首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
文章检索
  按 检索   检索词:      
出版年份:   被引次数:   他引次数: 提示:输入*表示无穷大
  收费全文   42330篇
  免费   1778篇
  国内免费   11篇
  2020年   430篇
  2019年   550篇
  2018年   773篇
  2017年   777篇
  2016年   794篇
  2015年   577篇
  2014年   709篇
  2013年   3105篇
  2012年   1273篇
  2011年   1361篇
  2010年   820篇
  2009年   780篇
  2008年   1160篇
  2007年   1129篇
  2006年   1065篇
  2005年   935篇
  2004年   914篇
  2003年   826篇
  2002年   870篇
  2001年   1344篇
  2000年   1253篇
  1999年   939篇
  1998年   482篇
  1996年   390篇
  1992年   727篇
  1991年   727篇
  1990年   703篇
  1989年   709篇
  1988年   705篇
  1987年   656篇
  1986年   658篇
  1985年   719篇
  1984年   594篇
  1983年   531篇
  1982年   460篇
  1981年   418篇
  1979年   650篇
  1978年   461篇
  1977年   400篇
  1976年   439篇
  1975年   551篇
  1974年   631篇
  1973年   672篇
  1972年   539篇
  1971年   506篇
  1970年   482篇
  1969年   521篇
  1968年   634篇
  1967年   531篇
  1966年   543篇
排序方式: 共有10000条查询结果,搜索用时 31 毫秒
891.
This study investigated whether political endorsements from in- versus out-group political elites would influence likelihood of COVID-19 vaccination. In March 2021, we ran an experiment with Democrats and Republicans in the United States to examine whether they would be more likely to get vaccinated following endorsements by former Presidents Obama or Trump. Participants reported greater likelihood of getting vaccinated if the vaccine was endorsed by an elite from their own rather than the opposing party. This effect was driven by Trump, who increased vaccination likelihood among Republicans but decreased it among Democrats. We also investigated the mechanisms underlying this persuasion effect and found that perceived bias and liking were plausible mediators, whereas perceived trustworthiness and expertise were not. This study highlights the potential of having endorsements from both Democrat and Republican political elites to increase support for health behaviors in a politically charged climate.  相似文献   
892.
This series of studies examined U.S. individuals' use of specific emotion regulation/coping strategies during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, investigated the factor structure among strategies during this universally experienced stressor, and the extent to which these factors predicted engagement in COVID-related health-promoting behaviors. In Study 1, participants (N = 520) rated their use of 17 strategies for coping with pandemic-related stress during the past 24 h. Differences emerged in strategy use across demographic groups (age, race, income). Results of exploratory factor analysis suggest a factor structure grouping strategies in terms of goals beyond emotion regulation per se, rather than phases of the emotion process or a binary adaptive versus maladaptive distinction. In Study 2 (N = 264), participants reported daily on their coping strategy use and weekly on their engagement in COVID-specific health behaviors for 22 days. Results of confirmatory factor analysis replicate the factor structure found in Study 1. Some significant associations of coping strategy use with health-promoting behaviors were observed, but these were sporadic and largely involved baseline measures rather than predicting change over time. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.  相似文献   
893.
894.
895.
896.
897.
898.
899.
900.
Lines of various orientations were viewed as prolonged afterimages in six experiments. The duration of unitary appearance was not influenced by line orientation for monocular afterimages, but there was a marginal effect for afterimages generated binocularly; vertical and horizontal lines tended to be visible for longer than did 45-deg lines. Measures of fragmentation frequency and the latency to the first disappearance did not vary reliably with orientation under any conditions. Binocular afterimages lasted longer than did monocular ones, but generally showed the same pattern of fragmentations. These results are compared with those from experiments using optical stabilization and steady fixation, in which orientation differences have been reported.  相似文献   
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号