Graduate School Administration

Works Published in 2015

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Displaying all 7 works

Sorted by most recent date added to the index first, which may not be the same as publication date order.

2015 conference paper

Early Cretaceous to Paleocene paleogeography of the Western Interior Seaway: The interaction of eustasy and tectonism

Wyoming Geological Association 68th Annual Field Conference Guidebook, 22–60.

By: J. Slattery, W. Cobban, K. McKinney, P. Harries & A. Sandness

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: March 5, 2021

2015 journal article

The Paracladistic Approach to Phylogenetic Taxonomy

Paleontological Contributions, 1(12), 1–9.

By: J. Carter*, C. Altaba*, L. Anderson*, D. Campbell*, Z. Fang*, P. Harries*, P. Skelton*

TL;DR: Paracladistics is proposed as a pragmatic synthesis of phylogenetic and evolutionary taxonomy in which true monophyly is distinguished from structural monophylies with historical paraphyly, some structurally paraphyletic groups are retained in the interest of nomenclatorial continuity and stability, and both unranked and suprageneric ranked taxon names are defined phylogenetically. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, NC State University Libraries
Added: January 5, 2020

2015 journal article

Response of the Miliolid Archaias Angulatus to Simulated Ocean Acidification

The Journal of Foraminiferal Research, 45(2), 109–127.

TL;DR: A common, but not universal, effect of ocean acidification on benthic foraminifera is a reduction in the growth rate, and the reduction in growth rate indicates that under a high-CO2 setting, future A. angulatus populations will consist of smaller adults. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
14. Life Below Water (OpenAlex)
Sources: Crossref, NC State University Libraries
Added: January 5, 2020

2015 journal article

Modulation of impulsivity and reward sensitivity in intertemporal choice by striatal and midbrain dopamine synthesis in healthy adults

J Neurophysiol, 115(3), 1146–1156.

author keywords: delay discounting; immediate reward bias; impulsive choice; putamen; ventral tegmental area
MeSH headings : Adult; Choice Behavior; Dopamine / metabolism; Female; Humans; Impulsive Behavior; Male; Mesencephalon / diagnostic imaging; Mesencephalon / metabolism; Mesencephalon / physiology; Positron-Emission Tomography; Putamen / diagnostic imaging; Putamen / metabolism; Putamen / physiology; Radiopharmaceuticals; Reaction Time; Reward; Tyrosine / analogs & derivatives
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that intertemporal reward choice in healthy humans varies with region-specific measures of DA processing, with regionally distinct associations with sensitivity to delay and to reward magnitude. (via Semantic Scholar)
Source: ORCID
Added: December 4, 2019

2015 journal article

Intertemporal Choice Behavior in Emerging Adults and Adults: Effects of Age Interact with Alcohol Use and Family History Status

Front. Hum. Neurosci., 9.

By: C. Smith*, E. Steel*, M. Parrish*, M. Kelm* & C. Boettiger*

author keywords: alcoholism; family history; decision-making; delay-discounting; impulsivity
TL;DR: Findings lend support for elevated Now bias in adulthood as an intermediate phenotype for AUDs, and non-additive effects of age and heavy drinking on Now bias suggest perturbations in largely common neural circuits in both groups. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
3. Good Health and Well-being (OpenAlex)
Source: ORCID
Added: December 4, 2019

2015 journal article

Temporal patterns in successful and unsuccessful shell-breaking predatory attack strategies on Varicorbula in the Plio-Pleistocene of Florida

Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 428, 31–38.

author keywords: Predator-prey interaction; Durophagous predation; Shell repair; Estimated crushing mortality; Predatory crab diversity
TL;DR: The broader implications of this study suggest that interpretations based either on scars or breaks in isolation as an indicator of predation can lead to erroneous interpretations, and breaks and scars in association with size and location information should be used in tandem to better constrain potential ecological interpretations. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, NC State University Libraries
Added: September 11, 2019

2015 chapter

Index Fossil

In Encyclopedia of Scientific Dating Methods (pp. 353–354).

By: P. Harries*

Sources: Crossref, NC State University Libraries
Added: September 11, 2019

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