205 research outputs found

    Kahwà:tsire:Indigenous Families in a Family Therapy Practice with the Indigenous Worldview as the Foundation

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    This study creates new knowledge regarding the impact of European colonization on Indigenous (Aboriginal, First Nations, Inuit, Metis) families in Canada. It particularly focuses on the issues in families whose children were forcibly removed by the government to institutions called residential schools. Members of Indigenous families voluntarily attended a family therapy practice which utilized a family systems approach and was uniquely based in the Indigenous worldview. This worldview is spiritually centered, child based, and sees relationships as important in the family as the individuals themselves. The study is a qualitative inquiry utilizing social construction theory that asks what might be possible when using Indigenous knowledge together with systemic family therapy to heal Indigenous families impacted by colonization and genocide. What kinds of knowledge emerged from the Kahwà:tsire family therapy practice? What culturally sensitive approaches were used? And is this model of healing transferable to other marginalized families?The research applied reflexive analyses, both collaborative and self reflective, to analyze the results of the Indigenous methodologies applied with the families; narratives such as storytelling, performances in art, drama, music and writing, and circle format work. The therapist used a collaborative constructionist approach with the families.The conclusions of the study named eleven meta-themes of the Indigenous families. Three meta-themes overarch the others; Trauma and Loss from Genocide, Residential School Family Trauma and Loss, and Unresolved Intergenerational Issues of Trauma and Loss. Eight meta-themes follow these; Relationship Challenges, Healing Victimized Women and Children, Healing Adult Children, Collective Anger and the Emotional Aspect, Learned Helplessness and Powerlessness, Attachment Challenges, Lateral Violence, and Decolonization as an Outcome.The basic principles of this model are described with the understanding they can be applied with other marginalized families. The outcome of this study provides information for the healing of Indigenous families in Canada. The information supports the current desire to reclaim Indigenous cultural and family identities, and by doing so, create a change in the relationship between the colonizers/settlers and Indigenous people that will benefit everyone.*Pronounced ‘Gah wah jud lay’. This is a Mohawk Haudensaunee word for family, and translates as ‘we are wrapped together as family’.<br/

    Multiparton Interactions in Photoproduction at HERA

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    The high energy photoproduction of jets is being observed at the ep collider, HERA. It may be that the HERA centre-of-mass energy is sufficiently large that the production of more than one pair of jets per ep collision becomes possible, owing to the large number density of the probed gluons. We construct a Monte Carlo model of such multiparton interactions and study their effects on a wide range of physical observables. The conclusion is that multiple interactions could have very significant effects upon the photoproduction final state and that this would for example make extractions of the gluon density in the photon rather difficult. Total rates for the production of many (i.e. > 2) jets could provide direct evidence for the presence of multiple interactions, although parton showering and hadronization significantly affect low transverse energy jets.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures include

    Supercurrent coupling in the Faddeev-Skyrme model

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    Motivated by the sigma model limit of multicomponent Ginzburg-Landau theory, a version of the Faddeev-Skyrme model is considered in which the scalar field is coupled dynamically to a one-form field called the supercurrent. This coupled model is investigated in the general setting where physical space is an oriented Riemannian manifold and the target space is a Kaehler manifold. It is shown that supercurrent coupling destroys the topological stability enjoyed by the usual Faddeev-Skyrme model, so that there can be no globally stable knot solitons in this model. Nonetheless, local energy minimizers may still exist. The first variation formula is derived and used to construct three families of static solutions of the model, all on compact domains. In particular, a coupled version of the unit-charge hopfion on a three-sphere of arbitrary radius is found. The second variation formula is derived, and used to analyze the stability of some of these solutions. A family of stable solutions is identified, though these may exist only in spaces of even dimension. Finally, it is shown that, in contrast to the uncoupled model, the coupled unit hopfion on the three-sphere of radius R is unstable for all R. This gives an explicit, exact example of supercurrent coupling destabilizing a stable solution of the uncoupled Faddeev-Skyrme model, and casts doubt on the conjecture of Babaev, Faddeev and Niemi that knot solitons should exist in the low-energy regime of two-component superconductors.Comment: 17 page

    Electron ionization - tandem mass spectrometry of glycosphingolipids. I.: The identification of compound-specific sequence ions in the collision-induced dissociation spectra of the immonium ions of two isomeric hexaglycosylceramides

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    AbstractA permethylated-reduced hexaglycosylceramide in a complex glycolipid mixture isolated from a unique human tissue has been identified by using tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). The mass spectrum of this glycolipid mixture, obtained by using in-beam electron ionization, is very complex, and fragment ions derived from the hexaglycosylceramide cannot be distinguished from other ions. Tandem mass spectrometry using a four-sector mass spectrometer gave the mass spectrum of the immonium ion of the permethylated-reduced hexaglycosylceramide (m/z 1645.8), which is characteristic of its structure. Comparison of this MS/MS spectrum with those of two similarly derivatized blood group hexaglycosylceramide isomers permitted identification of the unknown glycolipid structure

    A robust semantics hides fewer errors

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    In this paper we explore how formal models are interpreted and to what degree meaning is captured in the formal semantics and to what degree it remains in the informal interpretation of the semantics. By applying a robust approach to the definition of refinement and semantics, favoured by the event-based community, to state-based theory we are able to move some aspects from the informal interpretation into the formal semantics

    Systematic Regge theory analysis of omega photoproduction

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    Systematic analysis of available data for ω\omega-meson photoproduction is given in frame of Regge theory. At photon energies above 20 GeV the γ+pω+p\gamma{+}p{\to}\omega{+}p reaction is entirely dominated by Pomeron exchange. However, it was found that Pomeron exchange model can not reproduce the γ+pρ+p\gamma{+}p{\to}\rho{+}p and γ+pω+p\gamma{+}p{\to}\omega{+}p data at high energies simultaneously with the same set of parameters. The comparison between ρ\rho and ω\omega data indicates a large room for meson exchange contribution to ω\omega-meson photoproduction at low energies. It was found that at low energies the dominant contribution comes from π\pi and f2f_2-meson exchanges. There is smooth transition between the meson exchange model at low energies and Regge theory at high energies.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, revtex

    Comparison of data and process refinement

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    When is it reasonable, or possible, to refine a one place buffer into a two place buffer? In order to answer this question we characterise refinement based on substitution in restricted contexts. We see that data refinement (specifically in Z) and process refinement give differing answers to the original question, and we compare the precise circumstances which give rise to this difference by translating programs and processes into labelled transition systems, so providing a common basis upon which to make the comparison. We also look at the closely related area of subtyping of objects. Along the way we see how all these sorts of computational construct are related as far as refinement is concerned, discover and characterise some (as far as we can tell) new sorts of refinement and, finally, point up some research avenues for the future

    Long-lived oscillons from asymmetric bubbles

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    The possibility that extremely long-lived, time-dependent, and localized field configurations (``oscillons'') arise during the collapse of asymmetrical bubbles in 2+1 dimensional phi^4 models is investigated. It is found that oscillons can develop from a large spectrum of elliptically deformed bubbles. Moreover, we provide numerical evidence that such oscillons are: a) circularly symmetric; and b) linearly stable against small arbitrary radial and angular perturbations. The latter is based on a dynamical approach designed to investigate the stability of nonintegrable time-dependent configurations that is capable of probing slowly-growing instabilities not seen through the usual ``spectral'' method.Comment: RevTeX 4, 9 pages, 11 figures. Revised version with a new approach to stability. Accepted to Phys. Rev.

    Color Transparency versus Quantum Coherence in Electroproduction of Vector Mesons off Nuclei

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    So far no theoretical tool for the comprehensive description of exclusive electroproduction of vector mesons off nuclei at medium energies has been developed. We suggest a light-cone QCD formalism which is valid at any energy and incorporates formation effects (color transparency), the coherence length and the gluon shadowing. At medium energies color transparency (CT) and the onset of coherence length (CL) effects are not easily separated. Indeed, although nuclear transparency measured by the HERMES experiment rises with Q^2, it agrees with predictions of the vector dominance model (VDM) without any CT effects. Our new results and observations are: (i) the good agreement with the VDM found earlier is accidental and related to the specific correlation between Q^2 and CL for HERMES kinematics; (ii) CT effects are much larger than have been estimated earlier within the two channel approximation. They are even stronger at low than at high energies and can be easily identified by HERMES or at JLab; (iii) gluon shadowing which is important at high energies is calculated and included; (iv) our parameter-free calculations explain well available data for variation of nuclear transparency with virtuality and energy of the photon; (v) predictions for electroproduction of \rho and \phi are provided for future measurements at HERMES and JLab.Comment: Latex 57 pages and 17 figure

    Decision analysis in cardiac surgery:a scoping review and methodological primer

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    OBJECTIVES: Randomized controlled trials are the gold standard for evidence generation in medicine but are limited by their real-world generalizability, resource needs, shorter follow-up durations and inability to be conducted for all clinical questions. Decision analysis (DA) models may simulate trials and observational studies by using existing data and evidence- and expert-informed assumptions and extend analyses over longer time horizons, different study populations and specific scenarios, helping to translate population outcomes to patient-specific clinical and economic outcomes. Here, we present a scoping review and methodological primer on DA for cardiac surgery research. METHODS: A scoping review was performed using the PubMed/MEDLINE, EMBASE and Web of Science databases for cardiac surgery DA studies published until December 2021. Articles were summarized descriptively to quantify trends and ascertain methodological consistency.RESULTS: A total of 184 articles were identified, among which Markov models (N = 92, 50.0%) were the most commonly used models. The most common outcomes were costs (N = 107, 58.2%), quality-adjusted life-years (N = 96, 52.2%) and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (N = 89, 48.4%). Most (N = 165, 89.7%) articles applied sensitivity analyses, most frequently in the form of deterministic sensitivity analyses (N = 128, 69.6%). Reporting of guidelines to inform the model development and/or reporting was present in 22.3% of articles. CONCLUSION: DA methods are increasing but remain limited and highly variable in cardiac surgery. A methodological primer is presented and may provide researchers with the foundation to start with or improve DA, as well as provide readers and reviewers with the fundamental concepts to review DA studies.</p
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