819 research outputs found
Predictors of onset of cannabis and other drug use in male young adults: results from a longitudinal study.
BACKGROUND: The use of cannabis and other illegal drugs is particularly prevalent in male young adults and is associated with severe health problems. This longitudinal study explored variables associated with the onset of cannabis use and the onset of illegal drug use other than cannabis separately in male young adults, including demographics, religion and religiosity, health, social context, substance use, and personality. Furthermore, we explored how far the gateway hypothesis and the common liability to addiction model are in line with the resulting prediction models.
METHODS: The data were gathered within the Cohort Study on Substance Use Risk Factors (C-SURF). Young men aged around 20 years provided demographic, social, health, substance use, and personality-related data at baseline. Onset of cannabis and other drug use were assessed at 15-months follow-up. Samples of 2,774 and 4,254 individuals who indicated at baseline that they have not used cannabis and other drugs, respectively, in their life and who provided follow-up data were used for the prediction models. Hierarchical logistic stepwise regressions were conducted, in order to identify predictors of the late onset of cannabis and other drug use separately.
RESULTS: Not providing for oneself, having siblings, depressiveness, parental divorce, lower parental knowledge of peers and the whereabouts, peer pressure, very low nicotine dependence, and sensation seeking were positively associated with the onset of cannabis use. Practising religion was negatively associated with the onset of cannabis use. Onset of drug use other than cannabis showed a positive association with depressiveness, antisocial personality disorder, lower parental knowledge of peers and the whereabouts, psychiatric problems of peers, problematic cannabis use, and sensation seeking.
CONCLUSIONS: Consideration of the predictor variables identified within this study may help to identify young male adults for whom preventive measures for cannabis or other drug use are most appropriate. The results provide evidence for both the gateway hypothesis and the common liability to addiction model and point to further variables like depressiveness or practising of religion that might influence the onset of drug use
HCI and environmental public policy:opportunities for engagement
This note discusses opportunities for the HCI community to engage with environmental public policy. It draws on insights and observations made during the primary author’s recent work for a policy unit at Global Affairs Canada, which is a federal ministry of the Government of Canada. During that work, the primary author identified several domains of environmental public policy that are of direct relevance to the HCI commu- nity. This note contributes a preliminary discussion of how, why, with whom, and in what capacity HCI researchers and practitioners might engage with three types of environmental public policy: climate change, waste electrical and electronic equipment, and green ICT procurement policies. This builds on existing public policy and environmental knowledge within the HCI community and responds directly to calls from some members to engage with environmental public policy
Destruction of long-range antiferromagnetic order by hole doping
We study the renormalization of the staggered magnetization of a
two-dimensional antiferromagnet as a function of hole doping, in the framework
of the t-J model. It is shown that the motion of holes generates decay of spin
waves into ''particle-hole'' pairs, which causes the destruction of the
long-range magnetic order at a small hole concentration. This effect is mainly
determined by the coherent motion of holes. The value obtained for the critical
hole concentration, of a few percent, is consistent with experimental data for
the doped copper oxide high-Tc superconductors.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
A multi-site single blind clinical study to compare the effects of prolonged exposure, eye movement desensitization and reprocessing and waiting list on patients with a current diagnosis of psychosis and co morbid post traumatic stress disorder: study protocol for the randomized controlled trial Treating Trauma in Psychosis
Contains fulltext :
116518.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Background: Trauma contributes to psychosis and in psychotic disorders post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is often a comorbid disorder. A problem is that PTSD is underdiagnosed and undertreated in people with psychotic disorders. This study's primary goal is to examine the efficacy and safety of prolonged exposure and eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) for PTSD in patients with both psychotic disorders and PTSD, as compared to a waiting list. Secondly, the effects of both treatments are determined on (a) symptoms of psychosis, in particular verbal hallucinations, (b) depression and social performance, and (c) economic costs. Thirdly, goals concern links between trauma exposure and psychotic symptomatology and the prevalence of exposure to traumatic events, and of PTSD. Fourthly predictors, moderators, and mediators for treatment success will be explored. These include cognitions and experiences concerning treatment harm, credibility and burden in both participants and therapists.
Methods/Design: A short PTSD-screener assesses the possible presence of PTSD in adult patients (21- to 65-years old) with psychotic disorders, while the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale interview will be used for the diagnosis of current PTSD. The M.I.N.I. Plus interview will be used for diagnosing lifetime psychotic disorders and mood disorders with psychotic features. The purpose is to include consenting participants (N = 240) in a multi-site single blind randomized clinical trial. Patients will be allocated to one of three treatment conditions (N = 80 each): prolonged exposure or EMDR (both consisting of eight weekly sessions of 90 minutes each) or a six-month waiting list. All participants are subjected to blind assessments at pre-treatment, twomonths post treatment, and six monthspost treatment. In addition, participants in the experimental conditions will have assessments at mid treatment and at 12 months follow-up.
Discussion: The results from the post treatment measurement can be considered strong empirical indicators of the safety and effectiveness of prolonged exposure and EMDR. The six-month and twelve-month follow-up data have the potential of reliably providing documentation of the long-term effects of both treatments on the various outcome variables. Data from pre-treatment and midtreatment can be used to reveal possible pathways of change.19 p
Kahler Moduli Inflation
We show that under general conditions there is at least one natural
inflationary direction for the Kahler moduli of type IIB flux
compactifications. This requires a Calabi-Yau which has h^{2,1}>h^{1,1}>2 and
for which the structure of the scalar potential is as in the recently found
exponentially large volume compactifications. We also need - although these
conditions may be relaxed - at least one Kahler modulus whose only
non-vanishing triple-intersection is with itself and which appears by itself in
the non-perturbative superpotential. Slow-roll inflation then occurs without a
fine tuning of parameters, evading the eta problem of F-term inflation. In
order to obtain COBE-normalised density perturbations, the stabilised volume of
the Calabi-Yau must be O(10^5-10^7) in string units, and the inflationary scale
M_{infl} ~ 10^{13} GeV. We find a robust model independent prediction for the
spectral index of 1 - 2/N_e = 0.960 - 0.967, depending on the number of
efoldings.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figure; v2. references adde
Collinear helium under periodic driving: stabilization of the asymmetric stretch orbit
The collinear eZe configuration of helium, with the electrons on opposite
sides of the nucleus, is studied in the presence of an external electromagnetic
(laser or microwave) field. We show that the classically unstable "asymmetric
stretch" orbit, on which doubly excited intrashell states of helium with
maximum interelectronic angle are anchored, can be stabilized by means of a
resonant driving where the frequency of the electromagnetic field equals the
frequency of Kepler-like oscillations along the orbit. A static magnetic field,
oriented parallel to the oscillating electric field of the driving, can be used
to enforce the stability of the configuration with respect to deviations from
collinearity. Quantum Floquet calculations within a collinear model of the
driven two-electron atom reveal the existence of nondispersive wave packets
localized on the stabilized asymmetric stretch orbit, for double excitations
corresponding to principal quantum numbers of the order of N > 10.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figure
Spin polaron damping in the spin-fermion model for cuprate superconductors
A self-consistent, spin rotational invariant Green's function procedure has
been developed to calculate the spectral function of carrier excitations in the
spin-fermion model for the CuO2 plane. We start from the mean field description
of a spin polaron in the Mori-Zwanzig projection method. In order to determine
the spin polaron lifetime in the self-consistent Born approximation, the
self-energy is expressed by an irreducible Green's function. Both, spin polaron
and bare hole spectral functions are calculated. The numerical results show a
well pronounced quasiparticle peak near the bottom of the dispersion at
(pi/2,pi/2), the absence of the quasiparticle at the Gamma-point, a rather
large damping away from the minimum and an asymmetry of the spectral function
with respect to the antiferromagnetic Brillouin zone. These findings are in
qualitative agreement with photoemission data for undoped cuprates. The direct
oxygen-oxygen hopping is responsible for a more isotropic minimum at
(pi/2,pi/2).Comment: 18 pages, 13 figure
Cosmology from Rolling Massive Scalar Field on the anti-D3 Brane of de Sitter Vacua
We investigate a string-inspired scenario associated with a rolling massive
scalar field on D-branes and discuss its cosmological implications. In
particular, we discuss cosmological evolution of the massive scalar field on
the ant-D3 brane of KKLT vacua. Unlike the case of tachyon field, because of
the warp factor of the anti-D3 brane, it is possible to obtain the required
level of amplitude of density perturbations. We study the spectra of scalar and
tensor perturbations generated during the rolling scalar inflation and show
that our scenario satisfies the observational constraint coming from the Cosmic
Microwave Background anisotropies and other observational data. We also
implement the negative cosmological constant arising from the stabilization of
the modulus fields in the KKLT vacua and find that this leads to a successful
reheating in which the energy density of the scalar field effectively scales as
a pressureless dust. The present dark energy can be also explained in our
scenario provided that the potential energy of the massive rolling scalar does
not exactly cancel with the amplitude of the negative cosmological constant at
the potential minimum.Comment: RevTex4, 15 pages, 5 eps figures, minor clarifications and few
references added, final version to appear in PR
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