35,045 research outputs found
Mental Health Nurse Prescribing: Challenges in Theory and Practice
This article addresses the historical context of mental health nursing and its relationship to nurse prescribing.; examines some of the theoretical and philosophical forces that have molded modern mental health nursing, discussing the tensions between the medical model and the psychosocial models favoured by many mental health nurse academics and practitioners over the last forty years; and finally discusses the issues and challenges around commencing prescribing in practice, especially when nurse prescribing is not integral to the practitioner’s role.
The article intends to examine the theoretical basis for mental health nurse prescribing, to discuss some of the theoretical tensions which are implicit; and describes briefly the author’s own experience as a recently qualified nurse prescriber
Lagrangian spheres in Del Pezzo surfaces
Lagrangian spheres in the symplectic Del Pezzo surfaces arising as blow-ups
of the complex projective plane in 4 or fewer points are classified up to
Lagrangian isotopy. Unlike the case of the 5-point blow-up, there is no
Lagrangian knotting.Comment: 48 pages, 2 figures; referee's corrections and suggestions
incorporated
Diurnal and Seasonal Activity of Female Mutillids on a Michigan Sand Flat (Hymenoptera: Mutillidae)
Diurnal activity of mutillid females of a southwestern Michigan sand area was characterized in relation to sand surface temperature conditions. Seasonal abundance patterns weredetermined for four Dasymutilla species
The infimum of the Nijenhuis energy
We prove that on any symplectic manifold whose symplectic form represents a
rational cohomology class there exists a sequence of compatible almost complex
structures whose Nijenhuis energy (the -norm of the Nijenhuis tensor)
tends to zero. The sequence is obtained by stretching the neck around a
Donaldson hypersurface.Comment: 6 pages; updated with minor corrections to agree with published
versio
The knowing ear : an Australian test of universal claims about the semantic structure of sensory verbs and their extension into the domain of cognition
In this paper we test previous claims concerning the universality of patterns of polysemy and semantic change in perception verbs. Implicit in such claims are two elements: firstly, that the sharing of two related senses A and B by a given form is cross-linguistically widespread, and matched by a complementary lack of some rival polysemy, and secondly that the explanation for the ubiquity of a given pattern of polysemy is ultimately rooted in our shared human cognitive make-up. However, in comparison to the vigorous testing of claimed universals that has occurred in phonology, syntax and even basic lexical meaning, there has been little attempt to test proposed universals of semantic extension against a detailed areal study of non-European languages. To address this problem we examine a broad range of Australian languages to evaluate two hypothesized universals: one by Viberg (1984), concerning patterns of semantic extension across sensory modalities within the domain of perception verbs (i .e. intra-field extensions), and the other by Sweetser (1990), concerning the mapping of perception to cognition (i.e. trans-field extensions). Testing against the Australian data allows one claimed universal to survive, but demolishes the other, even though both assign primacy to vision among the senses
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