14 research outputs found
Simultaneous Recruitment of Drug Users and Men Who Have Sex with Men in the United States and Russia Using Respondent-Driven Sampling: Sampling Methods and Implications
The Sexual Acquisition and Transmission of HIV Cooperative Agreement Program (SATHCAP) examined the role of drug use in the sexual transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) from traditional high-risk groups, such as men who have sex with men (MSM) and drug users (DU), to lower risk groups in three US cities and in St. Petersburg, Russia. SATHCAP employed respondent-driven sampling (RDS) and a dual high-risk group sampling approach that relied on peer recruitment for a combined, overlapping sample of MSM and DU. The goal of the sampling approach was to recruit an RDS sample of MSM, DU, and individuals who were both MSM and DU (MSM/DU), as well as a sample of sex partners of MSM, DU, and MSM/DU and sex partners of sex partners. The approach efficiently yielded a sample of 8,355 participants, including sex partners, across all four sites. At the US sites—Los Angeles, Chicago, and Raleigh–Durham—the sample consisted of older (mean age = 41 years), primarily black MSM and DU (both injecting and non-injecting); in St. Petersburg, the sample consisted of primarily younger (mean age = 28 years) MSM and DU (injecting). The US sites recruited a large proportion of men who have sex with men and with women, an important group with high potential for establishing a generalized HIV epidemic involving women. The advantage of using the dual high-risk group approach and RDS was, for the most part, the large, efficiently recruited samples of MSM, DU, and MSM/DU. The disadvantages were a recruitment bias by race/ethnicity and income status (at the US sites) and under-enrollment of MSM samples because of short recruitment chains (at the Russian site)
Journal of Consciousness Exploration & Research 1(5). Focus Issue — Time & Consciousness: Two Faces of One Mystery?
Table of Contents
Guest Editorial
1. Time and Experience: Twins of the Eternal Now, Gregory M. Nixon, 482-489
Research Essay
1. Why Time Flies When You’re Having Fun, William A. Adams, 490-500
2. Liberation and Its Constraints: A Philosophical Analysis of Key Issues in Psychiatry, Steven Bindeman, 501-510
3. Now, Gordon Globus, 511-515
4. ‘Landscapes’ of Mentality, Consciousness and Time, Chris Nunn 516-528
5. Special Relativity and Perception: The Singular Time of Psychology and Physics, Stephen E. Robbins, 529-559
6. Phenomenal Time and its Biological Correlates, Ram L. P. Vimal & Christopher J. Davia, 560-572
Explorations
1. Time and Its Relationship to Consciousness: An Overview, Mansoor Malik & Maria Hipolito, 573-579
2. Time, Consciousness and the Foundations of Science, Stephen Deiss, 580-584
3. Contextual Division and the Analysis of Linear Time, Christopher Holvenstot, 585-609
4. How Unconditioned Consciousness, Infinite Information, Potential Energy, and Time Created Our Universe, Leon H. Maurer, 610-624
5. Whitehead and the Elusive Present: Process Philosophy’s Creative Core, Gregory M. Nixon, 625-63
Featuring Gregory M. Nixon’s Work with Commentaries & Responses. HOLLOWS OF MEMORY. From Individual Consciousness to Panexperientialism and Beyond
Table of Contents
Article
Preface/Introduction
Gregory M. Nixon 213-215
From Panexperientialism to Conscious Experience: The Continuum of Experience
Gregory M. Nixon 216-233
Hollows of Experience
Gregory M. Nixon 234-288
Myth and Mind: The Origin of Human Consciousness in the Discovery of the Sacred
Gregory M. Nixon 289-337
…………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Commentary
Brief Comment on Gregory Nixon’s Hollows of Experience: Derrida
Frederick D. Abraham 338-341
Playing With Your Food: Review of “Hollows of Experience” by Greg Nixon
William A. Adams 342-345
Brief Commentary on Nixon's Three Papers
Roger Cook 346-347
Commentary on Nixon's From Panexperientialism to Individual Self Consciousness
Stephen Deiss 348-349
Nixon on Conscious and Non-conscious Experience
Gordon Globus 350-351
Commentary on Nixon's From Panexperientialism to Individual Self Consciousness
Syamala Hari 352-353
The Predictive Mind and Mortal Knowledge
Marc Hersch 354-368
Consciousness as Shared and Categorized Result of Experience
Tim Jarvilehto 369-371
Brief Comment on Gregory Nixon’s Myth and Mind
Joseph McCard 372-372
Commentary on Nixon's Three Papers
Marty Monteiro 373-376
Brief Commentary on Nixon's “From Panexperientialism to Conscious Experience”
Richard W Moodey 377-378
Hollows of a Science of Consciousness?
Alfredo Pereira Jr. 379-380
Comment on Gregory Nixon’s “From Panexperientialism to Individual Self Consciousness”
Steven M. Rosen 381-382
Consciousness, Non-conscious Experiences and Functions, Proto-experiences and Protofunctions,
and Subjective Experiences
Ram L. P. Vimal 383-389
…………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Response to Commentary
Response to the Commentary of Frederick D. Abraham
Gregory M. Nixon 390-390
Response to the Commentary of William A. Adams
Gregory M. Nixon 391-392
Response to the Commentary of Syamala Hari
Gregory M. Nixon 393-394
Response to the Commentary of Marc Hersch
Gregory M. Nixon 395-398
Response to the Commentary of Joseph McCard
Gregory M. Nixon 399-399
Response to the Commentary of Steven M. Rosen
Gregory M. Nixon 400-40
Journal of Consciousness Exploration & Research 1(5). Focus Issue — Time & Consciousness: Two Faces of One Mystery?
Table of Contents
Guest Editorial
1. Time and Experience: Twins of the Eternal Now, Gregory M. Nixon, 482-489
Research Essay
1. Why Time Flies When You’re Having Fun, William A. Adams, 490-500
2. Liberation and Its Constraints: A Philosophical Analysis of Key Issues in Psychiatry, Steven Bindeman, 501-510
3. Now, Gordon Globus, 511-515
4. ‘Landscapes’ of Mentality, Consciousness and Time, Chris Nunn 516-528
5. Special Relativity and Perception: The Singular Time of Psychology and Physics, Stephen E. Robbins, 529-559
6. Phenomenal Time and its Biological Correlates, Ram L. P. Vimal & Christopher J. Davia, 560-572
Explorations
1. Time and Its Relationship to Consciousness: An Overview, Mansoor Malik & Maria Hipolito, 573-579
2. Time, Consciousness and the Foundations of Science, Stephen Deiss, 580-584
3. Contextual Division and the Analysis of Linear Time, Christopher Holvenstot, 585-609
4. How Unconditioned Consciousness, Infinite Information, Potential Energy, and Time Created Our Universe, Leon H. Maurer, 610-624
5. Whitehead and the Elusive Present: Process Philosophy’s Creative Core, Gregory M. Nixon, 625-63
Featuring Gregory M. Nixon’s Work with Commentaries & Responses. HOLLOWS OF MEMORY. From Individual Consciousness to Panexperientialism and Beyond
Table of Contents
Article
Preface/Introduction
Gregory M. Nixon 213-215
From Panexperientialism to Conscious Experience: The Continuum of Experience
Gregory M. Nixon 216-233
Hollows of Experience
Gregory M. Nixon 234-288
Myth and Mind: The Origin of Human Consciousness in the Discovery of the Sacred
Gregory M. Nixon 289-337
…………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Commentary
Brief Comment on Gregory Nixon’s Hollows of Experience: Derrida
Frederick D. Abraham 338-341
Playing With Your Food: Review of “Hollows of Experience” by Greg Nixon
William A. Adams 342-345
Brief Commentary on Nixon's Three Papers
Roger Cook 346-347
Commentary on Nixon's From Panexperientialism to Individual Self Consciousness
Stephen Deiss 348-349
Nixon on Conscious and Non-conscious Experience
Gordon Globus 350-351
Commentary on Nixon's From Panexperientialism to Individual Self Consciousness
Syamala Hari 352-353
The Predictive Mind and Mortal Knowledge
Marc Hersch 354-368
Consciousness as Shared and Categorized Result of Experience
Tim Jarvilehto 369-371
Brief Comment on Gregory Nixon’s Myth and Mind
Joseph McCard 372-372
Commentary on Nixon's Three Papers
Marty Monteiro 373-376
Brief Commentary on Nixon's “From Panexperientialism to Conscious Experience”
Richard W Moodey 377-378
Hollows of a Science of Consciousness?
Alfredo Pereira Jr. 379-380
Comment on Gregory Nixon’s “From Panexperientialism to Individual Self Consciousness”
Steven M. Rosen 381-382
Consciousness, Non-conscious Experiences and Functions, Proto-experiences and Protofunctions,
and Subjective Experiences
Ram L. P. Vimal 383-389
…………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Response to Commentary
Response to the Commentary of Frederick D. Abraham
Gregory M. Nixon 390-390
Response to the Commentary of William A. Adams
Gregory M. Nixon 391-392
Response to the Commentary of Syamala Hari
Gregory M. Nixon 393-394
Response to the Commentary of Marc Hersch
Gregory M. Nixon 395-398
Response to the Commentary of Joseph McCard
Gregory M. Nixon 399-399
Response to the Commentary of Steven M. Rosen
Gregory M. Nixon 400-40