57 Papers
95 Citations
Nan Li is an academic researcher from Chinese Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electromagnetic coil & Radio frequency. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 45 publications. Previous affiliations of Nan Li include RMIT University & University of Wisconsin-Madison.
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Papers
Cross-pressuring conservative Catholics? Effects of Pope Francis' encyclical on the U.S. public opinion on climate change.
TL;DR: This paper found that people who were aware of the encyclical held more polarized attitudes toward climate change than those who were unaware of it, whereas encyclically-aware liberals expressed heightened concerns about climate change, encyclICAL-aware conservatives expressed lower levels.
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Tweeting nano: how public discourses about nanotechnology develop in social media environments
Kristin K. Runge,Sara K. Yeo,Michael A. Cacciatore,Dietram A. Scheufele,Dominique Brossard,Michael A. Xenos,Ashley A. Anderson,Doo-Hun Choi,Jiyoun Kim,Nan Li,Xuan Liang,Maria Stubbings,Leona Yi-Fan Su +12 more
TL;DR: The trend toward certainty in opinion coupled with the distinct geographic origins of much of the social media traffic on Twitter for nanotechnology-related opinion has significant implications for understanding how key online influencers are debating and positioning the issue of nanotechnology for lay and policy audiences.
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Multi-objective optimization for designing of high-speed train cabin ventilation system using particle swarm optimization and multi-fidelity Kriging
TL;DR: A multi-objective optimization platform has been developed using the nondominated sorting-based particle swarm optimization (NSPSO) algorithm for searching the trade-off optimal design of the ventilation system in a fully occupied high-speed train (HST) cabin to shorten design optimization process.
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How do U.S. state residents form opinions about ‘fracking’ in social contexts? A multilevel analysis
Emily L. Howell,Nan Li,Heather Akin,Dietram A. Scheufele,Dietram A. Scheufele,Michael A. Xenos,Dominique Brossard,Dominique Brossard,Dominique Brossard +8 more
TL;DR: The authors found that people residing in states with a higher poverty rate and higher ground water use for public drinking supply are more likely to support hydraulic fracturing than those living in states without poverty.
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