29,154 research outputs found

    Spring 2010, UNH study abroad in Budapest: Reflections on the permanent possessions of the foreign experience

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    Relationship of Cognitive Style and Theoretical Orientation to Psychology Interns\u27 Preferences for Supervision

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    This study (N  = 106) investigated the effects of cognitive style and theoretical orientation on psychology interns\u27 judgments about the type of supervision they find most beneficial. Preferences for task-oriented and relationship-oriented supervision have been hypothesized to indicate lower and higher levels of professional development, respectively. This study, however, found that trainees\u27 cognitive styles and the behavioral emphasis of their theoretical orientations were also significantly related to their preferences for these two types of supervisory environments. Individual-difference variables in addition to developmental level may need to figure more prominently in future models of psychotherapist training and supervision

    Drug use in the year after prison

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    With poor health and widespread drug problems in the U.S. prison population, post-prison drug use provides an important measure of both public health and social integration following incarceration. We study the correlates of drug use with data from the Boston Reentry Study (BRS), a survey of men and women interviewed four times over the year after prison release. The BRS data allow an analysis of legal and illegal drug use, and the correlation between them. We find that illegal drug use is associated with histories of drug problems and childhood trauma. Use of medications is associated with poor physical health and a history of mental illness. Legal and illegal drug use are not strongly correlated. Results suggest that in a Medicaid expansion state where health coverage is widely provided to people leaving prison, formerly-incarcerated men and women use medications, not illegal drugs, to address their health needs.Accepted manuscrip

    Radiative Transfer Model of Dust Attenuation Curves in Clumpy, Galactic Environments

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    The attenuation of starlight by dust in galactic environments is investigated through models of radiative transfer in a spherical, clumpy ISM. Extinction properties for MW, LMC, and SMC dust types are considered. It is illustrated that the attenuation curves are primarily determined by the wavelength dependence of absorption rather than by the underlying extinction (absorption+scattering) curve. Attenuation curves consistent with the "Calzetti attenuation curve" are found by assuming the silicate-carbonaceous dust model for the MW, but with the 2175A absorption bump suppressed or absent. The discrepancy between our results and previous work that claimed the SMC-type dust to be the most likely origin of the Calzetti curve is ascribed to the difference in adopted albedos; this study uses the theoretically calculated albedos whereas the previous ones adopted empirically derived albedos from observations of reflection nebulae. It is also found that the model attenuation curves calculated with the MW dust are well represented by a modified Calzetti curve with a varying slope and UV bump strength. The strong correlation between the slope and UV bump strength, with steeper curves having stronger bumps, as found in star-forming galaxies at 0.5<z<2.0, is well reproduced by our models if the abundance of the UV bump carriers or PAHs is assumed to be 30% or 40% of that of the MW-dust. The trend is explained by radiative transfer effects which lead to shallower attenuation curves with weaker UV bumps as the ISM is more clumpy and dustier. We also argue that at least some of the IUE local starburst galaxies may have a UV bump feature in their attenuation curves, albeit much weaker than that of the MW extinction curve.Comment: 28 pages, 30 figures, submited to ApJ
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