278 research outputs found
Network Based Educational Environment: How Libraries and Librarians Become Organizers of Knowledge Access and Resources
In this paper we will highlight some important issues which will influence the redefinition of roles and duties of libraries and librarians in a networked based educational environment. Although librarians will also keep their traditional roles of faculty support services as well as reference service and research assistance, we identify the participation in the instructional design process, the support in the evaluation, development and use of a proper authoring system and the customization of information access, as being the domains where libraries and librarians should mainly involve themselves in the next future and make profit of their expertise in information and knowledge organization in order to properly and effectively support the institutions in the use of Information Technology in education
Acculturation alimentaire et santé dentaire des Yanomamis
http://www.didac.ehu.es/antropo/11/11-14/Pettenati.pd
Intentional and automatic measures of specific-category effect in the semantic impairment of patients with Alzheimer's disease
The breakdown of semantic knowledge relative to living and non-living categories was studied in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). The same living and non-living items were used in a semantic battery and in a semantic priming paradigm exploring automatic access to the semantic system. Although AD patients showed a semantic deficit on the intentional semantic battery, they demonstrated normal semantic facilitation on the priming task. In the AD group as a whole, the semantic impairment did not preferentially affect the living category either in the intentional or automatic condition. Instead, a prevalent deficit for the living category was found in three AD patients (14% of the group) on the intentional semantic tasks, but not on the automatic one. These findings support the view that the category effect may not be a generalised phenomenon in AD but may be restricted to a limited number of patients. The intentional/automatic dissociation of the semantic breakdown demonstrated by AD patients is discussed in relation to different theories regarding the organisation of semantic memory
Gestures and words in naming: Evidence from cross-linguistic and cross-cultural comparison
We report on an analysis of spontaneous gesture production in 2-year-old children who come from three countries (Italy, UK and Australia) and whom speak two languages (Italian and English), in an attempt to tease apart the influence of language and culture when comparing children from different cultural and linguistic environments. Eighty-seven monolingual children aged 24-30 months completed an experimental task measuring their comprehension and production of nouns and predicates. The Italian children scored significantly higher than the other groups on all lexical measures. With regards to gestures, British children produced significantly fewer pointing and speech combinations compared to the Italian and Australian children, who did not differ from each other. In contrast, Italian children produced significantly more representational gestures than the two other groups. We conclude that spoken language development is primarily influenced by the input language over gesture production, whereas the combination of cultural and language environments affects gesture productions
+7 or trisomy 7 (solely)
Review on +7 or trisomy 7 (solely), with data on clinics, and the genes involved
Neuropsychiatric symptoms and syndromes in a large cohort of newly diagnosed, untreated patients with Alzheimer disease.
Objectives: Neuropsychiatric symptoms are common in patients with Alzheimer disease
(AD). Treatment for both AD and psychiatric disturbances may affect the clinical observed
pattern and comorbidity. The authors aimed to identify whether particular
neuropsychiatric syndromes occur in untreated patients with AD, establish the severity of
syndromes, and investigate the relationship between specific neuropsychiatric syndromes
and AD disease severity. Design: Cross-sectional, multicenter, clinical study.
Participants: A total of 1,015 newly diagnosed, untreated outpatients with AD from five
Italian memory clinics were consecutively enrolled in the study from January 2003 to
December 2005. Measurements: All patients underwent thorough examination by
clinical neurologists/geriatricians, including neuropsychiatric symptom evaluation with
the Neuropsychiatric Inventory. Results: Factor analysis revealed five distinct neuropsychiatric
syndromes: the apathetic syndrome (as unique syndrome) was the most frequent,
followed by affective syndrome (anxiety and depression), psychomotor (agitation,
irritability, and aberrant motor behavior), psychotic (delusions and hallucinations), and
manic (disinhibition and euphoria) syndromes. More than three quarters of patients
with AD presented with one or more of the syndromes (N 790, 77.8%), and more than
half exhibited clinically significant severity of symptoms (N 603, 59.4%). With the
exception of the affective one, all syndromes showed an increased occurrence with
increasing severity of dementia. Conclusions: The authors’ study supports the use of a
syndrome approach for neuropsychiatric evaluation in patients with AD. Individual
neuropsychiatric symptoms can be reclassified into five distinct psychiatric syndromes.
Clinicians should incorporate a thorough psychiatric and neurologic examination of
patients with AD and consider therapeutic strategies that focus on psychiatric syndromes,
rather than specific individual symptoms
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