3,702 research outputs found

    Psychometric Testing of the Walker\u27s Feelings and Thoughts About Weight Scale in Taiwan

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    Background: The majority of women do not return to their pre-pregnant weight after six weeks postpartum in Taiwan. Excessive postpartum weight retention or gain can lead to long-term obesity and increase a woman\u27s risk of major health problems. Trends among Taiwanese women reveal an increasing prevalence of obesity. Limiting postpartum weight retention is important for preventing long-term obesity development. Objectives: The purpose of this study was to examine predictors of postpartum weight gain among Taiwanese women using the modified Thriving Model (Walker & Kim, 2002) as the guiding conceptual framework and to examine the psychometric properties of a Chinese Version of the Feelings and Thoughts About Weight (FATAW) scale. Methods: A cross-sectional descriptive design and a convenience sample of postpartum women three-to-nine month postpartum were recruited over a 6-month period (September 2005 through February 2006). Setting: Waiting room of the well baby clinic which routinely takes place six days a week at a large Maternity Center in the Taipei metropolitan area, northern Taiwan. Human subjects approval was obtained through the University of San Diego as well as Institutional Review Boards associated with the Maternity Center. Data analysis: Descriptive statistics, correlations and factor analysis were used. Results: Findings indicated that CFATAW was a valid and reliable scale to measure postpartum women\u27s feelings and thoughts about weight in Taiwan. The Cronbach\u27s alpha reliability coefficient for the total scale was 0.89. Women with BMI equal or greater than 24.00 and weight retention in this study had a significantly higher relative risk of reporting higher level of weight-related distress in the early months after childbirth in Taiwan. Conclusions: The results of this study show that the measurement of weight-related feelings and thoughts in the Chinese version is content valid and the instrument is internally consistent and construct valid for use in Taiwan. Implications for nursing: The Chinese version of FATAW scale in this study contributed to understanding of feelings and thoughts about weight among postpartum women in Taiwan that affect factors related to postpartum weight retention. This study also provided initial validate and reliable instrument for further research on weight-related distress among Taiwanese postpartum women

    Focusing RKKY interaction by graphene P-N junction

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    The carrier-mediated RKKY interaction between local spins plays an important role for the application of magnetically doped graphene in spintronics and quantum computation. Previous studies largely concentrate on the influence of electronic states of uniform systems on the RKKY interaction. Here we reveal a very different way to manipulate the RKKY interaction by showing that the anomalous focusing - a well-known electron optics phenomenon in graphene P-N junctions - can be utilized to refocus the massless Dirac electrons emanating from one local spin to the other local spin. This gives rise to rich spatial interference patterns and symmetry-protected non-oscillatory RKKY interaction with a strongly enhanced magnitude. It may provide a new way to engineer the long-range spin-spin interaction in graphene.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure

    Efficient tree-listing algorithm

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    Electronics LettersThe article of record may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/el:19700192An algorithm, based on the T-triangle method, is given for the generation of all the trees in a nonoriented connected graph. The efficiency of the algorithm is verified by computer results

    A Note on Entanglement Entropy for Primary Fermion Fields in JT Gravity

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    In this paper we analyse and discuss 2D Jackiw-Teitelboim (JT) gravity coupled to primary fermion fields in asymptotically anti-de Sitter (AdS) spacetimes. We get a particular solution of the massless Dirac field outside the extremal black hole horizon and find the solution for the dilaton in JT gravity. Two dimensional JT gravity spacetime is conformally flat, we calculate the two point correlators of primary fermion fields under the Weyl transformations. The key point of this work is to present a standard technique which is called resolvent rather than CFT methods. We redefine the fields in terms of the conformal factor as the fermion fields, and we use the resolvent technique to derive the renormalized entanglement entropy for massless Dirac fields in JT gravity.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures; improvements to presentation, new content added in appendix to comment about the correlator trace formula of primary fermion fields, published version in CP

    Collimated directional emission from a peanut-shaped microresonator

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    Collimated directional emission is essentially required an asymmetric resonant cavity. In this paper, we theoretically investigate a type of peanut-shaped microcavity which can support highly directional emission with the emission divergence as small as 2.5o. The mechanism of the collimated emission is explained with the short-term ray trajectory and the intuitive lens model in detail. Wave simulation also confirms these results. This extremely narrow divergence of the emission holds a great potential in highly collimated lasing from on-chip microcavities

    Self-reflection and screening mental health on Canadian campuses: validation of the mental health continuum model

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    Background This study describes the psychometric testing of the Mental Health Continuum (MHC) model the Canadian Department of National Defense developed initially, among undergraduates of three Canadian universities. The MHC is a tool that consists of 6 items to guide students the way to attend to, or monitor, signs and behavior indicators of their mental health status and suggest appropriate actions to improve their mental health. Methods Online survey data were collected from 4206 undergraduate students in three universities in two Canadian provinces during the spring of 2015 and winter of 2016. Participants completed an online survey questionnaire that consisted of the MHC questionnaire, the Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (K-10), and demographic information, including age, gender, and year of study. Results Factor analysis using the principal components method followed by a two-step internal replication analysis showed that the MHC tool was two-dimensional and that all six domains assessed were crucial. The construct (convergent) validity of the MHC tool was tested against the K-10, and the correlation analysis results were strong overall, as well as within subgroups defined by gender, year of study, and university. Conclusions The MHC is a useful tool that helps college students reflect on and enhance their mental health
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