2,373 research outputs found

    Neighborhood satisfaction, functional limitations, and self-efficacy influences on physical activity in older women

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Perceptions of one's environment and functional status have been linked to physical activity in older adults. However, little is known about these associations over time, and even less about the possible mediators of this relationship. We examined the roles played by neighborhood satisfaction, functional limitations, self-efficacy, and physical activity in a sample of older women over a 6-month period.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Participants (<it>N </it>= 137, <it>M </it>age = 69.6 years) completed measures of neighborhood satisfaction, functional limitations, self-efficacy, and physical activity at baseline and again 6 months later.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Analyses indicated that changes in neighborhood satisfaction and functional limitations had direct effects on residual changes in self-efficacy, and changes in self-efficacy were associated with changes in physical activity at 6 months.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our findings support a social cognitive model of physical activity in which neighborhood satisfaction and functional status effects on physical activity are in part mediated by intermediate individual outcomes such as self-efficacy. Additionally, these findings lend support to the position that individual perceptions of both the environment and functional status can have prospective effects on self-efficacy cognitions and ultimately, physical activity behavior.</p

    Opioid Modulation of Oxytocin Release

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/97182/1/0091270010361256.pd

    Overview of the TOPEX/Poseidon Platform Harvest Verification Experiment

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    An overview is given of the in situ measurement system installed on Texaco's Platform Harvest for verification of the sea level measurement from the TOPEX/Poseidon satellite. The prelaunch error budget suggested that the total root mean square (RMS) error due to measurements made at this verification site would be less than 4 cm. The actual error budget for the verification site is within these original specifications. However, evaluation of the sea level data from three measurement systems at the platform has resulted in unexpectedly large differences between the systems. Comparison of the sea level measurements from the different tide gauge systems has led to a better understanding of the problems of measuring sea level in relatively deep ocean. As of May 1994, the Platform Harvest verification site has successfully supported 60 TOPEX/Poseidon overflights

    Book Reviews

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    Carbon cycling in a Patagonian fjord: Strength of biological vs. physical pump

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    Póster presentado en la 2nd International Ocean Research Conference, celebrada en Barcelona del 17 al 21 de noviembre de 2014.Understanding the role of the pelagic “biological and physical pump” in carbon cycling is critical to climate change adaptation and mitigation efforts especially in coastal areas characterized by intense biogeochemical cycling. Fjords are among the few coastal regions that appear to be net annual sinks for atmosphericCO2. Vertical profiles of temperature and salinity were collected with a CTD revealing intense vertical structure in the water column that could be summarised as 2 layers with a transition-mixing region .Spatio-temporal sampling of physical and biogeochemical (C system, nutrients, Phyto- and Zooplankton, in situ dissolved pCO2) parameters was conducted in Comau Fjord (Puerto Montt-Chile) during Austral spring from the surface and deep layers. Spatial variation in water column structure in the fjord was minimal, however the depth of the upper layer varies probably depending on the surface-water inputs. Surface waters had significantly lower pCO2 values compared to the atmosphere and deeper water. Concentrations of suspended material and chlorophyll a were higher deeper in the water column, suggesting concentration process of material across the halocline. Overall, concentrations of particulate matter and mesozooplankton (during the study period), were low compared to many mid-latitude regions, and near absent in the vicinity of the 2 rivers entering the fjord. The low surface water pCO2 values suggest negative air-water CO2fluxes predominates within Comau Fjord during Austral spring. This preliminary study suggests that the geochemical properties of watershed and the low [DIC] of surface-water inputs, i.e., the physical pump, seems to play an important role in this region.This work was supported by the project 2013CL0013 funded by the CSIC, Fundacion Endesa and Fundación San Ignacio del Huinay. Funding was also provided by the Spanish Ministry of Sciences and Innovation (JAE DOCTORES 2010 contract for E.P.M., JAE PREDOCTORAL scholarship for S.T. and S.F.) and part-funded bythe European Union (European Social Fund, ESF2007-2013) and the Spanish Ministry for Economy and Competitiveness.Peer Reviewe

    Quantum Monte Carlo Calculations of Pion Scattering from Li

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    We show that the neutron and proton transition densities predicted by recent quantum Monte Carlo calculations for A=6,7 nuclei are consistent with pion scattering from 6Li and 7Li at energies near the Delta resonance. This has provided a microscopic understanding of the enhancement factors for quadrople excitations, which were needed to describe pion inelastic scattering within the nuclear shell model of Cohen and Kurath.Comment: 10 pages, REVTeX, 3 postscript figures; added calculation of elastic and inelastic pion scattering from 6Li at multiple energie

    Rotating traversable wormholes

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    The general form of a stationary, axially symmetric traversable wormhole is discussed. This provides an explicit class of rotating wormholes that generalize the static, spherically symmetric ones first considered by Morris and Thorne. In agreement with general analyses, it is verified that such a wormhole generically violates the null energy condition at the throat. However, for suitable model wormholes, there can be classes of geodesics falling through it which do not encounter any energy-condition-violating matter. The possible presence of an ergoregion surrounding the throat is also noted.Comment: 15 pages, harvmac; 1 figure in PicTeX; minor changes; to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Recent Decisions

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    IMPLIED WARRANTY OF WORKMANLIKE PERFORMANCE--ONE WHO CONTRACTS TO PROVIDE MARITIME SERVICES IMPLIEDLY AGREES TO PERFORM IN A DILIGENT AND WORKMANLIKE MANNE

    Jumping the Gun: Mapping Neural Correlates of Waiting Impulsivity and Relevance Across Alcohol Misuse.

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    BACKGROUND: Why do we jump the gun or speak out of turn? Waiting impulsivity has a preclinical basis as a predictor for the development of addiction. Here, we mapped the intrinsic neural correlates of waiting and dissociated it from stopping, both fundamental mechanisms of behavioral control. METHODS: We used a recently developed translational task to assess premature responding and assess response inhibition using the stop signal task. We mapped the neural correlates in 55 healthy volunteers using a novel multi-echo resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging sequence and analysis, which robustly boosts signal-to-noise ratio. We further assessed 32 young binge drinkers and 36 abstinent subjects with alcohol use disorders. RESULTS: Connectivity of limbic and motor cortical and striatal nodes mapped onto a mesial-lateral axis of the subthalamic nucleus. Waiting impulsivity was associated with lower connectivity of the subthalamic nucleus with ventral striatum and subgenual cingulate, regions similarly implicated in rodent lesion studies. This network was dissociable from fast reactive stopping involving hyperdirect connections of the pre-supplementary area and subthalamic nucleus. We further showed that binge drinkers, like those with alcohol use disorders, had elevated premature responding and emphasized the relevance of this subthalamic network across alcohol misuse. Using machine learning techniques we showed that subthalamic connectivity differentiates binge drinkers and individuals with alcohol use disorders from healthy volunteers. CONCLUSIONS: We highlight the translational and clinical relevance of dissociable functional systems of cortical, striatal, and hyperdirect connections with the subthalamic nucleus in modulating waiting and stopping and their importance across dimensions of alcohol misuse.The study was funded by the Wellcome Trust Fellowship grant for VV (093705/Z/10/Z) and Cambridge NIHR Biomedical Research Centre. VV and NAH are Wellcome Trust (WT) intermediate Clinical Fellows. The BCNI is supported by a WT and MRC grant. ETB is employed part-time by the University of Cambridge and part-time by GSK PLC and is a shareholder of GSK. TWR is a consultant for Cambridge Cognition, Eli Lilly, GSK, Merck, Sharpe and Dohme, Lundbeck, Teva and Shire Pharmaceuticals. He is or has been in receipt of research grants from Lundbeck, Eli Lilly and GSK and is an editor for Springer-Verlag (Psychopharmacology). The remaining authors declare no competing financial interests.This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Elsevier via http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2015.06.00
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