1,343 research outputs found
Human resources for control of tuberculosis and HIV-associated tuberculosis.
The global targets for tuberculosis (TB) control were postponed from 2000 to 2005, but on current evidence a further postponement may be necessary. Of the constraints preventing these targets being met, the primary one appears to be the lack of adequately trained and qualified staff. This paper outlines: 1) the human resources and skills for global TB and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) TB control, including the human resources for implementing the DOTS strategy, the additional human resources for implementing joint HIV-TB control strategies and what is known about human resource gaps at global level; 2) the attempts to quantify human resource gaps by focusing on a small country in sub-Saharan Africa, Malawi; and 3) the main constraints to human resources and their possible solutions, under six main headings: human resource planning; production of human resources; distribution of the work-force; motivation and staff retention; quality of existing staff; and the effect of HIV/AIDS. We recommend an urgent shift in thinking about the human resource paradigm, and exhort international policy makers and the donor community to make a concerted effort to bridge the current gaps by investing for real change
k-Spectra of weakly-c-Balanced Words
A word is a scattered factor of if can be obtained from by
deleting some of its letters. That is, there exist the (potentially empty)
words , and such that and
. We consider the set of length- scattered
factors of a given word w, called here -spectrum and denoted
\ScatFact_k(w). We prove a series of properties of the sets \ScatFact_k(w)
for binary strictly balanced and, respectively, -balanced words , i.e.,
words over a two-letter alphabet where the number of occurrences of each letter
is the same, or, respectively, one letter has -more occurrences than the
other. In particular, we consider the question which cardinalities n=
|\ScatFact_k(w)| are obtainable, for a positive integer , when is
either a strictly balanced binary word of length , or a -balanced binary
word of length . We also consider the problem of reconstructing words
from their -spectra
Quantitative Determination of Trace Metals in Two Species of Fish in the Cannon River
ABSTRACT - Samples of fish were taken from three stations along the Cannon River and comparatively analyzed for concentrations of Copper and Mercury in their muscle tissue by atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Samples from different stations showed a difference in metal concentration
Tetris and Word games lead to fewer intrusive memories when applied several days after analogue trauma.
Background: Intrusive trauma memories are a key symptom of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), so disrupting their recurrence is highly important. Intrusion development was hindered by visuospatial interventions administered up to 24 hours after analogue trauma. It is unknown whether interventions can be applied later, and whether modality or working-memory load are crucial factors. Objectives: This study tested: (1) whether a visuospatial task would lead to fewer intrusions compared to a reactivation-only group when applied after memory reactivation four days after analogue trauma exposure (extended replication), (2) whether both tasks (i.e. one aimed to be visuospatial, one more verbal) would lead to fewer intrusions than the reactivation-only group (intervention effect), and (3) whether supposed task modality (visuospatial or verbal) is a critical component (modality effect). Method: Fifty-four participants were randomly assigned to reactivation+Tetris (visuospatial), reactivation+Word games (verbal), or reactivation-only (no task). They watched an aversive film (day 0) and recorded intrusive memories of the film in diary A. On day 4, memory was reactivated, after which participants played Tetris, Word games, or had no task for 10 minutes. They then kept a second diary (B). Informative hypotheses were evaluated using Bayes factors. Results: Reactivation+Tetris and reactivation+Word games resulted in relatively fewer intrusions from the last day of diary A to the first day of diary B than reactivation-only (objective 1 and 2). Thus, both tasks were effective even when applied days after analogue trauma. Reactivation-only was not effective. Reactivation+Word games appeared to result in fewer intrusions than reactivation+Tetris (objective 3; modality effect), but this evidence was weak. Explorative analyses showed that Word games were more difficult than Tetris. Conclusions: Applying a task four days after the trauma film (during memory reconsolidation) was effective. The modality versus working-memory load issue is inconclusive
Do Horizontal Saccadic Eye Movements Increase Interhemispheric Coherence? Investigation of a Hypothesized Neural Mechanism Underlying EMDR
Series of horizontal saccadic eye movements (EMs) are known to improve episodic memory retrieval in healthy adults and to facilitate the processing of traumatic memories in eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) therapy. Several authors have proposed that EMs achieve these effects by increasing the functional connectivity of the two brain hemispheres, but direct evidence for this proposal is lacking. The aim of this study was to investigate whether memory enhancement following bilateral EMs is associated with increased interhemispheric coherence in the electroencephalogram (EEG). Fourteen healthy young adults were asked to freely recall lists of studied neutral and emotional words after a series of bilateral EMs and a control procedure. Baseline EEG activity was recorded before and after the EM and control procedures. Phase and amplitude coherence between bilaterally homologous brain areas were calculated for six frequency bands and electrode pairs across the entire scalp. Behavioral analyses showed that participants recalled more emotional (but not neutral) words following the EM procedure than following the control procedure. However, the EEG analyses indicated no evidence that the EMs altered participants’ interhemispheric coherence or that improvements in recall were correlated with such changes in coherence. These findings cast doubt on the interhemispheric interaction hypothesis, and therefore may have important implications for future research on the neurobiological mechanism underlying EMDR
Some observations on the smallest adjacency eigenvalue of a graph
In this paper, we discuss various connections between the smallest eigenvalue
of the adjacency matrix of a graph and its structure. There are several
techniques for obtaining upper bounds on the smallest eigenvalue, and some of
them are based on Rayleigh quotients, Cauchy interlacing using induced
subgraphs, and Haemers interlacing with vertex partitions and quotient
matrices. In this paper, we are interested in obtaining lower bounds for the
smallest eigenvalue. Motivated by results on line graphs and generalized line
graphs, we show how graph decompositions can be used to obtain such lower
bounds.Comment: 24 pages, Discussiones Mathematicae Graph Theory, Special Issue in
honor of Slobodan K. Simi\'c, accepted for publicatio
The neural correlates of childhood maltreatment and the ability to understand mental states of others
: Emotional abuse and emotional neglect are related to impaired interpersonal functioning. One underlying mechanism could be a developmental delay in mentalizing, the ability to understand other people’s thoughts and emotions.
: This study investigates the neural correlates of mentalizing and the specific relationship with emotional abuse and neglect whilst taking into account the level of sexual abuse, physical abuse and physical neglect.
: The RMET was performed in an fMRI scanner by 46 adolescents (Age: = 18.70, = 1.46) who reported a large range of emotional abuse and/or emotional neglect. CM was measured using a self-report questionnaire (CTQ).
: Neither severity of emotional abuse nor neglect related to RMET accuracy or reaction time. The severity of sexual abuse was related to an increased activation of the left IFG during mentalization even when controlled for psychopathology and other important covariates. This increased activation was only found in a group reporting both sexual abuse and emotional maltreatment and not when reporting isolated emotional abuse or neglect or no maltreatment. Functional connectivity analysis showed that activation in the left IFG was associated with increased activation in the right insula and right STG, indicating that the IFG activation occurs in a network relevant for mentalizing.
: Being sexually abused in the context of emotional abuse and neglect is related to an increase in activation of the left IFG, which may indicate a delayed development of mirroring other people’s thoughts and emotions. Even though thoughts and emotions were correctly decoded from faces, the heightened activity of the left IFG could be an underlying mechanism for impaired interpersonal functioning when social situations are more complex or more related to maltreatment experiences.This work was supported by The Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO)-E.A.C., VICI-grant [453-14- 001], B.M.E., VIDI-grant [016-085-353], A.L.v.H., Rubicon grant [446-13-006] and by the Royal Society-A.L.v.H., Dorothy Hodgkin Fellowship [DH150176]
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