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Creators/Authors contains: "Robinson, Marcus"

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  1. This full research paper reports findings from a multitiered intervention focused on developing growth mindset among talented, low-income undergraduate students attending a College of Computing in the northeastern United States. Rooted in theories of intelligence, a growth mindset views intelligence and skills as being developed through persistent practice and learning from mistakes, while a fixed mindset sees skills as set at birth, never evolving, with mistakes becoming insurmountable barriers to success. The program in this study was designed to develop a community of learners with a shared framework for responding to academic challenges, to combat imposter syndrome, and to support persistence in their major and enter the workforce. During their first two years as college students, three undergraduate cohorts (totaling 32 participants) experienced four semesters of growth-mindset faculty mentoring concurrent with a community-building, growth mindset-focused seminar, and in their first year experienced two growth-mindset infused introductory programming courses. To address the research question, “How do talented, financially disadvantaged computing students understand growth and fixed mindsets?”, we report on qualitative data collected each semester, for each cohort. Focus group transcripts and individual written responses were thematically analyzed, drawing from a priori frameworks (social constructivism and self-efficacy in the context of mindset theory) and emergent codes to develop categories. Discussion is presented using frames of self-determination theory and positioning theory. We discuss the impact of these findings on students, implications for growth mindset interventions and provide guidance for using educational and developmental theories in the context of studies of growth mindset. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 2, 2026
  2. This innovative practice full paper examines mindset understandings of three cohorts of first-year student scholars in a College of Computing at a private technical Carnegie-classified Doctoral University in the northeastern United States. Grounded in theories of intelligence, a growth mindset posits that intelligence and skills can be developed through continued practice and learning, while a fixed mindset situates one with the skills they have at birth, never to evolve or grow. Thirty-two undergraduate students across three years (10 students in year one, cohort one; 10 students in year two, cohort two; and 12 students in year three, cohort three) participated in a holistic growth mindset program that included three pillars: (a) faculty-student mentoring infused with growth mindset, (b) growth-mindset augmentations to the introductory programming course and (c) a growth mindset-scholar seminar - a series of meetings where each cohort met as a group to discuss and practice activating a growth mindset. Previous work with students has focused on more limited growth mindset interventions rather than a holistic approach. Prior to the scholars arriving on campus, the faculty involved in each of the pillars were part of a Community of Practice to learn about and activate their own growth mindset. At the end of their first semester in the project, each of the student cohorts participated in a focus group to learn about their understanding and application of growth and fixed mindset. We report findings from the student scholar data after one semester of participating in the three programmatic pillars in the context of growth mindset: mentoring, programming instruction, and the scholar seminar. Summary findings from the student perspectives are described including the use of illustrative quotes, in the students' own words, serving as a powerful reminder of the importance of growth mindset and relationship building. This has implications for addressing mindset in the future by considering how the innovative practice of embedding a growth mindset holistically into mentoring, instruction and a student seminar can provide support for students that standalone interventions cannot. 
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  4. This paper presents a search for massive, charged, long-lived particles with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider using an integrated luminosity of $$140~fb^{−1}$$ of proton-proton collisions at $$\sqrt{s}=13$$~TeV. These particles are expected to move significantly slower than the speed of light. In this paper, two signal regions provide complementary sensitivity. In one region, events are selected with at least one charged-particle track with high transverse momentum, large specific ionisation measured in the pixel detector, and time of flight to the hadronic calorimeter inconsistent with the speed of light. In the other region, events are selected with at least two tracks of opposite charge which both have a high transverse momentum and an anomalously large specific ionisation. The search is sensitive to particles with lifetimes greater than about 3 ns with masses ranging from 200 GeV to 3 TeV. The results are interpreted to set constraints on the supersymmetric pair production of long-lived R-hadrons, charginos and staus, with mass limits extending beyond those from previous searches in broad ranges of lifetime 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 1, 2026
  5. Top-quark pair production is observed in lead–lead ( Pb + Pb ) collisions at s NN = 5.02 TeV at the Large Hadron Collider with the ATLAS detector. The data sample was recorded in 2015 and 2018, amounting to an integrated luminosity of 1.9 nb 1 . Events with exactly one electron and one muon and at least two jets are selected. Top-quark pair production is measured with an observed (expected) significance of 5.0 (4.1) standard deviations. The measured top-quark pair production cross section is σ t t ¯ = 3.6 0.9 + 1.0 ( stat ) 0.5 + 0.8 ( syst ) μ b , with a total relative uncertainty of 31%, and is consistent with theoretical predictions using a range of different nuclear parton distribution functions. The observation of this process consolidates the evidence of the existence of all quark flavors in the preequilibrium stage of the quark-gluon plasma at very high energy densities, similar to the conditions present in the early Universe. © 2025 CERN, for the ATLAS Collaboration2025CERN 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 1, 2026
  6. A<sc>bstract</sc> A study of the Higgs boson decaying into bottom quarks (H→$$ b\overline{b} $$ b b ¯ ) and charm quarks (H→$$ c\overline{c} $$ c c ¯ ) is performed, in the associated production channel of the Higgs boson with aWorZboson, using 140 fb−1of proton-proton collision data at$$ \sqrt{s} $$ s = 13 TeV collected by the ATLAS detector. The individual production ofWHandZHwithH→$$ b\overline{b} $$ b b ¯ is established with observed (expected) significances of 5.3 (5.5) and 4.9 (5.6) standard deviations, respectively. Differential cross-section measurements of the gauge boson transverse momentum within the simplified template cross-section framework are performed in a total of 13 kinematical fiducial regions. The search for theH→$$ c\overline{c} $$ c c ¯ decay yields an observed (expected) upper limit at 95% confidence level of 11.5 (10.6) times the Standard Model prediction. The results are also used to set constraints on the charm coupling modifier, resulting in|κc| <4.2 at 95% confidence level. Combining theH→$$ b\overline{b} $$ b b ¯ andH→$$ c\overline{c} $$ c c ¯ measurements constrains the absolute value of the ratio of Higgs-charm and Higgs-bottom coupling modifiers (|κcb|) to be less than 3.6 at 95% confidence level. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 1, 2026
  7. A<sc>bstract</sc> Differential measurements of Higgs boson production in theτ-lepton-pair decay channel are presented in the gluon fusion, vector-boson fusion (VBF),VHand$$ t\overline{t}H $$ t t ¯ H associated production modes, with particular focus on the VBF production mode. The data used to perform the measurements correspond to 140 fb−1of proton-proton collisions collected by the ATLAS experiment at the LHC. Two methods are used to perform the measurements: theSimplified Template Cross-Section(STXS) approach and anUnfolded Fiducial Differentialmeasurement considering only the VBF phase space. For the STXS measurement, events are categorized by their production mode and kinematic properties such as the Higgs boson’s transverse momentum ($$ {p}_{\textrm{T}}^{\textrm{H}} $$ p T H ), the number of jets produced in association with the Higgs boson, or the invariant mass of the two leading jets (mjj). For the VBF production mode, the ratio of the measured cross-section to the Standard Model prediction formjj> 1.5 TeV and$$ {p}_{\textrm{T}}^{\textrm{H}} $$ p T H > 200 GeV ($$ {p}_{\textrm{T}}^{\textrm{H}} $$ p T H < 200 GeV) is$$ {1.29}_{-0.34}^{+0.39} $$ 1.29 0.34 + 0.39 ($$ {0.12}_{-0.33}^{+0.34} $$ 0.12 0.33 + 0.34 ). This is the first VBF measurement for the higher-$$ {p}_{\textrm{T}}^{\textrm{H}} $$ p T H criteria, and the most precise for the lower-$$ {p}_{\textrm{T}}^{\textrm{H}} $$ p T H criteria. Thefiducialcross-section measurements, which only consider the kinematic properties of the event, are performed as functions of variables characterizing the VBF topology, such as the signed ∆ϕjjbetween the two leading jets. The measurements have a precision of 30%–50% and agree well with the Standard Model predictions. These results are interpreted in the SMEFT framework, and place the strongest constraints to date on the CP-odd Wilson coefficient$$ {c}_{H\overset{\sim }{W}} $$ c H W ~
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available March 1, 2026
  8. A<sc>bstract</sc> This paper presents measurements of top-antitop quark pair ($$ t\overline{t} $$ t t ¯ ) production in association with additionalb-jets. The analysis utilises 140 fb−1of proton–proton collision data collected with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider at a centre-of-mass energy of 13 TeV. Fiducial cross-sections are extracted in a final state featuring one electron and one muon, with at least three or fourb-jets. Results are presented at the particle level for both integrated cross-sections and normalised differential cross-sections, as functions of global event properties, jet kinematics, andb-jet pair properties. Observable quantities characterisingb-jets originating from the top quark decay and additionalb-jets are also measured at the particle level, after correcting for detector effects. The measured integrated fiducial cross-sections are consistent with$$ t\overline{t}b\overline{b} $$ t t ¯ b b ¯ predictions from various next-to-leading-order matrix element calculations matched to a parton shower within the uncertainties of the predictions. State-of-the-art theoretical predictions are compared with the differential measurements; none of them simultaneously describes all observables. Differences between any two predictions are smaller than the measurement uncertainties for most observables. 
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