Research is limited on whether differing methodologies for facilitating personal contributions from individuals aging with intellectual disability produce equivalent knowledge outcomes. Two matched purpose-developed tools examined five quality-of-life domains. Results showed substantial variance between qualitative interview responses and Likert-scale data, and indicate validity concerns for using either methodology in isolation
There is little argument against the benefits of physical activity for most cohorts: healthy individ...
Large-scale electronic health record research introduces biases compared to traditional manually cur...
In this paper we examine current debates about work‐life balance against a background of changing wo...
Social gerontology and disability studies have made similar but separate arguments for ways to study...
Author name used in this manuscript: Y. W. Mak2011-2012 > Academic research: refereed > Publication ...
This short feature documents elements of research in advance of a long-term work. Rather than a tech...
Cheri Wilson is Program Director for the Culture-Quality-Collaborative (CQC), and Faculty Research A...
Author's accepted version (post-print).This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: G...
Author name used in this publication: David Kurt Herold2009-2010 > Academic research: refereed > Pub...
This article forwards the theory of compulsory youthfulness as a way to explore how ableism, ageism,...
The present study was designed to ascertain the extent to which dimensions of acculturation would di...
A large literature identifies unique organizational capabilities as a potent source of competitive a...
Switzerland’s social security system categorizes seniors with disabilities according to the onset of...
The relationship between information and complexity is analysed, by way of a detailed literature ana...
We ascertained how disability and disabled people were framed within the 4899 articles covering agin...
There is little argument against the benefits of physical activity for most cohorts: healthy individ...
Large-scale electronic health record research introduces biases compared to traditional manually cur...
In this paper we examine current debates about work‐life balance against a background of changing wo...
Social gerontology and disability studies have made similar but separate arguments for ways to study...
Author name used in this manuscript: Y. W. Mak2011-2012 > Academic research: refereed > Publication ...
This short feature documents elements of research in advance of a long-term work. Rather than a tech...
Cheri Wilson is Program Director for the Culture-Quality-Collaborative (CQC), and Faculty Research A...
Author's accepted version (post-print).This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: G...
Author name used in this publication: David Kurt Herold2009-2010 > Academic research: refereed > Pub...
This article forwards the theory of compulsory youthfulness as a way to explore how ableism, ageism,...
The present study was designed to ascertain the extent to which dimensions of acculturation would di...
A large literature identifies unique organizational capabilities as a potent source of competitive a...
Switzerland’s social security system categorizes seniors with disabilities according to the onset of...
The relationship between information and complexity is analysed, by way of a detailed literature ana...
We ascertained how disability and disabled people were framed within the 4899 articles covering agin...
There is little argument against the benefits of physical activity for most cohorts: healthy individ...
Large-scale electronic health record research introduces biases compared to traditional manually cur...
In this paper we examine current debates about work‐life balance against a background of changing wo...