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Sources of revenue growth: a history of state taxes and fees in Texas, 1972-2016 (open access)

Sources of revenue growth: a history of state taxes and fees in Texas, 1972-2016

This publication updates the source of revenues last issued by the comptroller.
Date: January 2017
Creator: Texas. Comptroller's Office.
Object Type: Article
System: The Portal to Texas History
Consequences of Coworker Bullying: A Bystander Perspective (open access)

Consequences of Coworker Bullying: A Bystander Perspective

Previous research on workplace bullying primarily focuses on two main actors – the bully and the victim – while neglecting a third actor: the bystander of the bullying. The prevalence of workplace bullying is increasing across organizations, resulting in more employees becoming subjected to the effects of workplace bullying. Furthermore, witnessing coworker-on-coworker bullying is likely to influence the relationships that the bystander has with the two coworkers involved in the bullying episode. Two areas are proposed to investigate their effect on the coworker bystander: coworker interpersonal justice and personal identification with coworkers. Coworker interpersonal justice involves the perceived fairness between coworkers, while personal identification refers to how these bystanders identify with the specific actors of the bullying event. In addition to work-related outcomes, bystanders are affected at a personal level. That is, being exposed to bullying situations causes these bystanders to alter their anxiety levels and their core affect, with core affect being a precursor to moods and emotions. In addition to the aforementioned outcomes of witnessing a coworker bullying incident, there are also contextual aspects which may influence these relationships. Personal-level factors, such as a bystander's empathy and sense of coherence (i.e., coping mechanisms), may influence the effect of …
Date: May 2017
Creator: Medina, Michele N.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Seismic Vulnerability and Post-Event Actions for Texas Bridge Infrastructure (open access)

Seismic Vulnerability and Post-Event Actions for Texas Bridge Infrastructure

Report that investigates the seismic vulnerability of bridges in Texas and provides tools to aid post-earthquake response.
Date: December 2017
Creator: Khosravikia, Farid; Potter, Anderson; Prakhov, Vyacheslav; Zalachoris, Georgios; Cheng, Tianjian; Tiwari, Ayushi et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The Portal to Texas History
Protests in China: Why and Which Chinese People Go to the Street? (open access)

Protests in China: Why and Which Chinese People Go to the Street?

This research seeks to answer why and which Chinese people go to the street to protest. I argue that different sectors of Chinese society differ from each other regarding their tendencies to participate in protest. In addition to their grievances, the incentives to participate in protest and their capacities to overcome the collective action problem all needed to be taken into account. Using individual level data along with ordinary binary logistic regression and multilevel logistic regression models, I first compare the protest participation of workers and peasants and find that workers are more likely than peasants to participate in protests in the context of contemporary China. I further disaggregate the working class into four subtypes according to the ownership of the enterprises they work for. I find that workers of township and village enterprises are more likely than workers of state-owned enterprises to engage in protest activities, while there is no significant difference between the workers of domestic privately owned enterprises and the workers of foreign-owned enterprises regarding their protest participation. Finally, I find that migrant workers, which refers to peasants who move to urban areas in search of jobs, are less likely than urban registered workers to participate in …
Date: May 2017
Creator: Chen, Yen-Hsin
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sabine River Authority of Texas Comprehensive Annual Financial Report: 2017 and 2016 (open access)

Sabine River Authority of Texas Comprehensive Annual Financial Report: 2017 and 2016

Annual financial report of the Sabine River Authority documenting income, expenditures, and other relevant financial information for fiscal years 2017 and 2016.
Date: 2017~
Creator: Sabine River Authority of Texas
Object Type: Report
System: The Portal to Texas History
Adrenergic and Cholinergic Regulation of Cardiovascular Function in Embryonic Neotropic Cormorants (Phalacrocorax basilianus) (open access)

Adrenergic and Cholinergic Regulation of Cardiovascular Function in Embryonic Neotropic Cormorants (Phalacrocorax basilianus)

Investigations of cholinergic and adrenergic tone on heart rate (fH) and mean arterial pressure (Pm) during embryonic development have been conducted on numerous avian species. While these investigations have documented that adrenergic tone, a continuous stimulation, on fH and Pm is vital to embryonic development in the birds studied to date, development of cholinergic tone on fH has been shown to vary even within species. Further, past studies have been bias to focus primarily on precocial species while altricial species remain poorly understood in this context. The goal of this investigation was to investigate the role of cholinergic and adrenergic tone on fH and Pm of an altricial species, the neotropic cormorant (P. brasilianus) to address this bias. The embryonic neotropic cormorant possesses B-and-a adrenergic tone on fH and Pm at 70% and 90% incubation while cholinergic tone on fH occurs at 90% incubation. This pattern of control is similar to that previously reported for several species of precocial birds suggesting the development of tonic cardiovascular regulation may be conserved across avian taxa.
Date: May 2017
Creator: Cummins, James B.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigating Factors that Affect Faculty Attitudes towards Participation in Open Access Institutional Repositories (open access)

Investigating Factors that Affect Faculty Attitudes towards Participation in Open Access Institutional Repositories

Open access institutional repositories (OA IRs) are electronic systems that capture, preserve, and provide access to the scholarly digital work of an institution. As a new channel of scholarly communications IRs offer faculty a new way to disseminate their work to a wider audience, which in turn can increase the visibility to their work and impact factors, and at the same time increase institutions prestige and value. However, despite the increased popularity of IRs in numbers, research shows that IRs remain thinly populated in large part due to faculty reluctance to participate. There have been studies on the topic of open access repositories with the focus on external factors (social or technological context) that affect faculty attitudes towards participation in IRs, and there is a lack of understanding of the internal factors and the psychology of the reluctance. The goal of this mix method study was to identify the overall factors that affect faculty attitudes towards participation in IRs and examine the extent to which these factors influenced faculty willingness to participate in IRs. First, from literature review and the Model of Factors Affecting Faculty Self-Archiving this study identified eleven factors that influenced faculty members' intention to participate in OA …
Date: December 2017
Creator: Tmava, Ahmet Meti
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Improving Irrigation Water Use Estimates with Remote Sensing Technologies: A Feasibility Study for Texas (open access)

Improving Irrigation Water Use Estimates with Remote Sensing Technologies: A Feasibility Study for Texas

Identifies the remote sensing and modelling technologies capable of estimating ET and PPT with the end goal of improving NIWR across Texas.
Date: May 10, 2017
Creator: Caldwell, Todd; Huntington, Justin; Scanlon, Bridget; Joros, Andrew & Howard, Teresa
Object Type: Report
System: The Portal to Texas History
Wills Road Map: Practical Cnsiderations in Will Drafting (open access)

Wills Road Map: Practical Cnsiderations in Will Drafting

Manual outlining various laws that affect wills (including probate and trust planning) as well as "silent doctrines" that result from laws to inform the creation of a will. From back cover: "Mapped to direct both general practitioners and seasoned estate planning attorneys beyond the language of the will to a better understanding of the underlying principles. Stops along the way include doctrines affecting the will's validity and a review of the significance and effect of specific will provisions. New material includes client intake questionnaires and a will execution ceremony checklist."
Date: 2017
Creator: Barthel, Casey A.; Akers, Steve R.; Jones, Bernard E. & Watts, R. J., II
Object Type: Book
System: The Portal to Texas History
Impact of Relational Incongruity on Customer Ownership and Sales Outcome Performance: A Resource-Advantage Theory Approach (open access)

Impact of Relational Incongruity on Customer Ownership and Sales Outcome Performance: A Resource-Advantage Theory Approach

There exists heightened research attention afforded to the pivotal demands - both internal and external - that exist within the salesperson role set. Unprecedented pressures on salespersons to acquire, retain, and build enduring customer relationships to enhance the firm's bottom-line performance coincides with increasing complexities within the work environment. This relevant and timely research introduces an original construct derived from the long-standing attention afforded to relationship selling, relational incongruity that exists within the buyer-seller exchange. Relational incongruity, defined, is the relational tension spawned between the salesperson, the customer, and the firm when situational psychological incongruity exists within the buyer-seller exchange itself. Framed in resource-advantage theory, this research investigates divergent demands and the increasing complexity of sales relationships through the lens of relational incongruity. A research program based on minimizing relational incongruity will augment the sales management and B2B literature by looking at how he salesperson and the customer build strong relationships as well as the antecedents that can undermine these relationships by generating realtional incongruity.
Date: December 2017
Creator: Fergurson, Ricky
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Instructional Expenditures on College Readiness (open access)

The Effect of Instructional Expenditures on College Readiness

With limited state and local funds as well as a growing student population, how elected decision makers allocate money to impact college readiness needs to be explored. The purpose of this research study was to explore the impact of instructional expenditures on educational outcomes. This multivariate multiple regression study specifically explored the impact of instructional expenditure ratios and per pupil instructional expenditures of every public school district in Texas on student performance college readiness indicators measured by state assessments (State of Texas Assessment of Academic Readiness [STAAR] Mathematics and English Language Arts [ELA] test scores) and national assessments (American College Test [ACT] and Scholastic Assessment Test [SAT] scores) over a 5-year period. Fifteen different regression models were established with various significant predictors of expenditures and revenue funds. These models explained up to 46% of the variance for college readiness scores over the 5-year period.
Date: August 2017
Creator: Blair, Cody
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
City Mixed Beverage Comparison Summary: Third Quarter 2017 (open access)

City Mixed Beverage Comparison Summary: Third Quarter 2017

Quarterly report outlining tax revenues and remittances for alcoholic beverages, listed by city, for July-September 2017. It also compares the statistics to the same period for the previous year.
Date: October 2017
Creator: Texas. Comptroller's Office.
Object Type: Report
System: The Portal to Texas History
Elections and Authoritarian Rule: Causes and Consequences of Adoption of Grassroots Elections in China (open access)

Elections and Authoritarian Rule: Causes and Consequences of Adoption of Grassroots Elections in China

This dissertation investigates the relationship between elections and authoritarian rule with a focus on the case of China's adoption of elections at the grassroots level. In this dissertation, I look at the incentives facing Chinese local governments in choosing between holding competitive elections or state-controlled elections, and how the selection of electoral rules shapes the public's preferences over political institutions and influences the citizens' political behaviors, especially voting in elections and participation in contentious activities. The overarching theme in this dissertation proposes that the sources and consequences of Chinese local elections are conditioned on the state-owned resources and the governing costs. When the amount of state-owned resources to rule the local society is limited, the paucity of resources will incentivize authoritarian governments to liberalize grassroots elections to offset the governance costs. The various levels of election liberalization will lead to different consequences in the public's political behavior. An abundance of state-owned resources not only discourages rulers from sharing power with the local society, but also supplies the rulers with strong capacity to obtain loyalty from voters when elections are adopted. As a result, elections under authoritarian governments with an abundance of state-owned resources will see more loyalist voters than elections …
Date: August 2017
Creator: Tzeng, Wei Feng
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exploring the Relationship between Strategic Thinking and Absorptive Capacity: A Proposed Typology (open access)

Exploring the Relationship between Strategic Thinking and Absorptive Capacity: A Proposed Typology

Absorptive capacity plays an important role in the organizational adaptation process. Prior research on absorptive capacity focuses on its role in organizational outcomes such as financial performance, innovation, new product development, etc. Recently, scholars have called for research on factors that influence absorptive capacity. Because absorptive capacity plays a vital role in achieving organizational outcomes, it behooves us to improve our understanding of absorptive capacity and its antecedents to serve both researchers and practitioners. In this investigation, strategic thinking is posited to be a key antecedent of absorptive capacity. Capability theory suggests that strategic thinking is a metaphysical (higher order) capability that influences an organization's absorptive capacity. Combining this argument with Miles and Snow's typology of organizational adaptation process, it is posited that the relationship between strategic thinking and absorptive capacity can be clustered into different "groups." Prospectors, defenders, and analyzers, characterized in Miles and Snow's typology of firms are viewed as distinctive groups that exhibit different relationships between strategic thinking and absorptive capacity. Results from an empirical examination suggest that strategic thinking is positively related to absorptive capacity. The results also suggest that the relationship between these two constructs is different between these groups and that the strategic thinking …
Date: December 2017
Creator: Srivastava, Saurabh
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of Rainfall/Runoff Patterns in the Upper Colorado River Basin (open access)

Evaluation of Rainfall/Runoff Patterns in the Upper Colorado River Basin

Analysis of data collected regarding river flows and precipitation for specific study sites in the Upper Colorado Basin as well as information about activities that may have impacted observed flows.
Date: August 2017
Creator: Kennedy Resource Company
Object Type: Report
System: The Portal to Texas History
Predictors of Postsecondary Success: An Analysis of First Year College Remediation (open access)

Predictors of Postsecondary Success: An Analysis of First Year College Remediation

This study was a quantitative multiple regression investigation into the relationships between campus factors of high school students graduating in 2013 who immediately enrolled in first-year college freshman level remedial coursework at a large, Central Texas two-year postsecondary institution. The goal of this study was to determine which high school campus-level factors predicted enrollment into college remedial education coursework. The dependent variable was a continuous variable representing the percentage of students from Texas public high school campuses enrolled into at least one student credit hour of remedial education during their first semester as a first-year college student. Eight high school campus-level independent variables were included in the regression model at the campus-level: at risk percentage, economically disadvantaged percentage, limited English proficient percentage, advanced course/dual-enrollment percentage, college ready math percentage, college ready English percentage, ACT average, and SAT average. Pearson correlations and linear regression results were examined and interpreted to determine the level of relationship between the eight selected variables and first-year college student remedial coursework. The multiple regression model successfully explained 26.3% (F(8,286) = 12.74. p < 0.05, r2 = 0.263) of the variance between first-year college students enrolled into remedial coursework at a large, Central Texas two-year postsecondary institution …
Date: August 2017
Creator: Baker, Emmett A.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Texas Workforce Investment Council Briefing Materials: June 9, 2017 (open access)

Texas Workforce Investment Council Briefing Materials: June 9, 2017

Briefing materials compiled for a meeting of the Texas Workforce Investment Council held Friday, June 9, 2017 at 8:30 a.m. at the Austin Community College Highland Business Center. The materials include minutes, reports, grant updates, action item considerations, and current initiatives.
Date: Summer 2017
Creator: Texas Workforce Investment Council
Object Type: Book
System: The Portal to Texas History
Facets of Positive Affect and Risk for Bipolar Disorder: Role of the Behavioral Activation System (open access)

Facets of Positive Affect and Risk for Bipolar Disorder: Role of the Behavioral Activation System

Bipolar disorder is characterized by disruptions in mood and affect that occur not only during mood episodes, but during euthymic periods as well. At the same time, sensitivity of the behavioral activation system (BAS) has been implicated in the disorder and is a risk marker for it. Less clear is the relationship between BAS sensitivity and positive affect, particularly lower level facets of positive affect. The aim of the present study was to examine the relationship between positive affect and vulnerability for mania as assessed using BAS sensitivity. Specifically, the link between daily levels and fluctuations of positive affect and baseline BAS sensitivity was examined. Following the hierarchical model of affect, this study also assessed the relationship between BAS sensitivity and the distinct facets of positive affect. Finally, this study examined whether BAS sensitivity moderates associations between daily rewards and positive affect. Undergraduates (N = 265) from a large university in the South were recruited to complete measures of BAS sensitivity, affect, and mood symptoms at baseline. Using ecological momentary assessment (EMA), participants completed daily surveys assessing affect and engagement with rewarding situations. An exploratory factory analysis revealed a four factor structure of positive affect, consisting of Serenity, Joviality, Attentiveness, …
Date: December 2017
Creator: Dornbach-Bender, Allison
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Operating Budget: 2018 (open access)

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Operating Budget: 2018

Proposed budget for University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center outlining projected income and expenditures, with supporting documentation.
Date: 2017
Creator: University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas
Object Type: Book
System: The Portal to Texas History
A Systemic Model for Family Functioning: Mutual Influences of Spousal Attachment, Marital Adjustment, and Coparenting (open access)

A Systemic Model for Family Functioning: Mutual Influences of Spousal Attachment, Marital Adjustment, and Coparenting

The current study examined direct and indirect influences of romantic attachment processes, marital adjustment, and the coparenting relationship on family functioning. Data was collected from a community sample of 86 heterosexual couples with a child aged eight to eleven living in the home. Both spouses completed a demographic questionnaire, the Experiences in Close Relationships Scale, the Dyadic Adjustment Scale, the Coparenting Scale, and the Self-Report Family Inventory as part of a larger study on family processes in middle childhood. Data analysis included multilevel modeling, utilizing the actor-partner interdependence model. Results indicated that marital adjustment mediated the association between attachment processes and family functioning, suggesting that a healthy marital relationship is an important variable that helps explain links between attachment security and the family functioning. Findings also highlighted the benefit of conceptualizing adult romantic attachment, marital, and coparental subsystems within a systemic framework.
Date: August 2017
Creator: Young, Anne Michelle
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Panel Analysis of Institutional Finances of Medical Residencies at Non-University-Based Independent M.D. Granting Medical Schools in the United States (open access)

A Panel Analysis of Institutional Finances of Medical Residencies at Non-University-Based Independent M.D. Granting Medical Schools in the United States

Traditionally, medical residency positions have been primarily funded by the federal government. However, due to declining governmental funding support over time, medical schools have resorted to fund these programs through other means such as clinical fees and payments for services. This change has affected the number and types of residencies available to medical school graduates. The purpose of this study was to measure how the availability of fiscal resources shape mission-related outputs, particularly medical residency positions at medical schools. Using academic capitalism as the theoretical framework provided a lens through which to examine how federal policies have shaped the availability and funding of medical residencies today at the institutional level. This concept has been studied in traditional colleges and universities and how they balance mission and money, but less so in the context of medical schools. This study used a fixed effect panel analysis to study the impact of selected variables over a 10-year period on financing of medical residencies. Findings included that tuition revenues, paid for by undergraduate medical students, are increasingly funding medical residency positions. There was little to no effect from hospital revenues and federal research monies on increasing the number of medical residency positions. The funding …
Date: May 2017
Creator: Cho, Ah Ra
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Global and Regional Sea Level Rise Scenarios for the United States (open access)

Global and Regional Sea Level Rise Scenarios for the United States

This report discusses the scenario-based and probabilistic projections of future sea levels for coastal-risk planning, management of infrastructure, and mission readiness.
Date: January 2017
Creator: Sweet, William V.; Kopp, Robert E.; Weaver, Christopher P.; Obeysekera, Jayantha; Horton, Radley M.; Thielder, E. Robert et al.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Texas Real Estate Forms Manual: Third Edition, Volume 1 (open access)

Texas Real Estate Forms Manual: Third Edition, Volume 1

First volume of a manual compiled by professional lawyers in the state of Texas regarding the processes and forms needed for typical real estate transactions. It includes forms with filler text and extensive explanations about how the forms might be completed depending on various common scenarios.
Date: 2017
Creator: State Bar of Texas. Real Estate Forms Committee.
Object Type: Book
System: The Portal to Texas History
Psychopathy in Male and Female Offenders: Validating the CAPP-IRS and Investigating the Impact of Gender Role Conformity (open access)

Psychopathy in Male and Female Offenders: Validating the CAPP-IRS and Investigating the Impact of Gender Role Conformity

Recent conceptualizations of psychopathy are moving toward more inclusive, purely trait-based models. However, researchers continue to heavily rely on assessments of psychopathy that include categorical behavioral elements. The newly developed Comprehensive Assessment of Psychopathic Personality – Institutional Rating Scale appears to be a promising interview-based measure of psychopathy, but research on its reliability and validity is in its infancy. As a second issue, the vast majority of research on psychopathy, particularly in offender populations, is conducted with male participants. Nonetheless, the growing body of literature involving incarcerated females suggests gender differences in the prevalence and manifestation of psychopathic traits. Reasons for these differences are unclear, but some have proposed socialized gender roles as a contributing factor. With a sample of 52 female 49 male offenders recruited from a large, metropolitan jail, this dissertation evaluated the construct validity of the CAPP-IRS and examined the effect of gender role conformity on the manifestation of psychopathic traits. Results indicated that a three-factor model of psychopathy represented by antagonistic interpersonal relations, restricted emotions, and disinhibited behavior best fit the data. Findings further suggested convergent and discriminant validity for the CAPP-IRS. Additionally, masculine and feminine gender role conformity differentially related to psychopathy, but generally accounted …
Date: December 2017
Creator: Carter, Rachel Marjann
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library