283 research outputs found

    Integration of Spirituality and Cognitive-behavioral Therapy for the Treatment of Depression

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    Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a common mental health problem that is treated by many mental health practitioners. Cognitive-behavioral therapies have proven to be effective in helping restructure the cognitions of the client, which in turn reduces depressive symptom. Research has shown that individuals with MDD who value spirituality tend to view the world in a different way than those individuals that do not hold spirituality as an important value in their life. Spiritual individuals have religious schemas, and therefore, it would be important to incorporate spirituality into the treatment setting. This pilot study utilized a manualized treatment approach that focuses on spiritual growth and decreasing depression through a spiritually informed cognitive-behavioral approach (SICBT)

    THE VALUE OF USDA OUTLOOK INFORMATION: AN INVESTIGATION USING EVENT STUDY ANALYSIS

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    The economic value of public situation and outlook information has long been a subject of debate. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the economic value of USDA WASDE reports in corn and soybean markets. The investigation is based on event study analysis, with the "events" consisting of the release of all monthly USDA WASDE reports for corn and soybeans from 1985 through 1998. The WASDE reports during the sample period are divided into two groups: one that represents "pure" outlook information and one that represents a "mix" of situation and outlook information. The statistical tests can be placed into two categories: mean price reaction and volatility reaction. Overall, the results suggest that USDA outlook information has a significant impact in corn and soybean markets. The most notable impact is found in options markets, where implied volatility consistently declines after the release of WASDE reports. For the group of monthly reports containing only outlook information, implied volatility for both corn and soybeans was lower on the report day than on the previous day about 60 percent of the time. The difference in mean implied volatility on the day of the report and on the previous day for both corn and soybeans was significantly different from zero. The average magnitude of the drop was between about two- and three-tenths of a percentage point (of annualized implied volatility), which would appear to be an economically non-trivial decrease. Hence, it can be concluded that USDA outlook information reduces the uncertainty of market participants' expected distribution of future prices. This reduction in market uncertainty is unambiguously welfare-enhancing.Crop Production/Industries, Marketing,

    THE ROLE OF MARKET ADVISORY SERVICES IN CROP MARKETING AND RISK MANAGEMENT: A PRELIMINARY REPORT OF SURVEY RESULTS

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    The purpose of this report is to provide a preliminary summary of the results of a survey designed to help answer the questions about subscriber use of market advisory services. Importantly, this research is a cooperative partnership between the University of Illinois and the Data Transmission Network. The survey participants are commercial producers of major grain, oilseed and fiber crops, representing important agricultural areas of the US. The survey has three broad objectives, including 1) how US producers perceive the riskiness of various aspects of farming; 2) how US producers manage farm business risk, and 3) how US producers select and use market advisory services.Marketing, Risk and Uncertainty,

    Framing Terror

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    Invited Keynote address at 'Mediated Visibility of Conflicts' PhD course/symposium, University of Copenhagen

    Day Zero: Photographs at the Epicentre of History

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    If the World Trade Centre attacks occupied not only Ground Zero, but Day Zero, on which America’s new relationship to the world began and after which ‘nothing would be the same’, this day becomes fixed as an historical moment around which there can be no ambiguity. With this belief comes such a strong determination to respond and push forward into the future that everything before that September day ceases to exist and looking back is seemingly not required. At the same time, however, the event is firmly fixed within nostalgic frames that, rhetorically and visually, make sense of the new reality. This chapter looks at the commemorative work of photographer Joel Meyerowitz at Ground Zero along with the wider photographic representation of this event, considering photography as a site of tension between the denial of history and its fetishisation

    The Burden of the Screen: Virtual presence and death during Covid-19

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    In the isolation of pandemic lockdowns, photography was a lifeline of connection, but for many families, it carried a greater burden. Separated at their darkest moments, relying on screens for connection as never before, loss became mediated suddenly by photography in a completely new way. There was no choice but to say goodbye to dying loved ones, isolated in care homes and hospital wards, through Zoom and Facetime, technologies created by digital media corporations and developed for the purposes of business conferencing and ‘chat’. What does it mean to say goodbye in this way? To share final words, final gazes and the last moments of a life – and then to undertake the work of mourning – through a screen? This chapter considers the ways in which the pandemic has taken established thought regarding not only death and photography, but also cyberspace and the digital image, and turned it on it head
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