34 research outputs found
What Attracts Men Who Batter to Their Partners? An Exploratory Study
Men who batter, because of particular personality traits and sense of entitlement,
may select partners whom they perceive will be dependent on them,
meet their emotional needs, or be “objects” of physical attractiveness. During
treatment intake, 181 offenders responded to the question, “What attracted
you to her (your partner)?” We explored whether men who mentioned their
own needs or her physical traits would engage in more frequent and severe
violence and would have specific forms of personality disorder dimensions or
personality traits. Six categories of attraction, including “her physical traits”
and “his needs,” were derived from the men’s responses. The results showed
that men who focused on their partners’ physical attractiveness were more
likely to be violent after treatment. Men who cited their own needs for their
attraction had higher scores on borderline personality, alcohol abuse, and
psychotic thinking and lower scores on compulsive-conformingPeer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/89970/1/Saunders-Kurko-Barlow-Crane 2011 What Attracts Men Who Batter to Their Partners JIV.pd
Expansion for Excited Baryons
We derive consistency conditions which constrain the possible form of the
strong couplings of the excited baryons to the pions. The consistency
conditions follow from requiring the pion-excited baryon scattering amplitudes
to satisfy the large-N_c Witten counting rules and are analogous to consistency
conditions used by Dashen, Jenkins and Manohar and others for s-wave baryons.
The consistency conditions are explicitly solved, giving the most general
allowed form of the strong vertices for excited baryons in the large-N_c limit.
We show that the solutions to the large-N_c consistency conditions coincide
with the predictions of the nonrelativistic quark model for these states,
extending the results previously obtained for the s-wave baryons. The 1/N_c
corrections to these predictions are studied in the quark model with arbitrary
number of colors N_c.Comment: 56 pages, REVTeX; one new Appendix added containing a discussion of
the results in the language of quark operator
A proof of the base cases of the Emergence of Reason's Conjecture for CM
In this paper we extend the support for a general `Emergence of Reasons' principle in predicate uncertain reasoning by proving the base case of the `Emergence of Reasons Conjecture', for all s, in the case of the inference process CM
Certification and the American Phytopathological Society
The profession of plant pathology strives to improve the health and safety of the public through improved plant health systems. This includes the benefits afforded by well-managed urban landscapes and abundant food and fiber. However, the proud glow of the profession of plant pathology has dimmed over the past 20 years to the point that some members of the American Phytopathological Society (APS), the principal professional society of plant pathologists in the United States, are not sure what a plant pathologist should know or what a plant pathologist is responsible for (Phytopathology News 30:162). Without a unified, positive direction for the profession of plant pathology, we will see continued dissolution of academic plant pathology departments to departments such as microbiology, ecology, and plant science. We lament that the public doesn’t understand who we are, and we seek ways to change that public perception. Plant pathology can be divided into two major components: (i) the science of plant pathology, and (ii) the profession of plant pathology. The basic research discoveries that lead to the development of the scientific principles of plant pathology provide the foundation for the profession. The profession of plant pathology is the application of those scientific principles in production agriculture, forestry, and urban settings to benefit the public by safely reducing the negative impact of plant diseases