Results 91 to 100 of about 252,797 (265)

Bangor Hydro Electric News: June 1929, Volume 2, No.7 -- Managers Issue [PDF]

open access: yes, 1929
Provides extensive biographical information about Lincoln A. Gardner, Ralph A. Fernald, Albert E. Grose, William R. Wray, Leonard A. Austin, Roscoe H. Smith, Vernon E. Cushing, Leroy G. Vose, and Julius W.
Bangor Hydro Electric Company
core   +1 more source

Testosterone mediates life‐history trade‐offs in female mammals

open access: yesBiological Reviews, Volume 100, Issue 2, Page 871-891, April 2025.
ABSTRACT Hormones mediate life‐history trade‐offs. In female mammals, such trade‐offs have been studied predominantly in the contexts of oestrogen, progesterone and prolactin. We evaluate the hypothesis that prenatal and postnatal testosterone levels structure and regulate trade‐offs in females involving components of reproduction and survival.
Bernard J. Crespi   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Cytokine expression profiles of immune imbalance in post-mononucleosis chronic fatigue

open access: yesJournal of Translational Medicine, 2012
Background As Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) has been known to follow Epstein-Bar virus (EBV) and other systemic infections; our objective was to describe differences in immune activation in post-infective CFS (PI-CFS) patients and recovered controls. We
Broderick Gordon   +8 more
doaj   +1 more source

Woolsack 1976 volume 14 number 5 [PDF]

open access: yes, 1976
Table of Contents: Paris Summer Program Estates in land: Professor Moynihan by Vernon Tweedie Counseling: There is help Environmental Essay From the Editor by Steve Laudig Guest Editorial by H.L.
University of San Diego School of Law Student Bar Association
core   +1 more source

Annual Research Review: Associations of socioeconomic status with cognitive function, language ability, and academic achievement in youth: a systematic review of mechanisms and protective factors

open access: yesJournal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, Volume 66, Issue 4, Page 417-439, April 2025.
Low socioeconomic status (SES) is negatively associated with children's cognitive and academic performance, leading to long‐term educational and economic disparities. In particular, SES is a powerful predictor of executive function (EF), language ability, and academic achievement.
Divyangana Rakesh   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Laboratory Experiments in Political Economy [PDF]

open access: yes
Most of the laboratory research in political science follows the style that was pioneered in experimental economics a half-century ago by Vernon Smith. The connection between this style of political science experimentation and economics experimentation ...
Thomas R. Palfrey
core  

Widows, Violence and Death: The Construction of Imperial Identity and Memory by Women in Mourning across British India, 1857–1926

open access: yesGender &History, Volume 37, Issue 1, Page 167-182, March 2025.
Abstract This article examines the work of British widows in the construction of their husbands’ memory following their violent deaths in British India, during the nineteenth and early‐twentieth centuries. Exploring the collections of a military, missionary and Indian Civil Service widow, it suggests that a specifically feminised culture of mourning ...
Ellen Smith
wiley   +1 more source

Interjecting economics into the groundwater policy dialogue

open access: yesTexas Water Journal, 2017
Historically, economic theory has played a miniscule role in groundwater policy deliberations because of its complexity. This paper is intended for practitioners.
James Milton Griffin
doaj  

Extracting Valuable Data from Classroom Trading Pits [PDF]

open access: yes
Edward Chamberlin, who initiated classroom market experiments, used the results of these experiments to argue that competitive equilibrium performs poorly in explaining the outcomes of real markets.
Ted Bergstrom
core  

Without “Bipartisanship” Have Referendums to Change the Australian Constitution Ever Succeeded? An Unnoticed Success, Several Near‐Misses, and the Struggle to Explain Why Referendums Fail

open access: yesAustralian Journal of Politics &History, Volume 71, Issue 1, Page 73-105, March 2025.
That bipartisanship has been required for referendums to change the Australian Constitution to succeed is regarded widely as axiomatic. But the idea of bipartisanship as a necessary condition of success is relatively new; in the first half of the twentieth century, party opposition did not loom large in accounts of why referendums failed.
Murray Goot
wiley   +1 more source

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