12 research outputs found

    Methodological issues in epidemiological studies of periodontitis - how can it be improved?

    Get PDF
    Background: This position paper was commissioned by the European Association of Dental Public Health, which has established six working groups to investigate the current status of six topics related to oral public health. One of these areas is epidemiology of periodontal diseases. Methods: Two theses "A systematic review of definitions of periodontitis and the methods that have been used to identify periodontitis" [1] and "Factors affecting community oral health care needs and provision" [2] formed the starting point for this position paper. Additional relevant and more recent publications were retrieved through a MEDLINE search. Results: The literature reveals a distinct lack of consensus and uniformity in the definition of periodontitis within epidemiological studies. There are also numerous differences in the methods used. The consequence is that data from studies using differing case definitions and differing survey methods are not easily interpretable or comparable. The limitations of the widely used Community Periodontal Index of Treatment Need (CPITN) and its more recent derivatives are widely recognized. Against this background, this position paper reviews the current evidence base, outlines existing problems and suggests how epidemiology of periodontal diseases may be improved. Conclusions: The remit of this working group was to review and discuss the existing evidence base of epidemiology of periodontal diseases and to identify future areas of work to further enhance it

    Trajectory Based Assessment of Coordinated Human Activity

    No full text
    Most approaches to detection and classification of human activity deal with observing individual persons. However, people often tend to organize into groups to achieve certain goals, and human activity is sometimes more readily defined and observed in the context of whole group, where the activity is coordinated among its members. An excellent example of this are team sports, which can provide valuable test ground for development of methods for analysis of coordinated group activity. We used basketball play in this work and developed a probabilistic model of a team play, which is based on the detection of key events in the team behavior. The model is based on expert coach knowledge and has been used to assess the team performance in three di#erent types of basketball o#ense, based on trajectories of all players, obtained by wholebody tracker. Results show that our high-level behaviour model may be used both for activity recognition and performance evaluation in certain basketball activities. Keywords: human motion, group activity, activity analysis, sport analysis

    Norms of Intentionality: Norms that Don't Guide

    No full text
    More than ever, it is in vogue to argue that no norms either play a role in or directly follow from the theory of mental content. In this paper, I present an intuitive theory of intentionality (including a theory of mental content) on which norms are constitutive of the intentional properties of attitude and content in order to show that this trend is misguided. Although this theory of intentionality—the teleological theory of intentional representation—does involve a commitment to representational norms, these norms are not problematic in the way critics have suggested they would be. In particular, these norms do not guide thinking by motivating intentional agents to (intentionally) accord with them; as a result, no obvious vicious regress threatens the theory. In the final section of this paper, I argue that accepting this teleological theory of intentionality need not commit one to thinking that intentionality is the product of natural selectio

    Oral microbiome and health

    No full text
    corecore