274 research outputs found

    Delusions as Hetero-Dynamic Property Clusters

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    The standard position in psychiatry maintains that delusions are beliefs. However, the features of delusions often diverge from those typically associated with belief. This discrepancy has given rise to what I refer to as the doxastic status debate, which concerns whether delusions are best characterized as “beliefs.” Despite efforts, there has been little progress in settling this debate. I argue that the debate has been stymied because it’s largely a verbal dispute (Chalmers, 2011). I then attempt to advance the debate into substantive territory by putting forward the hetero-dynamic property cluster (HDPC) model. According to the HDPC model, delusions are mental states characterized by an odd and unstable cluster of features, which, when manifested, gives delusions the appearance of straddling the line between two distinct types of attitudes

    Delusions as Herero-Dynamic Property Clusters

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    The standard position in psychiatry maintains that delusions are beliefs. However, the features of delusions often diverge from those typically associated with belief. This discrepancy has given rise to what I refer to as the doxastic status debate, which concerns whether delusions are best characterized as “beliefs.” Despite efforts, there has been little progress in settling this debate. I argue that the debate has been stymied because it’s largely a verbal dispute (Chalmers, 2011). I then attempt to advance the debate into substantive territory by putting forward the hetero-dynamic property cluster (HDPC) model. According to the HDPC model, delusions are mental states characterized by an odd and unstable cluster of features, which, when manifested, gives delusions the appearance of straddling the line between two distinct types of attitudes

    Spinning the Spectrum: How a world-traveling DJ and a Dallas SpeechPathologist developed a new spin on how to helpneurodiverse people navigate a neurotypical world.

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    https://remix.berklee.edu/able-assembly-conference/1099/thumbnail.jp

    Effects of Climate Change and Landscape-Scale Forest Management on Avian Communities, Abundance, and Nest Success in the Appalachian Mountains

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    Birds are integral components of ecosystems and account for billions of dollars in tangible benefits to humans. As such, recent continental declines of bird species have ecological and economic consequences, providing the impetus for my dissertation research. I identified knowledge gaps and proposed novel questions about how birds in the Appalachian Mountains are influenced by changing environmental conditions due to climate change and forest management. The Appalachian Mountains encompass an important biogeographical region with high conservation value due to its myriad habitats and corresponding bird species diversity. Thus, there is a critical need to evaluate the effects of shifting climate factors and land management decisions on long-term trends in bird populations in this region. I designed my dissertation research to fulfill that need, developing 4 chapters that investigate the effects of temperature, precipitation, land cover, and management actions on Appalachian forest bird communities. The first 2 chapters of my dissertation emphasize the role of climate in the Appalachian Mountains. In Chapter 1, I determined the potential effects of both climate and land cover change on forest songbirds breeding in the Appalachian Mountains region by conducting a comprehensive review of published literature and presenting a novel case study. The literature review focused on synthesizing documented and predicted changes in bird species distributions, populations, and communities in response to changes in climate and land cover across the Appalachian Mountains. I concluded by noting the dearth of studies from the Appalachian Mountains that track long-term avian responses, particularly population dynamics, to changing climate and land cover. For my case study, I used 20 years of North American Breeding Bird Survey data from 322 survey routes within the Appalachian Mountains Bird Conservation Region to model the regionwide abundance and distributions of 14 songbird species, disentangle the influences of climate versus land cover change, and predict the consequences of future shifts in climate and land cover patterns. I found that both climate and land cover variables were important in shaping forest songbird distributions. However, the proportions of land cover types tended to be more influential and had higher effect sizes than temperature or precipitation variables. When predicting future distributions of the 14 focal forest songbird species within the Appalachian Mountains, the future climate and land cover combination scenarios had varying but limited impacts on projected relative abundance, regional occupancy, and shifts in the distribution of relative abundance, with the strongest consistent effects on cold-associated species and the 2 warmest scenarios resulting in the greatest differences between contemporary and future projections. Overall, the net projected impact of climate change on breeding forest songbirds within the Appalachian Mountains was modest at a broad spatiotemporal scale, but there may be cause for conservation concern for cold-associated species if greenhouse gas emissions remain high. Furthermore, based on the importance and effect sizes of land cover variables in my case study, land use changes that result in reduced forest cover and increased urban cover may pose a more immediate threat than climate change to forest songbirds in this region. The second chapter of my dissertation takes a finer-scale approach compared to Chapter 1 and investigates whether the influence of climate change on forest songbirds in the Appalachian Mountains is mediated by latitude and elevation. In Chapter 2, I quantified differences in how forest songbird communities are affected by climate factors and additionally explored concurrent temporal trends across latitudinal and elevational gradients within the Appalachian Mountains. My specific objectives were to apply interactions with both latitude and elevation in quantifying how temperature, precipitation, and other temporal factors influence climate-related guild richness and the abundance of specific focal species during the breeding season. I used nearly 30 years of bird survey data from 1,733 sites at various elevations in National Forests located within the Northern, Central, and Southern Appalachians to model responses in guild richness and focal species abundance to climate factors and long-term temporal trends. I found that guild-specific relationships varied among latitudinal regions and along elevational gradients within the Appalachian Mountains. The results of this study are valuable for understanding historical effects of changing climate factors and improving predictions of future climate change impacts on forest songbirds in the Appalachian Mountains by verifying and delineating the dynamic nature of the relationships with temperature and precipitation across latitudinal and elevational gradients. My findings will also help to inform forest songbird conservation efforts in the Appalachian Mountains because they quantify the regional effects of temperature and precipitation on climate-related guilds and forest songbird species, and identify specific latitudes and elevations at which they are at the highest risk from climate change and other temporal factors. Based on my models, climate mitigation strategies for forest songbirds in the Appalachian Mountains are most needed for cold-associated species and for low elevations in the Southern Appalachians. My final 2 chapters focus on the role of land management decisions within the Central Appalachian region. In Chapter 3, I used 17 years of historical bird survey data to fill a knowledge gap about long-term bird responses to landscape-scale forest management by investigating how avian diversity, abundance, and population dynamics changed over time in 2 Central Appalachian forested landscapes with varying levels of timber harvest intensity. My specific objectives were to examine the influence and effect of interactions between time and landscape-scale timber harvest intensity on breeding season songbird guild richness, focal species abundance, and focal species nest success. I found that guild richness and focal species abundance tended to be consistently higher in the actively harvested landscape, and trends in guild richness and species abundance over time were consistently positive in the actively harvested landscape and negative in the minimally harvested landscape. In particular, early-successional / edge-associated species and forest-gap species were found in higher numbers and exhibited positive temporal trends in the actively harvested landscape. However, a holistic assessment that included trends in reproductive success highlighted long-term declines in nest success for a forest-interior species of regional conservation concern within the actively harvested landscape but not the minimally harvested landscape. Thus, there are important trade-offs to consider when using landscape-scale forest management to promote songbird communities and populations in forested landscapes. The fourth chapter of my dissertation addresses specific management efforts to promote target game birds and a diversity of breeding and post-breeding songbirds in heavily forested landscapes. In Chapter 4, I collected extensive data from 335 wildlife openings within the Monongahela National Forest, and then quantified how a suite of site-level and landscape-level wildlife opening attributes relate to multi-species occupancy of 3 game birds (wild turkey, ruffed grouse, and American woodcock) during the game bird courtship season and songbird guild richness during the breeding and post-breeding seasons. I found that game bird species occupancy in wildlife openings may be best explained by management actions and local habitat attributes. My findings further indicated that it is feasible to manage wildlife openings for the mutual benefit of different species groups across seasons. I presented a set of management recommendations to maximize occurrence of wild turkey, ruffed grouse, and American woodcock in concordance with breeding and post-breeding songbird occurrence within wildlife openings, with considerations for minimizing negative impacts to breeding songbirds in adjacent forests. These actions can be applied by private landowners, non-governmental organizations, and government agencies to simultaneously meet management goals and promote avian diversity in forest ecosystems. Combining all 4 chapters, my dissertation research generates critical knowledge needed to manage and conserve important natural resources that are ecologically and economically valuable, particularly in the Appalachian Mountains region. My first 2 research studies advance understanding of climate change effects and underscore the significance of the Appalachian Mountains to regional bird communities, especially cold-associated bird species, with important implications for mitigating large-scale threats to biodiversity. The final 2 research studies provide specific management considerations and recommendations for Central Appalachian forests that will holistically benefit and sustain many forest bird species, including target game birds and species of regional conservation concern

    Environmental and Anthropogenic Factors Influencing Salamanders in Riparian Forests: A Review

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    Salamanders and riparian forests are intimately interconnected. Salamanders are integral to ecosystem functions, contributing to vertebrate biomass and complex food webs in riparian forests. In turn, these forests are critical ecosystems that perform many environmental services, facilitate high biodiversity and species richness, and provide habitat to salamander populations. Due to the global decline of amphibians, it is important to understand, as thoroughly and holistically as possible, the roles of environmental parameters and the impact of human activities on salamander abundance and diversity in riparian forests. To determine the population responses of salamanders to a variety of environmental factors and anthropogenic activities, we conducted a review of published literature that compared salamander abundance and diversity, and then summarized and synthesized the data into general patterns. We identify stream quality, leaf litter and woody debris, riparian buffer width, and soil characteristics as major environmental factors influencing salamander populations in riparian forests, describe and explain salamander responses to those factors, and discuss the effects of anthropogenic activities such as timber harvest, prescribed fires, urbanization, road construction, and habitat fragmentation. This review can assist land and natural resource managers in anticipating the consequences of human activities and preparing strategic conservation plans

    The Use of Quiet Books with People with Late Stage Dementia: A Case Study

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    Discussion of the use of Quiet Books as a method to provide sensory stimulation to people with late stage dementia to reduce agitation and combativeness with activities of daily living. Supporting literature for the use of sensory stimulation with people with dementia is also highlighted. Poster presented at AOTA 2017 Annual Conference in Philadelphia PA and POTA 2016 Annual Conferenc

    Multi-camera simultaneous localization and mapping

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    In this thesis, we study two aspects of simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM) for multi-camera systems: minimal solution methods for the scaled motion of non-overlapping and partially overlapping two camera systems and enabling online, real-time mapping of large areas using the parallelism inherent in the visual simultaneous localization and mapping (VSLAM) problem. We present the only existing minimal solution method for six degree of freedom structure and motion estimation using a non-overlapping, rigid two camera system with known intrinsic and extrinsic calibration. One example application of our method is the three-dimensional reconstruction of urban scenes from video. Because our method does not require the cameras' fields-of-view to overlap, we are able to maximize coverage of the scene and avoid processing redundant, overlapping imagery. Additionally, we developed a minimal solution method for partially overlapping stereo camera systems to overcome degeneracies inherent to non-overlapping two-camera systems but still have a wide total field of view. The method takes two stereo images as its input. It uses one feature visible in all four views and three features visible across two temporal view pairs to constrain the system camera's motion. We show in synthetic experiments that our method creates rotation and translation estimates that are more accurate than the perspective three-point method as the overlap in the stereo camera's fields-of-view is reduced. A final part of this thesis is the development of an online, real-time visual SLAM system that achieves real-time speed by exploiting the parallelism inherent in the VSLAM problem. We show that feature tracking, relative pose estimation, and global mapping operations such as loop detection and loop correction can be effectively parallelized. Additionally, we demonstrate that a combination of short baseline, differentially tracked corner features, which can be tracked at high frame rates and wide baseline matchable but slower to compute features such as the scale-invariant feature transform can facilitate high speed visual odometry and at the same time support location recognition for loop detection and global geometric error correction

    Winter Waterbird Community Composition and Use at Created Wetlands in West Virginia, USA

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    Information on nonbreeding waterbirds using created wetlands in the Central Appalachian region of the United States is limited. We compared waterbird communities of two managed wetlands, created in 2013 and 2001, in West Virginia. We observed 27 species of waterbirds. Species richness and diversity were generally similar between the wetlands, but species composition and use differed. Branta canadensis(Canada Geese), Anas strepera (Gadwall), Bucephala albeola (Buffleheads), Aythya affinis (Lesser Scaup), and Aythya collaris (Ring-Necked Ducks) used the older wetland most frequently. Disparities in species use were the highest in March. The older wetland differed from the younger in supporting species such as diving ducks, possibly due to differences in size, vegetation, water depth, and microtopography. However, the ability to provide habitat for waterbirds during the winter was determined to be comparable between wetlands, despite their age difference

    Winter Waterbird Community Composition and Use at Created Wetlands in West Virginia, USA

    Get PDF
    Information on nonbreeding waterbirds using created wetlands in the Central Appalachian region of the United States is limited. We compared waterbird communities of two managed wetlands, created in 2013 and 2001, in West Virginia. We observed 27 species of waterbirds. Species richness and diversity were generally similar between the wetlands, but species composition and use differed. Branta canadensis (Canada Geese), Anas strepera (Gadwall), Bucephala albeola (Buffleheads), Aythya affinis (Lesser Scaup), and Aythya collaris (Ring-Necked Ducks) used the older wetland most frequently. Disparities in species use were the highest in March. The older wetland differed from the younger in supporting species such as diving ducks, possibly due to differences in size, vegetation, water depth, and microtopography. However, the ability to provide habitat for waterbirds during the winter was determined to be comparable between wetlands, despite their age difference

    Physical function and associations with diet and exercise: Results of a cross-sectional survey among elders with breast or prostate cancer

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    BACKGROUND: Functional decline threatens independent living and is common among individuals diagnosed with cancer, especially those who are elderly. The purpose of this study was to explore whether dietary and exercise practices are associated with physical function status among older cancer survivors. METHODS: Mailed surveys were used to ascertain data on physical function, dietary fat, fruit and vegetable (F&V) consumption, and exercise among elderly diagnosed with early stage (I-II) breast (N = 286) or prostate cancer (N = 402) within the past 18 months. RESULTS: Sixty-one percent of respondents reported diets with <30% of energy from fat, 20.4% reported F&V intakes of 5+ daily servings, and 44.6% reported regular vigorous exercise. Significant, independent associations were found between physical functioning and reported dietary fat intake, F&V consumption, and exercise. A simultaneous multiple regression model controlled for age, race, gender, time since diagnosis and concurrent health behaviors yielded the following estimates: (1) 0.2 increase in the SF-36 physical function subscale (PFS) score with each reported 1% decrease in percent energy from fat (p < .0001); (2) 0.9 increase in the SF-36 PFS score for each reported serving of F&V/day (p = .0049); and (3) 15.4 increase in the SF-36 PFS score with a positive response for regular vigorous exercise (p < .0001). CONCLUSIONS: Results of this cross-sectional survey suggest that regular vigorous exercise and consumption of diets low in fat and rich in F&Vs are associated with higher levels of physical functioning among older cancer survivors. Interventions that promote healthful lifestyle change may deliver considerable benefit within this ever increasing and vulnerable population
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