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Strategies used in the pursuit of achievability during goal setting in rehabilitation
We used conversation analysis of six audio- and video-recorded goal setting meetings that were attended by patients and their respective treating team to explore and describe the interaction of participants during interdisciplinary goal setting, and to identify the strategies used to agree goals. The health care professionals involved in the six sessions included four physiotherapists, four occupational therapists, four nurses, one speech and language therapist, and one neuropsychologist. The participants included 3 patients with multiple sclerosis, 2 patients with spinal cord lesions, and 1 patient with stroke from an inpatient neurological rehabilitation unit. Detailed analysis revealed how the treating team shaped the meetings. The most notable finding was that there was rarely a straightforward translation of patient wishes into agreed-on written goals, with the treating team leading goal modification so that goals were achievable. Despite professional dominance, patients also influenced the course of the interaction, particularly when offering resistance to goals proposed by the treating team
Schwarzschild-anti de Sitter within an Isothermal Cavity: Thermodynamics, Phase Transitions and the Dirichlet Problem
The thermodynamics of Schwarzschild black holes within an isothermal cavity
and the associated Euclidean Dirichlet boundary-value problem are studied for
four and higher dimensions in anti-de Sitter (AdS) space. For such boundary
conditions classically there always exists a unique hot AdS solution and two or
no Schwarzschild-AdS black-hole solutions depending on whether or not the
temperature of the cavity-wall is above a minimum value, the latter being a
function of the radius of the cavity. Assuming the standard area-law of
black-hole entropy, it was known that larger and smaller holes have positive
and negative specific heats and hence are locally thermodynamically stable and
unstable respectively. In this paper we present the first derivation of this by
showing that the standard area law of black-hole entropy holds in the
semi-classical approximation of the Euclidean path integral for such boundary
conditions. We further show that for wall-temperatures above a critical value a
phase transition takes hot AdS to the larger Schwarzschild-AdS within the
cavity. The larger hole thus can be globally thermodynamically stable above
this temperature. The phase transition can occur for a cavity of arbitrary
radius above a (corresponding) critical temperature. In the infinite cavity
limit this picture reduces to that considered by Hawking and Page. The case of
five dimensions is found to be rather special since exact analytic expressions
can be obtained for the masses of the two holes as functions of cavity radius
and temperature thus solving exactly the Euclidean Dirichlet problem. This
makes it possible to compute the on-shell Euclidean action as functions of them
from which other quantities of interest can be evaluated exactly.Comment: 23 pages, Late
Notes on actinomycosis, and its transmissibility to the human subject
I refer to the question of the transmissibility of
some bovine diseases to human beings by the consumption of
the meat of diseased animals.
The primary object of my paper is to show that there is
prevalent amongst the cattle in Tasmania, as well as in the
adjacent colonies, from which we obtain a large proportion of
our meat supply, a disease which resembles tuberculosis in
some respects, but differs from it in the specific micro-organism
that is the cause of the disease, and yet, like tuberculosis, is
transmissible to the human subject, and is almost as
distressing in its consequences.
Soon after the publication of the discovery of the
actinomyces or ray-fungus iu diseased cattle, the same
vegetable parasite was found in man; and it was then seen
that the tumours in the bovine species presented great
similarity to those found in the human subject, leading to the
presumption that it was identically the same disease.
It has been shown by experiment that the introduction of
the fungus by inoculation into a calf has produced swellings
which contained the characteristic clubs of the fungus, thus
suggesting that this disease can be transmitted by direct
inoculation.
Many similar experiments have been made with a view to
prove the transmissibility of this vegetable parasite from
animal to animal, and in the majority of cases with a positive
result
The role of the courts in the application of consumer protection law: A comparative perspective
The vast majority of jurisdictions (in particular, the European Union and South Africa) conform to the United Nations Guidelines for Consumer Protection, whereby governments are encouraged to establish and maintain legal and administrative measures to enable a consumer to obtain redress through both formal and informal procedures, with particular regard to the needs of vulnerable (low-income) consumers. The Guidelines for Consumer Protection encourage the resolution of consumer disputes in a manner that is not only fair and expeditious, but also includes the establishment of voluntary mechanisms and procedures. In this regard, the European Union and South Africa have established redress and enforcement of consumer protection mechanisms with a primary focus on consensual consumer dispute resolution and, more specifically, alternative dispute resolution. This does not, however, diminish the important role and responsibility that courts have in the effective enforcement of consumer protection law. This contribution aims to establish the role of the courts in this regard, not only for the advancement of consumer rights and consumer protection law, but also taking into account the ex officio role of the courts in relation to the effective (or ineffective) alternative dispute resolution mechanisms that are currently in place. The contribution analyses the comparative positions in the European Union and South Africa. In terms of the European Union position, focus is placed on the application of the relevant consumer directives within Member States, taking into account pre-existing national law and its interpretation by national courts. The primary focus, in terms of the South African position, is an analysis of the enforcement institutions and redress provisions contained in the Consumer Protection Act 68 of 2008, taking into account the interpretation of these provisions by the relevant institutions and the courts. This contribution highlights problematic issues with the current alternative dispute resolution mechanisms, resulting in ineffective consumer protection and the ex officio role of the courts to address these issues. It aims to confirm that the right to access to the courts is a constitutionally entrenched right and a balance between effective formal and informal enforcement should be the aim
Last letter Barnard E. Bee wrote to his brother H.P. Bee, June 20, 1861
Bee sends his love to his brother\u27s family and asks that his son be taken care of should I fall in this war.https://digitalcommons.wofford.edu/littlejohnmss/1282/thumbnail.jp
Systems, interactions and macrotheory
A significant proportion of early HCI research was guided by one very clear vision: that the existing theory base in psychology and cognitive science could be developed to yield engineering tools for use in the interdisciplinary context of HCI design. While interface technologies and heuristic methods for behavioral evaluation have rapidly advanced in both capability and breadth of application, progress toward deeper theory has been modest, and some now believe it to be unnecessary. A case is presented for developing new forms of theory, based around generic “systems of interactors.” An overlapping, layered structure of macro- and microtheories could then serve an explanatory role, and could also bind together contributions from the different disciplines. Novel routes to formalizing and applying such theories provide a host of interesting and tractable problems for future basic research in HCI
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