7,432 research outputs found
Creature comforts: An exploration of pet owners and their experiences of wellbeing gained through their relationships with their companion animals
The aim of this phenomenological research was to gain greater understanding of people’s lived experience of their relationships with companion animals. Of particular interest were the everyday aspects of the relationship. Four participants were interviewed and Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) was used in order to analyse the data. The findings are generally consistent with other research in the area in that they show the central role that companion animals play in the participants’ lives, and the up-lifting, life-enhancing qualities they bestow. Unexpectedly, a major theme of healing and transformation emerged as each participant had come through difficult times in their lives with a sense that their companion animal relationship had been restorative, sustaining and motivating. An additional interest was to discover if people felt inhibited in speaking about the depth of the bond; such a finding could be a useful factor for counsellors to consider when working with clients. However, with the small, purposive sample used in this study, it was not possible to explore this aspect. It might be fruitful to continue research in this area. The study confirms that, for counsellors, an appreciation of the important contribution of pets to happiness and wellbeing could add a significant dimension to understanding a client’s world. It is suggested that the human-animal bond merits attention in counselling training, research and practice
Detailed Abundances for a Large Sample of Giant Stars in the Globular Cluster 47 Tucanae (NGC 104)
47 Tuc is an ideal target to study chemical evolution and GC formation in
massive more metal-rich GCs since is the closest, massive GC. We present
chemical abundances for O, Na, Al, Si, Ca, Ti, Fe, Ni, La, and Eu in 164 red
giant branch (RGB) stars in the massive globular cluster 47 Tuc using spectra
obtained with both the Hydra multi-fiber spectrograph at the Blanco 4-m
telescope and the FLAMES multi-object spectrograph at the Very Large Telescope.
We find an average [Fe/H]=--0.790.09 dex, consistent with literature
values, as well as over-abundances of alpha-elements
([\alpha/\mbox{Fe}]\sim0.3 dex). The n-capture process elements indicate that
47 Tuc is r-process dominated ([Eu/La]=+0.24), and the light elements O, Na,
and Al exhibit star-to-star variations. The Na-O anti-correlation, a signature
typically seen in Galactic globular clusters, is present in 47 Tuc, and extends
to include a small number of stars with [O/Fe] \,--0.5. Additionally, the
[O/Na] ratios of our sample reveal that the cluster stars can be separated into
three distinct populations. A KS-test demonstrates that the O-poor/Na-rich
stars are more centrally concentrated than the O-rich/Na-poor stars. The
observed number and radial distribution of 47 Tuc's stellar populations, as
distinguished by their light element composition, agrees closely with the
results obtained from photometric data. We do not find evidence supporting a
strong Na-Al correlation in 47 Tuc, which is consistent with current models of
AGB nucleosynthesis yields.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
Consumer Purchases of Biotech Sweet Corn: Results from a Market Experiment
In the increasingly consumer-driven food system, consumer preferences toward agricultural biotechnology have the potential to influence decisions about development and adoption of biotech crop varieties. Current knowledge about consumer attitudes toward biotech foods is largely based on a number of consumer surveys and a growing body of experimental auctions. This paper reports results of a market experiment designed to isolate the effect of the use of biotechnology on consumer choices between two otherwise identical products. Two related varieties of fresh-market sweet corn were grown, labeled, and sold side-by-side in nine participating grocery stores in the Philadelphia area. Sales data indicate a market share of biotech corn of about 45 percent, with store-specific shares varying between 10 and 80 percent. Over 700 surveys were collected in stores. Surprisingly, only 65 percent of respondents noticed that there were two types of corn for sale despite the labeling and merchandising, and 87 percent of the sample spent one minute or less choosing their corn. About half of the respondents had heard of biotechnology before, and 16 percent volunteered the biotechnology trait as an influence on their purchase decision. Approximately 40 percent of the sample purchased some of the biotech variety, with several respondents purchasing some of each.Institutional and Behavioral Economics,
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