254 research outputs found
Rate of information processing and reaction time of aircraft pilots and non-pilots.
Reaction time and rate of information processing are cited as critical components in the make-up of pilots. A need was identified to establish the validity of various chronometric measures in the selection of pilots. Fifty-eight military and commercial pilots and twenty non-pilots were subjected to Schepers’ Computerised Information Processing Test Battery, which measures reaction time, form discrimination time, colour discrimination time, rate of information processing(perceptual) and rate of information processing (conceptual). Five hypotheses and one postulate were formulated and tested. The results indicate that pilots could be differentiated from non-pilots with 92,3% accuracy. However, the results need to be cross-validated before they are used for selection
The abundance of an invasive freshwater snail Tarebia granifera (Lamarck, 1822) in the Nseleni River, South Africa
The invasive freshwater snail Tarebia granifera (Lamarck, 1822) was first reported in South Africa in 1999 and it has become widespread across the country, with some evidence to suggest that it reduces benthic macroinvertebrate biodiversity. The current study aimed to identify the primary abiotic drivers behind abundance patterns of T. granifera, by comparing the current abundance of the snail in three different regions, and at three depths, of the highly modified Nseleni River in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Tarebia granifera was well established throughout the Nseleni River system, with an overall preference for shallow waters and seasonal temporal patterns of abundance. Although it is uncertain what the ecological impacts of the snail in this system are, its high abundances suggest that it should be controlled where possible and prevented from invading other systems in the region
Modeling top-down and bottom-up drivers of a regime shift in invasive aquatic plant stable states
FWN – Publicaties zonder aanstelling Universiteit Leide
The accuracy of the Thompson score in predicting early outcome in neonates with hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy treated with therapeutic cooling in a tertiary hospital
BACKGROUND : Hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy (HIE) is one of the major contributors to neonatal mortality and morbidity in developing countries. Scarcity of resources limits clinicians in optimally caring for these patients. Optimal utilisation of clinical tools such as the Thompson score (TS) can assist in improving care by classifying the severity of HIE followed by appropriate treatment. OBJECTIVES : The primary objective was to study the correlation of the TS and early neonatal outcomes in infants with HIE who received therapeutic hypothermia (TH). Secondary objectives were to investigate the correlation of blood gas values with the TS, need for resuscitation with TS, target organ damage (TOD) with TS and the most common risk factors associated with HIE in Tembisa Provincial Tertiary Hospital (TPTH). METHODS : This was a retrospective record review of infants admitted with HIE from January 2018 to August 2019 at the TPTH neonatal unit. Infants had to have successfully completed TH. RESULTS : Ninety-three infants met the inclusion criteria, with 32, 48 and 13 being classified into the mild, moderate and severe categories by TS, respectively. The median length of stay (LOS) was noted to rise with a rising TS, recorded to be 7, 8 and 9 days in the mild, moderate and severe groups, respectively. The mortality rate in the study was calculated to be 2.1%, and there was no significant difference across the groups (p=0.231). A need for antiseizure medication (ASM) on discharge was significantly associated with severe HIE (p=0.028). Hypertension was a frequent chronic illness, noted in 11.3% of the mothers. The most frequent perinatal risk factor was meconium aspiration (50.5%), followed by prolonged second stage of labour (PSSL) (17.2%). A higher TS (severe group) was associated with prolonged resuscitation for >10 minutes (p=0.001) and a need for adrenaline (p=0.008). The frequency of cardiac impairment, liver impairment and clinical seizures increased with a higher TS category (p=0.23, p=0.35 and p=0.51, respectively). On blood gas analysis, a low pH and a high base deficit were associated with severe HIE (p=0.027, p=0.061, respectively). CONCLUSION : The TS is still a useful clinical tool in the era of TH as it is able to predict some early neonatal outcomes such as LOS and a need for ASM at discharge. It is also able to demonstrate increased frequency of duration of resuscitation and a need for adrenaline in severely encephalopathic infants compared with mild. A high TS is also associated with severe metabolic acidosis and increased frequency of TOD. Maternal hypertension, meconium-stained liquor and PSSL are the common risk factors for HIE at TPTH.https://journals.co.za/journal/m.samjam2024Paediatrics and Child HealthSDG-03:Good heatlh and well-bein
Internal audit competencies : skills requirements for internal audit management in South Africa
Internal auditing is playing an increasingly important role within organisations. The growing demand for
internal auditors, as business and corporate governance partners to organisational management, places a
larger burden on internal audit managers in respect of the competence and skill requirements they need in
order to meet their increasingly diverse and divergent responsibilities. In South Africa, internal auditing is
regarded as a scarce skill profession. Published research addresses competencies in various disciplines and
professions, including the general competencies required by internal auditors, and the role and function of
internal audit managers. However, limited information is available with respect to the relative importance of
specific competencies and skills required by internal audit managers.
The purpose of this article is to broaden this knowledge area firstly, by identifying the relative importance of
various competencies included in IIA guidance pronouncements as being mandatory for internal audit
managers. Then, secondly, these ranked IIA competencies are compared with South African and global
internal audit leaders’ perceptions of these competencies’ relative importance.
The article concludes that the terminology used in the various IIA guidance pronouncements and the
published reports on studies conducted by the Institute of Internal Auditors Research Foundation are
ambiguous and should be standardised. Furthermore, it is believed that quality-related issues are not
appropriately addressed in the guidance pronouncements. This article also identifies substantial differences in
the levels of importance attributed to quality-related competencies by the various internal audit leaders. Other
areas where significant differences exist are those of soft skills (areas focussing on the performance of the
audit engagement) and of operational and management research.http://www.saiga.co.za/publications-sajaar.htmam201
Hydrellia lagarosiphon Deeming (Diptera: Ephydridae), a potential biological control agent for the submerged aquatic weed, Lagarosiphon major (Ridl.) Moss ex Wager (Hydrocharitaceae)
The leaf-mining fly, Hydrellia lagarosiphon Deeming (Diptera: Ephydridae), was investigated in its native range in South Africa, to determine its potential as a biological control agent for Lagarosiphon major (Ridl.) Moss ex Wager (Hydrocharitaceae), an invasive submerged macrophyte that is weedy in many parts of the world. The fly was found throughout the indigenous range of the plant in South Africa. High larval abundance was recorded at field sites with nearly all L. major shoots sampled ontaining larvae, with densities of up to 10 larvae per shoot. Adults laid batches of up to 15 eggs, usually on the abaxial sides of L. major leaves. The larvae mined internally, leaving the epidermal tissues of the upper and lower leaves intact. The larvae underwent three instars which took an average of 24 days and pupated within the leaf tissue, from which the adults emerged. Impact studies in the laboratory showed that H. lagarosiphon larval feeding significantly restricted the formation of L. major side branches. Based on its biology and damage caused to the plant, Hydrellia lagarosiphon could be considered as a useful biological control candidate for L. major in countries where the plant is invasive
Internal auditing : how South Africa compares
Despite South Africa being considered a developing country, internal auditing has developed a robust presence
both in the private and public sectors. The CBOK research (conducted by the IIA’s IIARF) shows that local
internal audit functions compare well with other more developed regions around the world. A factor that has
contributed to the strength of South African internal auditing is the support contained in legislation and private
sector codes of corporate governance: the Public Finance Management Act (PFMA) and the Municipal Finance
Management Act (MFMA) continue to underpin public sector advances, while the King ll and King lll reports, with
their codes of corporate governance, apply to all sectors in South Africa. All of this has placed South Africa’s
internal audit functions collectively in a leadership role in Africa.http://www.saiga.co.za/publications-sajaar.htmam201
Simulacral, genealogical, auratic and representational failure: Bushman authenticity as methodological collapse
This article engages with the concept of authenticity as deployed in anthropology. The first section critiques authenticity as a simple reference to cultural purity, a traditional isomorphism or historical verisimilitude or as an ‘ethnographic authenticity’. Demarcation of authenticity must take into account philosophical literature that argues that authenticity is an existential question of the ‘modern’ era. Thus, authenticity is offered to us as individuals as a remedy for the maladies of modernity: alienation, anomie and alterity. Authenticity is then discussed as a question of value within an economy of cultural politics that often draws on simulacra, creating cultural relics of dubious origin. The final section discusses various methodological failures and problematiques that are highlighted by the concern for, and scrutiny of, authenticity. The first is the simulacral failure. The subjects of anthropology are mostly real flesh-and-blood people-on-the-ground with real needs. In contrast is the simulacral subject, the brand, the tourist image, the media image or the ever-familiar hyper-real bushmen. Lastly, the article considers what Spivak calls ‘withholding’ – a resistance to authentic representation by the Other. Resistance suggests a need for a radically altered engagement with the Other that includes both a deepening, and an awareness, of anthropology as a process of common ontological unfolding
Between text and stage: the theatrical adaptations of J.M. Coetzee’s Foe
Several of J.M. Coetzee’s novels have been adapted successfully for the stage, both as theatrical and operatic versions, but these adaptations have not received much critical attention. This article examines the ways in which Peter Glazer and Mark Wheatley have adapted Coetzee’s novel Foe (1986), resulting in two different and distinct stage productions, performed in the US and the UK respectively. In order to explore the complex relationship between the published text and the play versions, the article will ground itself in theories of adaptation, drawing extensively on work by Linda Hutcheon and Robert Stam and Alessandra Raengo. One of the key ideas in adaptation theory is that adaptive fidelity to the source text is neither possible nor desirable, but that adaptation is a more complex, multi-layered intertextual and intermedial interplay of fictional material. The article discusses the two play scripts and analyses the adaptive choices which underpin them and how these structure their meaning-making. Finally, the article also suggests that these scripts can be used to throw more light on Coetzee’s enigmatic novel.DHE
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