94 research outputs found

    The Relationship Between Parental Sense of Competence and Parental Descriptions of Behavior and Treatment

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    Although the literature has paid significant attention to treatments addressing externalizing behavior disorders, it has given less attention to the role of parental factors on treatment outcomes. This study used a qualitative methodology consisting of thirty semi-structured interviews with parents whose children had been in treatment for externalizing behavior problems for at least a month to examine how variations in parental sense of competence and self-efficacy are related to the ways in which parents describe their child’s behaviors, their response to behaviors, their investment in treatment, and their attribution of treatment outcomes. Thematic differences between participants with high parental sense of competence and self-efficacy and those who scored low on these measures emerged in parental response to behaviors, use of resources, and investment in working to address behavior problems. Implications for future research will be discussed

    Procedural Justice: A systematic literature search and technical report to the National Policing Improvement Agency

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    The Research, Analysis and Information Unit (RAI) of the National Policing Improvement Agency (NPIA) have identified ‘the procedural justice thesis’ as an important development in policing research with plans to replicate US research in a UK context. To facilitate their research agenda, the Centre of Excellence in Policing and Security (CEPS) at Griffith University developed a comprehensive search strategy and conducted a methodologically rigorous systematic literature search of procedural justice between April and June, 2009. Twenty-two keywords were identified and searched on six electronic databases and two library catalogues

    Toward the Development of Semantically-Based Search Systems

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    Over the past several years, we have conducted a number of empirical studies focusing on the performance of human search intermediaries and indexers. Based on insights from these studies, we have developed a computerized intermediary system (EP-X) that represents document contents as frames, and that uses knowledge-based search tactics to assist information seekers in exploring the contents of such frame-based document databases. Below, we present for discussion several propositions based on our experiences in studying human experts and in building computerized intermediaries

    Preliminary Findings: Issues in Surface Movement

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    The final report for the grant is presented. The recent goals for this project have been: (1) To identify common surface movement challenges which affect the airlines and Air Traffic Control; (2) To map out possible solutions to these challenges; (3) To start generalizing about the information we are receiving so that major, abstract categories of challenges and potential solutions will begin to emerge. In particular, there are several areas of opportunity which are beginning to emerge from the data, dealing with the need for: (1) Tools to support information exchange regarding priorities (both within an individual airline and between the ATC tower and airlines). Such priorities include both concerns affecting departure throughput as well as the ordering of departures to accommodate other airline considerations; (2) Planning tools to help ATC and airline Ramp staff deal with information about priorities; (3) Implementation of strategies to enable greater flexibility in queueing flights for departures; (4) Tools to provide better coordination and situation awareness during taxiing (within an airline as well as between airlines and between the airlines); (5) Tools to support planning and to deal with the interactions between departures and arrivals. Thus far, the initial interviews and observations at three airlines and two ATC facilities have been completed

    Non-selective Primary Human Tumor Cell Line Generation from Surgical Resections to be Paired With Flash Frozen and Paraffin Embedded Tissue: Advancements in Democratizing Translational Research Materials to Rural Institutions

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    Translational cancer research relies on the availability of human patient tissue demonstrating the specific disease process under investigation. Biobanks of human tissue have historically been and remain to date the primary access point for cancer research samples. Biorepositories routinely supply researchers with varying sample types for use in biomedical studies; most commonly formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissue, or fresh snap-frozen tissue. In conjunction with preserved tissue samples, viable tumor cell lines derived from patient tissue have emerged to be a new gold standard in cancer research particularly in drug discovery and functional prognostic assays. Tissue banks providing these samples are being termed “next-generation” and are adapting to directly assist researchers by performing high throughput technical studies such as routine histology and immunostaining of donor tissue. These high quality, next-generation biorepositories are a relatively scarce resource in the broader research community in the United States and have traditionally been associated with large centralized and very well established university medical centers. This article describes the next-generation resources now available at the Edwards Comprehensive Cancer Center with its association with the Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine in Huntington, West Virginia. This manuscript details the procedures, protocols, and success rates of the Tissue Procurement Program (TPP) to generate a growing cohort of viable primary human tumor cell lines representing varying malignancies to be used in conjunction with matched formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) and snap-frozen tissue samples for comprehensive translational research

    Enhancing the Representation of Women: How Gender Diversity Signals and Acknowledgement Affect Attraction to Men-Dominated Professions

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    While organizations around the world recognize the importance of gender diversity and inclusion, many struggle to reach gender parity (Sneader & Yee, 2020). Particularly, women account for less than 15% of all sworn police officers (Donohue Jr, 2020). Considering signaling theory and novel research in organizational impression management, we examined the utility of various recruitment messaging techniques for attracting women job seekers to professions dominated by men, at both a consulting firm and law enforcement agency. Women evaluating consulting firm materials perceived greater behavioral integrity and were subsequently more attracted to the organization if recruitment messages included both high gender diversity signals and an explicit acknowledgement of the lack of gender diversity. With the law enforcement agency, a direct effect of the proposed interaction was identified, in that women were more attracted to police recruitment materials signaling gender diversity and explicitly acknowledging the lack of gender diversity within the agency. Materials had no adverse effect on men’s attraction. Last, research questions surrounding person-organization fit and risk propensity were analyzed to further explore the acknowledgement tactic

    Expression of poly-ADP-ribose polymerase (PARP) in endometrial adenocarcinoma: Prognostic potential

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    © 2020 Background: In the United States endometrial carcinoma is the most common female gynecologic malignancy. An average of more than 60,000 new cases of endometrial carcinomas have been diagnosed yearly over the past 5 years, with a higher incidence occurring in the central Appalachian states of Ohio and West Virginia. In the U.S., the national average of newly diagnosed endometrial carcinomas is 26.8 in every 100,000 women, while in the states of Ohio and West Virginia the average is 30.5 and 31.1 in every 100,000 women, respectively. This notable increase in the incidence of endometrial carcinomas may be due a variety of elevated risk factors including but not limited to: tobacco use, obesity, and genetic predisposition of the predominant demographic. The American Cancer Society estimates that approximately 55,000 new cases of endometrial carcinoma will be diagnosed in 2020 yet, this disease is widely considered understudied and under-represented in mainstream cancer research circles. Methods: The aim of this study was to quantitate the co-expression of two DNA repair proteins poly-ADP-ribose polymerase 1 and 2 (Parp-1 and Parp-2) by enzyme- linked immuno-sorbent assay (ELISA) in 60 endometrioid endometrial tumor samples and compare their expression to matched non-malignant endometrial tissue from the same corresponding donors from central Appalachia. Results: We found that Parp-1 was significantly overexpressed in endometrial carcinoma relative to corresponding normal tissue. This overexpression implicates Parp inhibition therapy as a possible treatment for the disease. Our results also found a protective effect of native Parp-2 expression in non-malignant endometrial tissue with each 1 ng/mL increase in PARP-2 concentration in normal tissue was associated with a 10 % reduction in the hazard of tumor progression (HR = 0.90; p = 0.039) and a 21 % reduction in the hazard of death (HR = 0.79; p = 0.044). Conclusions: This study demonstrated the over-expression of the druggable target Parp-1 in endometrial adenocarcinoma and observed a strong negative correlation of native Parp-2 expression and disease progression via the quantification of the Parp proteins using enzyme- linked immuno-sorbent assay (ELISA) assays

    Human-Centered Technologies and Procedures for Future Air Traffic Management

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    The use of various methodologies to predict the impact of future Air Traffic Management (ATM) concepts and technologies is explored. The emphasis has been on the importance of modeling coordination and cooperation among multiple agents within this system, and on understanding how the interactions among these agents will be influenced as new roles, responsibilities, procedures and technologies are introduced. To accomplish this, we have been collecting data on performance under the current air traffic management system, identifying critical problem areas and looking for examples suggestive of general approaches for solving such problems. Using the results of these field studies, we have developed a set of concrete scenarios centered around future designs, and have studied performance in these scenarios with a set of 40 controllers, dispatchers, pilots and traffic managers

    Human-Centered Technologies and Procedures for Future Air Traffic Management: A Preliminary Overview of 1996 Studies and Results

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    In this project, we have been exploring the use of a general methodology to predict the impact of future Air Traffic Management (ATM) concepts and technologies. In applying this methodology, our emphasis has been on the importance of modeling coordination and cooperation among the multiple agents within this system, and on understanding how the interactions among these agents will be influenced as new roles, responsibilities, procedures and technologies are introduced. To accomplish this, we have been collecting data on performance under the current air traffic management system, trying to identify critical problem areas and looking for exemplars suggestive of general approaches for solving such problems. Based on the results of these field studies, we have developed a set of scenarios centered around potential future system designs, and have conducted studies using these scenarios involving a total 40 controllers, dispatchers, pilots and traffic managers. The purpose of this report is to provide NASA with an early summary of the major recommendations that have resulted from our research under the AATT Program thus far. Recommendations 1-3 deal with general approaches that our findings suggest should be incorporated in future AATT Program activities, while Recommendations 4-11 identify some specific topics and technologies that merit research and development activities. Detailed technical reports containing supporting data, as well as the results of our still ongoing analyses, will be provided at a later date. The remainder of this report is organized as follows. Section 1 briefly describes the general design philosophy supported by our empirical studies. Section 2 presents the research methods we have used for identifying requirements for future system designs and for evaluating alternative design solutions. Section 3 discusses preliminary results from an initial set of investigations that we have conducted using these research methods. Section 4 then provides an overall summary. An outline of the rest of this preliminary project summary is provided on the following page
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