55 research outputs found
Spark: A Book Review
Spark, a social research novel by Patricia Leavy, innovatively explores the complexities of doing collaborative, complex research. The story follows Sociology Professor Peyton Wilde during a week-long research seminar in Iceland with, as her invitation reads, some of the greatest thinkers of our time. With an intriguing setup, swift plotline and lively characters, Leavy reaches to the heart of key concerns in interdisciplinary and mixed-methods research. Such concerns are well-discussed in the wider scholarly literature; Leavy uniquely handles and examines these concerns in fiction in a way that will be valuable to teachers and students alike. Spark makes an impressive contribution to fiction-based inquiry
How Does the Amount of Spending on Coaches\u27 Salaries and Recruiting Budgets Affect Win Percentage in College Football?
College football has become much more than a sport for the athletes who play it and entertainment for the fans who watch it. In college football, especially for Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) schools, winning has become a way to make money. However, in order to make money, people must spend money. In a college football program money is spent on a multitude of things. This study focuses on two important factors, coaches\u27 salaries and recruiting budgets. Specifically, this study looked to find out how the amount of spending on coaches\u27 salaries and recruiting budgets affected win percentage in college football. Correlational tests, including a t-test and Pearson Correlation, helped determine if spending more money on coaches\u27 salaries and recruiting budgets helps schools win more games. The results indicated that in 2010 both coaches\u27 salaries and recruiting budgets were significant contributing factors in regards to winning percentage, but in 2011 only coaches\u27 salaries was significant. The possible reasons for these differences and the implications this study could have on college football are presented in the data and analysis below
Multisensory integration, predictive coding and the Bayesian brain: reintegrating the body image and body schema distinction into cognitive science
The classic distinction between the body schema and the body image received renewed
interest in cognitive psychology, in part because of the attempts by the leading psychologist
Charles Spence and his co-authors to synthesise a mounting body of research into the
multisensory nature and functional properties of the neural structures in primate cortex that
are sensitive and responsive to cross-modal stimuli generated from the body and objects
located close to the body, and the famous rubber hand illusion which purported to illustrate
how the perception and understanding of what counts as one’s body, i.e., our body image,
can be manipulated to include foreign, body-part-like, objects such as a rubber hand. This
approach was intended to settle age old questions about how the body schema – the system
sub-personal sensorimotor system that shapes, facilitates and regulates motor control – is
implemented in the brain and address historic confusions about how the body schema should
be understood as an explanatory concept, as well as the problems surrounding the body
schema and image distinction on the grounds of the persistent conflation between the two
concepts. However, after offering several proposals as to how the body schema should be
used to organise and interpret the empirical data, the distinction fell out of favour with
Spence and his colleagues on the grounds of the very problems they intended to resolve. The
proposed solution is an alternative theoretical framework that, I shall argue, never
materialised. Instead, the various definitions they disseminate, I will claim, simply serve to
further perpetuate the same problems and confusions about the body schema. Thus, the
current state of the literature on the body image and schema in cognitive psychology is in dire
need of a conceptual framework that would help us situate and interpret the important
empirical data. I propose that we revisit the philosophical debates that were inspired by the
philosopher Shaun Gallagher as part of his project to provide a conceptual analysis of the
body schema and image distinction and vindicate its status as an important explanatory
device for the explanatory ambitions of embodied cognition. Gallagher’s analysis opens up
important questions about how the sub-personal multisensory processes of the body schema
not only facilitate moment-by-moment motor behaviours, but how they shape and optimise
motor control across developmental timelines, as well the importance of the embodied
configuration of an agent and its particular eco-niche for shaping and facilitating its motor
behaviours. The second important argument of the thesis is that the response to Gallagher’s
analysis has simply served to suppress the line of research that Gallagher inspired because the
questions his analysis raises have been overshadowed by more general disputes between
Gallagher and his opponents about the shape an analysis of the body schema from the
perspective of embodied cognition should take. As such, potentially promising lines of
research in relation to the body schema have since dried up. As part of my attempt to make
progress on the issues that are laid out at the first and second stages of the thesis, the third
stage will involve an exploration into the seminal Bayesian approach to understanding cross-modal
cue optimisation as it applies to object perception (Banks & Ernst, 2002) and the
recent extension of this paradigm to the multimodal sensorimotor processes that underpin
motor behaviour in action-oriented cognitive science (e.g., Friston, 2010). The conclusion of
the thesis is that the move from an embodied to an action-oriented analysis of the body
schema, and the conceptual distinction of which it is part, provides us with the right kind of
theoretical resources to begin to pursue fruitful avenues of research that allow us to begin to
address the questions set out by Gallagher’s analysis whilst avoiding (some of) the pitfalls
that beset the embodied approach. In the final chapter I use this model of the body schema to
illustrate how it can provide the basis for working back up towards a comprehensive theory
of the body image and schema distinction, which I then bring to bear on current, as-yet-unaddressed,
issues in developmental psychology
Sleep-related crash characteristics: Implications for applying a fatigue definition to crash reports
Sleep-related (SR) crashes are an endemic problem the world over. However, police officers report difficulties in identifying sleepiness as a crash contributing factor. One approach to improving the sensitivity of SR crash identification is by applying a proxy definition post hoc to crash reports. To identify the prominent characteristics of SR crashes and highlight the influence of proxy definitions, ten years of Queensland (Australia) police reports of crashes occurring in ≥100. km/h speed zones were analysed. In Queensland, two approaches are routinely taken to identifying SR crashes. First, attending police officers identify crash causal factors; one possible option is 'fatigue/fell asleep'. Second, a proxy definition is applied to all crash reports. Those meeting the definition are considered SR and added to the police-reported SR crashes. Of the 65,204 vehicle operators involved in crashes 3449 were police-reported as SR. Analyses of these data found that male drivers aged 16-24 years within the first two years of unsupervised driving were most likely to have a SR crash. Collision with a stationary object was more likely in SR than in not-SR crashes. Using the proxy definition 9739 (14.9%) crashes were classified as SR. Using the proxy definition removes the findings that SR crashes are more likely to involve males and be of high severity. Additionally, proxy defined SR crashes are no less likely at intersections than not-SR crashes. When interpreting crash data it is important to understand the implications of SR identification because strategies aimed at reducing the road toll are informed by such data. Without the correct interpretation, funding could be misdirected. Improving sleepiness identification should be a priority in terms of both improvement to police and proxy reporting
Sleep-related vehicle crashes on low speed roads
BACKGROUND. Very little is known about the characteristics of sleep related (SR) crashes occurring on low speed roads compared with current understanding of the role of sleep in crashes occurring on high speed roads e.g. motorways. To address this gap, analyses were undertaken to identify the differences and similarities between (1) SR crashes occurring on roads with low (≤60 km/h) and high (≥100 km/h) speed limits, and (2) SR crashes and not-SR crashes occurring on roads with low speed limits.
METHOD. Police reports of all crashes occurring on low and high speed roads over a ten year period between 2000 and 2009 were examined for Queensland, Australia. Attending police officers identified all crash attributes, including ‘fatigue/fell asleep’, which indicates that the police believe the crash to have a causal factor relating to falling asleep, sleepiness due to sleep loss, time of day, or fatigue. Driver or rider involvement in crashes was classified as SR or not-SR. All crash-associated variables were compared using Chi-square tests (Cramer’s V = effect size). A series of logistic regression was performed, with driver and crash characteristics as predictors of crash category. A conservative alpha level of 0.001 determined statistical significance.
RESULTS. There were 440,855 drivers or riders involved in a crash during this time; 6923 (1.6%) were attributed as SR. SR crashes on low speed roads have similar characteristics to those on high speed roads with young (16–24y) males consistently over represented. SR crashes on low speed roads are noticeably different to not-SR crashes in the same speed zone in that male and young novice drivers are over represented and outcomes are more severe. Of all the SR crashes identified, 41% occurred on low speed roads.
CONCLUSION. SR crashes are not confined to high speed roads. Low speed SR crashes warrant specific investigation because they occur in densely populated areas, exposing a greater number of people to risk and have more severe outcomes than not-SR crashes on the same low speed roads
The effects of licence disqualification on drink-drivers: Is it the same for everyone?
© 2017 Elsevier Ltd Drink-driving remains a major road safety concern that creates a significant social burden. Licence disqualification continues to play a key role in drink driving deterrence and sanctions together with police enforcement to address the problem in most motorised countries. However, on-going questions remain regarding the differing effect of licence disqualification periods between first time and repeat offenders, and between other sub-groups of offenders. As a result, this study aimed to determine whether: (a) differences exist in re-offence rates of convicted drink-drivers between: the period between committing the drink-driving offence and licence disqualification (pre-licence disqualification), during the period of licence disqualification, and after being re-licensed (post-licence restoration); and (b) differential effects of offence rates are evident based on Blood Alcohol Content (BAC), gender, age, repeat offender status and crash involvement at the time of offence. The sample consisted of 29,204 drink-driving offenders detected in Victoria, Australia between 1 January 1996 and 30 September 2002. The analysis indicated that licence disqualifications were effective as drink-driving offenders had a significantly lower rate of offending (both drink-driving and other traffic offences) during licence disqualifications compared to pre-licence disqualification and post-licence restoration periods. The influence of licence disqualification appeared to extend beyond the disqualification period, as offence rates were lower during post-licence restoration than during pre-licence disqualification. Interestingly, the highest rate of offending (both for drink-driving and other traffic offences) was during the pre-licence disqualification period, which suggests offenders are particularly vulnerable to drink and drive while waiting to be sanctioned. A consistent pattern of results was evident across genders and age groups. Additionally, those who were involved in a crash at the same time as their index offence had lower offence rates (compared to those who were not involved in a crash) for all periods, although for general traffic offences, the offence rate was highest in the post-licence restoration period for those who had a crash at index offence. This indicates that being involved in a crash may deter these offenders, at least in the short-term. The implications of the results for managing both first time and repeat offenders are discussed
Effects of antiplatelet therapy on stroke risk by brain imaging features of intracerebral haemorrhage and cerebral small vessel diseases: subgroup analyses of the RESTART randomised, open-label trial
Background
Findings from the RESTART trial suggest that starting antiplatelet therapy might reduce the risk of recurrent symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhage compared with avoiding antiplatelet therapy. Brain imaging features of intracerebral haemorrhage and cerebral small vessel diseases (such as cerebral microbleeds) are associated with greater risks of recurrent intracerebral haemorrhage. We did subgroup analyses of the RESTART trial to explore whether these brain imaging features modify the effects of antiplatelet therapy
Protease-activated receptor 2 activation induces behavioural changes associated with depression-like behaviour through microglial-independent modulation of inflammatory cytokines
Rationale: Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a leading cause of disability worldwide but currently prescribed treatments do not adequately ameliorate the disorder in a significant portion of patients. Hence, a better appreciation of its aetiology may lead to the development of novel therapies. Objectives: In the present study, we have built on our previous findings indicating a role for protease-activated receptor-2 (PAR2) in sickness behaviour to determine whether the PAR2 activator, AC264613, induces behavioural changes similar to those observed in depression-like behaviour. Methods: AC264613-induced behavioural changes were examined using the open field test (OFT), sucrose preference test (SPT), elevated plus maze (EPM), and novel object recognition test (NOR). Whole-cell patch clamping was used to investigate the effects of PAR2 activation in the lateral habenula with peripheral and central cytokine levels determined using ELISA and quantitative PCR. Results: Using a blood–brain barrier (BBB) permeable PAR2 activator, we reveal that AC-264613 (AC) injection leads to reduced locomotor activity and sucrose preference in mice but is without effect in anxiety and memory-related tasks. In addition, we show that AC injection leads to elevated blood sera IL-6 levels and altered cytokine mRNA expression within the brain. However, neither microglia nor peripheral lymphocytes are the source of these altered cytokine profiles. Conclusions: These data reveal that PAR2 activation results in behavioural changes often associated with depression-like behaviour and an inflammatory profile that resembles that seen in patients with MDD and therefore PAR2 may be a target for novel antidepressant therapies
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