963 research outputs found

    Sport Participation Influences Perceptions of Mate Characteristics

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    Sport provides a context in which mate choice can be facilitated by the display of athletic prowess. Previous work has shown that, for females, team sport athletes are more desirable as mates than individual sport athletes and non-participants. In the present study, the perceptions of males and females were examined regarding potential mates base on sport participation. It was predicted that team sport athletes would be more positively perceived than individual sport athletes and non-participants by both males and females. A questionnaire, a photograph, and manipulated descriptions were used to gauge perceptual differences with respect to team sport athletes, individual sport athletes, and extracurricular club participants for 125 females and 119 males from a Canadian university. Both team and individual sport athletes were perceived as being less lazy, more competitive, and healthier than non-participants by both males and females. Interestingly, females perceived male athletes as more promiscuous than non-athletes, which upholds predictions based on previous research indicating (a) athletes have more sexual partners than non-athletes, and (b) females find athletes more desirable as partners than nonparticipants. Surprisingly, only males perceived female team sport athletes as more dependable than non-participants, and both team and individual sport athletes as more ambitious. This raises questions regarding the initial hypothesis that male team athletes would be perceived positively by females because of qualities such as the ability to cooperate, likeability, and the acceptance of responsibilities necessary for group functioning. Future studies should examine similar questions with a larger sample size that encompasses multiple contexts, taking into account the role of the social profile of sport in relation to mate choice and perception

    Evaluation Factors for Multi-Stakeholder Broadband Visual Communication Projects

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    This paper presents a summary of multifaceted evaluation factors that we have identified through our research with Broadband Visual Communication (BVC) projects involving multiple stakeholders. The main benefit of these evaluation factors is that they provide a general evaluation framework for multiple stakeholder projects. The factors are social infrastructure, technical infrastructure, physical space, interaction style and content

    Development of A Commercial Expendable Launch Vehicle Industry

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    A ground rule in the development of the Shuttle was that expendable launch vehicles (ELV) would be phased out and eventually terminated and that the Shuttle would be the single transportation system for the nation. Subsequently, President Reagan announced a National Space Policy on July 4, 1982, which called for continuation of U.S. ELV activities until the Shuttle was fully operational. Several private firms expressed interest in providing ELV services on a commercial basis. This interest resulted in the 1983 Commercialization of Expendable Launch Vehicles Policy which laid the foundation for a U.S. commercial ELV industry. This policy declared that the U.S. Government fully endorsed and would facilitate commercial operations of ELV\u27s by the U.S. private sector in order to ensure a flexible and robust U.S. launch posture to maintain space transportation leadership. However, it also stated that the Shuttle would also be available to all authorized users. A National Space Strategy was issued in 1984, implementing the National Policy on Commercial Use of Space. This policy identified the encouragement of commercial ELV\u27s as one of the nation\u27s high priority national space goals. As a means of coordinating the development of commercial ELV operations, the 1984 Commercial Space Launch Act (Public Law 98-575) designated the Department of Transportation as the lead agency within the Federal Government for encouraging and facilitating commercial ELV activities by the U.S. private sector, as well as regulating those activities. This Act provides that the U.S. Government- will not subsidize the x commercial! zation of ELV\u27s, but will price the use of its facilities, equipment, and services consistent with the goal of encouraging viable commercial ELV activities

    Improved PET/CT Respiratory Motion Compensation by Incorporating Changes in Lung Density

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    Positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) lung imaging is highly sensitive to motion. Although several techniques exist to diminish motion artifacts, a few accounts for both tissue displacement and changes in density due to the compression and dilation of the lungs, which cause quantification errors. This article presents an experimental framework for joint activity image reconstruction and motion estimation in PET/CT, where the PET image and the motion are directly estimated from the raw data. Direct motion estimation methods for motion-compensated PET/CT are preferable as they require a single attenuation map only and result in optimal signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). Previous implementations, however, failed to address changes in density during respiration. We propose to account for such changes using the Jacobian determinant of the deformation fields. In a feasibility study, we demonstrate on a modified extended cardiac-torso (XCAT) phantom with breathing motion-where the lung density and activity vary-that our approach achieved better quantification in the lungs than conventional PET/CT joint activity image reconstruction and motion estimation that does not account for density changes. The proposed method resulted in lower bias and variance in the activity images, reduced mean relative activity error in the lung at the reference gate (-4.84% to -3.22%) and more realistic Jacobian determinant values

    The stairway of doom : respect, crime, and justice in the night-time economy

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    1 online resource (35 p.)Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (p. 32-35).Bouncers are private security personnel enlisted by nightclub owners who are tasked with the protection of physical property, maintaining order, and ensuring that provincial alcohol regulations are met. Often regarded as over-aggressive bullies, bouncers work in an occupation where drunken violence and criminality are unavoidable. Using the concept of the night-time economy to describe the after-dark downtown leisure industry, this paper qualitatively explores the stories of bouncers in this alcohol-fueled environment. Based on in-depth interviews and a focus group with 10 current or former bouncers, this paper presents the thoughts, feelings and experiences of those tasked with maintaining order in the night-time economy. The interviews and follow up focus group revealed interesting realties of bouncer culture: the important network of respect, a prevalence of crime and extreme violence, and the night-time economy’s own vigilante justice system

    Which children and young people are excluded from school? Findings from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) - poster abstract

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    Poster abstract presented at Spring Meeting for Clinician Scientists in Training 2015BACKGROUND: School exclusion is a disciplinary method used to remove a child from the school environment. It is known to affect certain groups disproportionately, including boys, some ethnic minorities, children in care, children in poverty, and children with special educational needs. Population-based studies on wider characteristics of excluded pupils are scarce. The aim of this study was to describe factors associated with school exclusion in the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC), focussing on neurodevelopment and mental health. METHODS: ALSPAC is a prospective population-based British birth cohort study, with the initial sample consisting of 14 541 pregnancies. The study has data for whether a child has been permanently excluded from school up to the age of 8 years as reported by parents and also permanent and fixed period exclusions in the preceding 12 months as reported by parents and young people at age 16 years. Upstream risk factors were assessed for associations with exclusion on univariable analysis. The association with social communication difficulties was investigated with multivariable logistic regression. FINDINGS: Data for exclusions up to the age of 8 years were available for 8245 ALSPAC participants and 4482 participants for exclusion at age 16 years. 53 pupils (0·6%) were excluded from school by age 8 years, and 390 (8·7%) at age 16 years. The odds of exclusion by 8 years and at 16 years were increased with male sex (p=0·001 and p<0·0001, respectively), low family income (p=0·014 and p<0·0001), family adversity (p<0·0001 for both), maternal psychopathology (p=0·013 and p=0·004), low intelligence quotient (p=0·041 and p<0·0001), mental health difficulties (p<0·0001 for both), psychiatric disorder (p<0·0001 for both), social communication difficulties (p<0·0001 for both), antisocial activities (p=0·004 and p<0·0001), bullying or being bullied (p=0·005 and p<0·0001), low educational attainment (p<0·0001 for both), and increased special educational needs (p<0·0001 for both). On multivariable analysis, having social communication difficulties above a clinical threshold on the Social Communication Disorders Checklist was strongly associated with exclusion by 8 years (odds ratio 7·4, 95% CI 3·6-15·4) and at 16 years (2·3, 1·5-3·5), after adjustment for relevant confounders. INTERPRETATION: Although cohort attrition and small numbers of exclusions at 8 years are limitations, this study suggests that school exclusion is associated with numerous risk factors identifiable at or before primary school entry. Child health professionals have an important role in the holistic assessment of children who are excluded, or who are at risk of school exclusion. There is particular need to ensure that mental health and neurodevelopmental difficulties are appropriately recognised and supported. FUNDING: National Institute for Health Research Academic Clinical Fellowship
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