World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Psychology

D-Index
51
Citations
15932
World Ranking
5122
National Ranking
2820

Overview

Xiaojia Ge was affiliated with the University of Minnesota in the United States. Their research primarily focused on Earth and Planetary Sciences, contributing to 46 publications in this field. Environmental Science was another key area of study for Xiaojia, with 21 publications in that domain.

Their work concentrated specifically on subfields like Atmospheric Science, Global and Planetary Change, and Oceanography, having published extensively with 39, 21, and 7 contributions respectively in these areas. Major research topics included Tropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research, Climate Variability and Models, Meteorological Phenomena and Simulations, Ocean Waves and Remote Sensing, Flood Risk Assessment and Management, Arctic and Antarctic Ice Dynamics, and Oceanographic and Atmospheric Processes.

Frequent co-authors in Xiaojia's publications consisted of:

  • Melinda S. Peng
  • Qijun Huang
  • Ziyu Yan
  • Zhuo Wang
  • Mingyu Bi

Xiaojia Ge contributed papers to several notable venues. The most common publication outlets were:

  • Frontiers in Earth Science
  • Monthly Weather Review
  • Climate Dynamics
  • Atmospheric Research
  • Journal of the Meteorological Society of Japan Ser II

Key recent publications by Xiaojia included:

  • Understanding the Impacts of Upper-Tropospheric Cold Low on Typhoon Jongdari (2018) Using Piecewise Potential Vorticity Inversion, 2021, Monthly Weather Review
  • Urban Impact on Landfalling Tropical Cyclone Precipitation: A Numerical Study of Typhoon Rumbia (2018), 2023, Advances in Atmospheric Sciences
  • Simulation of Rapid Intensification of Super Typhoon Lekima (2019). Part I: Evolution Characteristics of Asymmetric Convection Under Upper-Level Vertical Wind Shear, 2021, Frontiers in Earth Science
  • An interdecadal change in the relationship between summer Arctic Oscillation and surface air temperature over the eastern Tibetan Plateau around the late 1990s, 2023, Climate Dynamics
  • Effects of vertical shear on intensification of tropical cyclones of different initial sizes, 2023, Frontiers in Earth Science

Best Publications

  • Economic Stress, Coercive Family Process, and Developmental Problems of Adolescents

    Rand D. Conger;Xiaojia Ge;Glen H. Elder;Frederick O. Lorenz

  • Trajectories of Stressful Life Events and Depressive Symptoms during Adolescence.

    Xiaojia Ge;Frederick O. Lorenz;Rand D. Conger;Glen H. Elder

  • Pubertal transition, stressful life events, and the emergence of gender differences in adolescent depressive symptoms.

    Xiaojia Ge;Rand D. Conger;Glen H. Elder

  • Perceived Discrimination and the Adjustment of African American Youths: A Five-Year Longitudinal Analysis With Contextual Moderation Effects

    Gene H. Brody;Yi Fu Chen;Velma McBride Murry;Xiaojia Ge

  • It Takes Two to Replicate: A Mediational Model for the Impact of Parents' Stress on Adolescent Adjustment.

    Rand D. Conger;Gerald R. Patterson;Xiaojia Ge

  • The developmental interface between nature and nurture: A mutual influence model of child antisocial behavior and parent behaviors.

    Xiaojia Ge;Rand D. Conger;Remi J. Cadoret;Jenae M. Neiderhiser

  • Parenting behaviors and the occurrence and co-occurrence of adolescent depressive symptoms and conduct problems.

    Xiaojia Ge;Karin M. Best;Rand D. Conger;Ronald L. Simons

  • Coming of Age Too Early: Pubertal Influences on Girls' Vulnerability to Psychological Distress

    Xiaojia Ge;Rand D. Conger;Glen H. Elder

  • Linking parenting processes and self-regulation to psychological functioning and alcohol use during early adolescence.

    Gene H. Brody;Xiaojia Ge

  • Contextual amplification of pubertal transition effects on deviant peer affiliation and externalizing behavior among African American children.

    Xiaojia Ge;Gene H. Brody;Rand D. Conger;Ronald L. Simons

  • Trajectories of depressive symptoms and stressful life events among male and female adolescents in divorced and nondivorced families.

    Xiaojia Ge;Misaki N. Natsuaki;Rand D. Conger

  • Husband and wife differences in response to undesirable life events.

    Rand D. Conger;Frederick O. Lorenz;Glen H. Elder;Ronald L. Simons

  • In Search of Explanations for Early Pubertal Timing Effects on Developmental Psychopathology

    Xiaojia Ge;Misaki N. Natsuaki

  • It's about timing and change: Pubertal transition effects on symptoms of major depression among African American youths

    Xiaojia Ge;Irene J. Kim;Gene H. Brody;Rand D. Conger

  • Pubertal Maturation and African American Children’s Internalizing and Externalizing Symptoms

    Xiaojia Ge;Gene H. Brody;Rand D. Conger;Ronald L. Simons

  • Parents' stressful life events and adolescent depressed mood.

    Xiaojia Ge;Rand D. Conger;Frederick O. Lorenz;Ronald L. Simons

  • Neighborhood disadvantage moderates associations of parenting and older sibling problem attitudes and behavior with conduct disorders in African American children

    Gene H. Brody;Xiaojia Ge;Su Yeong Kim;Velma McBride Murry

  • Mutual influences in parent and adolescent psychological distress.

    Xiaojia Ge;Rand D. Conger;Frederick O. Lorenz;Michael Shanahan

  • Trajectories of Depressed Mood from Early Adolescence to Young Adulthood: The Effects of Pubertal Timing and Adolescent Dating.

    Misaki N. Natsuaki;Michael C. Biehl;Xiaojia Ge

  • The Relation between Puberty and Psychological Distress in Adolescent Boys.

    Xiaojia Ge;Rand D. Conger;Glen H. Elder

Frequent Co-Authors

Rand D. Conger
Rand D. Conger University of California, Davis
Misaki N. Natsuaki
Misaki N. Natsuaki University of California, Riverside
Ronald L. Simons
Ronald L. Simons University of Georgia
Jenae M. Neiderhiser
Jenae M. Neiderhiser Pennsylvania State University
Leslie D. Leve
Leslie D. Leve University of Oregon
David Reiss
David Reiss Yale University
Gene H. Brody
Gene H. Brody University of Georgia
Daniel S. Shaw
Daniel S. Shaw University of Pittsburgh
Glen H. Elder
Glen H. Elder University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Laura V. Scaramella
Laura V. Scaramella University of Arizona

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