1,809 research outputs found
The Need for a Spiritual Reboot in the Youth of Great Commission Church
The decline of the youth attendance is evident in many Protestant churches. This research paper examined forty-three young believers from three Haitian Baptist churches, respectively, located in Brooklyn, Queens, and the Bronx. These data results help develop a suitable spiritual program that includes the six key influencing factors for spiritual growth: discipleship, mentoring, parental influence, church attendance, personal devotion, and ministerial involvement. This spiritual program was tested on a small group of young people from Great Commission Church in Queens. This research uses a mixed-method methodology, which is a combination of qualitative and quantitative methods to analyze the data. The results show that parental influence can help Haitian youth attend church, but it does not encourage discipleship, mentorship, and ministerial involvement in the church. Further studies should aim at understanding the extent of parental involvement needed to encourage Haitian youth to be involved in the church\u27s ministries
CGIAR citations in IPCC reports: a summary report
In March 2015, Science-Metrix was contracted by CGIAR to evaluate the presence of CGIAR publications in the IPCC assessment reports (ARs). The study was carried through the analysis of the IPCC ARs' references
La P3 dans l'apprentissage explicite des catégories
La catégorisation consiste en la capacité\ud
de classer les stimuli en des catégories\ud
discrÚtes, selon une rÚgle de catégorisation\ud
(Harnad, 2005).\ud
Une étude en électroencéphalographie\ud
de St-Louis et Harnad (en prép.) révÚle\ud
une positivité tardive (P3b) dans une\ud
tĂąche consistant Ă trouver une rĂšgle\ud
permettant de différencier 2 images
The Display and Manipulation of Temporal Information
Because medical data have complex temporal features, special techniques are required for storing, retrieving, and displaying clinical data from electronic databases. One significant problem caused by the temporal nature of medical data has been called the temporal granularity problem. The temporal granularity problem is said to occur when the set of facts relevant to a specific problem changes as the time scale changes. We argue that what is needed to deal with changes in the relevant time scale are temporal granularity heuristics. One heuristic that we have explored is that, for any level of problem abstraction, and for each type of data item in the record, there exists an optimal level of temporal abstraction. We describe an implemented database kernel and a graphical user interface that have features designed specially to support this temporal granularity heuristic. The basis for our solution is the use of temporal abstraction and temporal granularity. This heuristic encodes the relevant behavior of each type of event at different levels of temporal granularity. In doing so, we can define a specific behavior for each type of data as the level of abstraction changes
Model-Based Interpretation of Time-Varying Medical Data
Temporal concepts are critical is medical therapy-planning. If given early enough, specific therapeutic choices may abort or suppress evolving undesired changes in a patientâs clinical status. Effective medical decision making demands recognition and interpretation of complex temporal changes that permeate the medical record. This paper presents a methodology for representing and using medical knowledge about temporal relationships to infer the presence of clinically relevant events, and describes a program, called TOPAZ, that uses this methodology to generate a narrative summary of such events. A unique feature of TOPAZ is the use of numeric and symbolic modeling techniques to perform temporal reasoning tasks that would be difficult to encode and perform using only one modeling methodology
An Algebra for Delay-Insensitive Circuits
A novel process algebra is presented; algebraic expressions specify delay-insensitive circuits in terms of voltage-level transitions on wires. The approach appears to have several advantages over traditional state-graph and production-rule based methods. The wealth of algebraic laws makes it possible to specify circuits concisely and facilitates the verification of designs. Individual components can be composed into circuits in which signals along internal wires are hidden from the environment
Information Retrieval from Hypertext: Update on the Dynamic Medical Handbook Project
This paper attempts to provide a perspective from which to develop a more complete theory of information retrieval from hypertext documents. Viewing hypertexts as large information spaces, we compare two general classes of navigation methods, classes we call local and global. We argue that global methods necessitate some form of âindex spaceâ conceptually separate from the hypertext âdocument spaceâ. We note that the architectures of both spaces effect the ease with which one can apply various information retrieval algorithms. We identify a number of different index space and document space architectures and we discuss some of the associated trade-offs between hypertext functionality and computational complexity. We show how some index space architectures can be exploited for enhanced information retrieval, query refinement, and automated reasoning. Through analysis of a number of prototype systems, we discuss current limitations and future potentials for various hypertext information retrieval structures
A surveillance system to monitor excess mortality of people with mental illness in Canada
Objective: Outcome measures are rarely available for surveillance and system performance monitoring for mental disorders and addictions. Our study aims to demonstrate the feasibility and face validity of routinely measuring the mortality gap in the Canadian context at the provincial and regional levels using the methods and data available to the Canadian Chronic Disease Surveillance System (CCDSS) of the Public Health Agency of Canada. Methods: We used longitudinal data from the Quebec Integrated Chronic Disease Surveillance System, which also provides aggregated data to the CCDSS. This includes data from the health insurance registry physician claims and the hospital discharge abstract for all mental disorder diagnoses (International Classification of Diseases [ICD]-9 290-319 or ICD-10 F00-F99). Patients were defined as having had received a mental disorder diagnosis at least once during the year. Life expectancy was measured using Chiang's method for abridged life tables, complemented by the Hsieh method for adjustment of the last age interval. Results: We found a lower life expectancy among psychiatric patients of 8 years for men and 5 years for women. For patients with schizophrenia, life expectancy was lowered by 12 years for men and 8 years for women. Cardiovascular disease and cancer were the most common causes of premature death. Findings were consistent across time and regions of the province. Lower estimates of the mortality gap, compared with literature, could be explained by the inclusion of primary care patients and methods. Conclusions: Our study demonstrates the feasibility of using administrative data to measure the impact of current and future mental health plans in Canada provided the techniques can be replicated in other Canadian provinces
WR 110: A Single Wolf-Rayet Star With Corotating Interaction Regions In Its Wind?
A 30-day contiguous photometric run with the MOST satellite on the WN5-6b
star WR 110 (HD 165688) reveals a fundamental periodicity of P = 4.08 +/- 0.55
days along with a number of harmonics at periods P/n, with n ~ 2,3,4,5 and 6,
and a few other possible stray periodicities and/or stochastic variability on
timescales longer than about a day. Spectroscopic RV studies fail to reveal any
plausible companion with a period in this range. Therefore, we conjecture that
the observed light-curve cusps of amplitude ~ 0.01 mag that recur at a 4.08 day
timescale may arise in the inner parts, or at the base of, a corotating
interaction region (CIR) seen in emission as it rotates around with the star at
constant angular velocity. The hard X-ray component seen in WR 110 could then
be a result of a high velocity component of the CIR shock interacting with the
ambient wind at several stellar radii. Given that most hot, luminous stars
showing CIRs have two CIR arms, it is possible that either the fundamental
period is 8.2 days or, more likely in the case of WR 110, there is indeed a
second weaker CIR arm for P = 4.08 days, that occurs ~ two thirds of a rotation
period after the main CIR. If this interpretation is correct, WR 110 therefore
joins the ranks with three other single WR stars, all WN, with confirmed CIR
rotation periods (WR 1, WR 6, and WR 134), albeit with WR 110 having by far the
lowest amplitude photometric modulation. This illustrates the power of being
able to secure intense, continuous high-precision photometry from space-based
platforms such as MOST. It also opens the door to revealing low-amplitude
photometric variations in other WN stars, where previous attempts have failed.
If all WN stars have CIRs at some level, this could be important for revealing
sources of magnetism or pulsation in addition to rotation periods.Comment: 25 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables, accepted in Ap
Cultural difference in attitudes towards stuttering among British, Arab and Chinese students: considering home and host cultures
Background
Geographical and cultural differences have been shown to affect public attitudes towards stuttering. However, increasingly for many individuals in the world one's birthplace culture (or home culture) and culture in their local geographical environment (or host culture) are not the same.
Aims
The effects of home culture and host culture in shaping the attitudes towards stuttering among students with British, Arab and Chinese home cultures attending one British university were explored. The effects of host culture were investigated by considering the time lived in the UK for Arab and Chinese students.
Methods & Procedures
The study used a descriptive survey design that included a standardized selfâdelivered questionnaire: the Public Opinion Survey of Human AttributesâStuttering (POSHAâS). Purposive sampling was carried out thorough volunteer mailing lists, student societies and personal contact. The final sample of 156 university students included 51 British, 52 Arab and 53 Chinese students.
Outcomes & Results
Overall stuttering score (OSS), which is indicative of attitudes towards stuttering, was highest for British participants (mean = 30) and lowest for Chinese participants (mean = 13), with Arab participants falling in the middle (mean = 21). The differences in attitudes between the three groups were statistically significant, suggesting that home culture is a contributor to attitudes towards stuttering. A postâhoc item analysis of the POSHAâS revealed numerous specific differences in attitudes towards stuttering between the three groups, including differences in the attribution of the aetiology of stuttering, their role in helping people who stutter (PWS) and sympathy toward PWS. Time lived in the UKâa proxy measure for the role of host cultureâdid not significantly influence the attitudes of Arab and Chinese respondents.
Conclusions & Implications
To varying degrees, all three groups had evidence of stereotypical stuttering attitudes. Nevertheless, given similar ages and student status in the same university, observed respondent differences confirm previous research documenting geographical influences on stuttering attitudes in Western versus East Asian and Middle Eastern samples. The study also provides evidence that home culture was influential in shaping attitudes towards stuttering, but host culture was not a significant contributor.
What this paper adds
What is already known on the subject
Public stereotypical beliefs towards stuttering are found across the world and hinder the quality of life among PWS. Different cultures have unique stereotypical beliefs towards PWS.
What this study adds to existing knowledge
To the best of our knowledge, no other study has investigated specifically if individuals who live in the same geographical location but have different home cultures, have similar or differing attitudes towards PWS. Results provide preliminary evidence that the home culture of an individual was influential in shaping attitudes towards PWS, but host culture, measured as the length of time living in the current geographical location, did not have a significant relationship with attitudes towards stuttering.
What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work
This study highlights that culturally sensitive clinical practice should not be based on just the culture of the region but should take home culture into consideration as well, and clinicians should discuss cultural perceptions of stuttering with clients in clinical practice
- âŠ