pr(2-x)Ce(x)CuO(4-delta): tunneling study.
- Author
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Dagan Y, Beck R, and Greene RL
- Abstract
We report a tunneling study between Pr(2-x)Ce(x)CuO(4-delta) and lead as a function of doping, temperature, and magnetic field. The temperature dependence of the gap follows the BCS prediction. Our data fit a nonmonotonic d-wave order parameter for the whole doping range studied. From our data we are able to conclude that the electron-doped cuprate Pr(2-x)Ce(x)CuO(4-delta) is a weak-coupling BCS dirty superconductor.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. High-field Hall resistivity and magnetoresistance of electron-doped Pr2-xCexCuO4-delta.
- Author
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Li P, Balakirev FF, and Greene RL
- Abstract
We report resistivity and Hall effect measurements in electron-doped Pr2-xCexCuO4-delta films in magnetic field up to 58 T. In contrast to hole-doped cuprates, we find a surprising nonlinear magnetic field dependence of Hall resistivity at high field in the optimally doped and overdoped films. We also observe a crossover from quadratic to linear field dependence of the positive magnetoresistance in the overdoped films. A spin density wave induced Fermi surface reconstruction model can be used to qualitatively explain both the Hall effect and magnetoresistance.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Evaluating the latent structure of the MMPI-2 F(p) scale in a forensic sample: a taxometric analysis.
- Author
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Strong DR, Glassmire DM, Frederick RI, and Greene RL
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Male, Malingering diagnosis, Malingering psychology, Predictive Value of Tests, Forensic Psychiatry methods, MMPI standards, MMPI statistics & numerical data, Mental Disorders diagnosis
- Abstract
P. A. Arbisi and Y. S. Ben-Porath (1995) originally proposed that the Infrequency Psychopathology scale, F(p), be used as the final step in an algorithm to determine the validity of a Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-2 (MMPI-2) protocol. The current study used taxometric procedures to determine the latent structure of F(p) among examinees with profiles that would necessitate the interpretation of F(p) when using Arbisi and Ben-Porath's proposed algorithm. Participants included a subsample of 289 consecutively referred pretrial forensic examinees adjudicated incompetent to stand trial with high Infrequency (F) scale scores, thereby providing a sample that would be expected to have a high base rate of persons with bona fide psychopathology and persons with incentive to overreport psychopathology. Using MAMBAC and MAXEIG, F(p) produced a taxonic latent structure within the subgroup of examinees who obtained raw scores on F of greater than 17. These results support Arbisi and Ben-Porath's original proposal to use F(p) to identify a distinct subgroup of overreported MMPI-2 protocols within forensic psychiatric examinees with high elevations on F. Implications and suggestions for future research are provided.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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