2,616 research outputs found
Vapor phase growth technique and system for several 3-5 compound semiconductors Quarterly technical report
Vapor phase growth technique and system for group 3A and 5A compound semiconductor
"Need Everyone Helping to Keep Off Because Everyone Helping to Keep On" â reducing harms from cannabis use in remote Indigenous Australian communities involves more than just users
Background: Heavy cannabis use in remote Indigenous Australian communities potentially
contributes to existing health disparities. Community membersâ perceptions of cannabis
harms will support harm-minimization in these settings. Objective: To describe perceived
cannabis harms reported by a cohort of Indigenous Australians living in small, isolated communities
as an indication of their existing resources for change. Method: Inductive thematic
analysis of 407 semi-structured interviews with participants in a cohort study in three
remote communities in Cape York in far north Queensland (Australia) revealed major areas
of concern about cannabis. Three attitudinal categories were defined according to reported
cannabis impacts and urgency for change: 1- âLOW CONCERNâ said cannabis was a low priority
community issue; 2- âSOME CONCERNâ tolerated cannabis use but identified personal
or community-level concerns; and 3- âHIGH CONCERNâ expressed strong aversion to cannabis
and identified serious personal or community-level harms. The characteristics and the patterns
of concerns were summarized across the groups. Results: âCategory 1- LOW CONCERNâ
(nÂŒ107), mostly current users, emphasized personal âfinancial impactsâ and âstress.â âCategory
2 â SOME CONCERNâ (nÂŒ141) perceived community level impacts warranting systematic
action, particularly on âemploymentâ; and âCategory 3 â HIGH CONCERNâ (nÂŒ159), most of
the never users, emphasized concerns for families and youth. Irrespective of use history, the
cohort reported financial and abstinence-related stress, overlapping alcohol issues and generally
endorsed alleviating impacts on children and youth. Conclusion: Nearly ubiquitous experience
with cannabis harms and impacts in this cohort suggests resources for harm reduction
including family and cultural obligation, stress relief, financial management, and engagement
are available across all community members, not just users
The relationship between mental toughness and cognitive control: evidence from the item-method directed forgetting task
Previous research by the authors found that mental toughness, as measured by the Mental Toughness Questionnaire 48 (MTQ48; Clough, P.J., Earle, K., & Sewell, D. [2002]. Mental toughness: the concept and its measurement. In I. Cockerill (Ed.), Solutions in sport psychology [pp. 32â43]. London: Thomson Publishing), was significantly associated with performance on the list-method directed forgetting task. The current study extends this finding to the item-method directed forgetting task in which the instruction to Remember or Forget is given after each item in the study list. A significant positive association was found between the correct recognition of Remember words and the emotional control subscale of the MTQ48. No significant associations were observed with other measures of mental toughness or personality. The findings are discussed in terms of the relationship between mental toughness and cognitive control
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Eyes on the bog. Long-term monitoring network for UK peatlands
Eyes on the Bog provides a scientifically robust, repeatable, low tech, long-term monitoring initiative.
The standardised methodology enables individual peatland sites to be consistently monitored across the UK, creating a network of comparable sites. The initiative employs cheap, simple techniques and modern technology to enable useful monitoring information to be collected by peatland community employees or volunteers on:
Peat subsidence and carbon loss
Carbon capture
Water table behaviour
Peat soil condition
Vegetation status, structure and composition
Historical context of change and current trajectorie
Vapor phase growth technique and system for several III-V compound semiconductors Interim scientific report
Vapor phase growth method for single crystalline preparation of gallium nitride, gallium arsenide alloy, and gallium antimonide allo
Cannabis Use Among Remote Indigenous Australians: Opportunities to Support Change Identified in Two Waves of Sampling
Background: Cannabis harms among Indigenous populations in Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the United States may be magnified by poorer health and heavy use. However, little direct evidence is available to evaluate cannabis' impacts. In communities in remote northern Queensland (Australia) where cannabis has become endemic, opportunities to support change were investigated.Methods: Opportunistically recruited participants (aged 15â49 years) discussed their cannabis use history in interviews in two waves of population sampling in Cape York (Queensland). Wave 1 included 429 people (235 males and 194 females); and wave 2 included 402 people (228 males and 174 females). Current users (used cannabis during the year before interview) described frequency of use, amount consumed, expenditure and dependence symptoms. Other substance use was recorded for 402 people at wave 2.Results: Wave 1: 69% reported lifetime use and 44% current use. Males (55%) were more likely than females (30%) to be current users (P < 0.001). Most (96%) current users described at least weekly use; nearly half (48%) were âheavyâ users (â„6 cones/session at least once/week) and 77% met cannabis dependence criteria. Three communities spent up to AUD2.0 million/year, or around 9% of community people's total income on cannabis. The majority (79%) of current users wanted to quit or reduce their cannabis use. Wave 2: no difference was observed in the proportion of lifetime (69%, |z| = 0.04, P = 0.968) or current cannabis users (39%, |z| = 1.39, P = 0.164); nor current use among males (71%, |z| = 0.91, P = 0.363) or females (62%, |z| = 0.36, P = 0.719). However, a significant reduction in current users by 15% (|z| = 2.36, P = 0.018) was observed in one community. Of 105 wave 1 current users re-assessed in 2, 29 (27%) had ceased use. These participants reported cost and family commitments as reasons to change and that social support and employment enabled abstinence. Current and lifetime cannabis use were closely associated with all other substance use, particularly tobacco and alcohol (both P > 0.001).Conclusions: High rates of heavy cannabis use in remote Australian Indigenous communities warrant action. Successful cessation among some individuals suggests that significant opportunities are available to support change even where cannabis use may be endemic
Relativistic drag forces on black holes from scalar dark matter clouds of all sizes
We use numerical simulations of scalar field dark matter evolving on a moving black hole background to confirm the regime of validity of (semi)analytic expressions derived from first principles for both dynamical friction and momentum accretion in the relativistic regime. We cover both small and large clouds (relative to the de Broglie wavelength of the scalars), and light and heavy particle masses (relative to the black hole size). In the case of a small dark matter cloud, the effect of accretion is a non-negligible contribution to the total force on the black hole, even for small scalar masses. We confirm that this momentum accretion transitions between two regimes (wave and particlelike) and we identify the mass of the scalar at which the transition between regimes occurs
Embracing virtual outpatient clinics in the era of COVID-19
The response to the COVID-19 pandemic has raised the profile and level of interest in the use, acceptability, safety and effectiveness of virtual outpatient consultations and telemedicine. These models of care are not new but a number of challenges have so far hindered widespread take up and endorsement of these ways of working. With the response to the COVID-19 pandemic, remote and virtual working and consultation have become the default. This paper explores our experience of and learning from virtual and remote consultation and questions how this experience can be retained and developed for the future
Spectrally resolved observations of atmospheric emitted radiance in the H2O rotation band
This paper presents the project Earth Cooling by Water
Vapor Radiation, an observational programme, which aims at
developing a database of spectrally resolved far infrared
observations, in atmospheric dry conditions, in order to
validate radiative transfer models and test the quality of water
vapor continuum and line parameters. The project provides
the very first set of far-infrared spectral downwelling
radiance measurements, in dry atmospheric conditions,
which are complemented with Raman Lidar-derived
temperature and water vapor profiles
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