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Violent video games: the media scapegoat for an aggressive society
There are plenty of researchers willing to ride the media bandwagon and suggest a relationship between violent video games and aggression (e.g. Bartholow, et al., 2006; Bartlett, et al., 2007; Giumetti & Markey, 2007; Bushman & Anderson 2009). However, there are methodological problems associated with many of the studies, these range from video game selection and complexity of game play, to inappropriate participant selection and measures of aggression (Ferguson, 2007). Goodson & Pearson (2009) used reliable measures of physiology (EEG, ECG, and respiration) and cognitive appraisals of aggression (Buss & Perry Aggression Questionnaire) in an immersive environment. In two studies, the physiology and cognitions of 70 participants were measured playing either a violent or non-violent video game. The participants were recruited carefully based on their experience of playing video games. Controversially, it was shown that driving games induced higher levels of aggression than violent first-person-shooters. Even when the players were conducting acts of a horrific nature in a game (i.e. chainsawing a body in half), aggression levels and brain activity were still lower that those induced by a driving game. Pearson & Goodson (2010) proposed the âreal life stressorâ hypothesis where situations that can induce an emotional response in real life, can also result in a similar response when they are created within the gaming environment. The latest fashion of âGrand Theft Autoâ type games, which incorporate large environments and morality decisions, are an ideal platform to test the validity of this theory.
This paper aims to examine the effects of playing videogames on cognition and physiology in light of the current research. It will demonstrate why, rather than appeasing the media hype machine, it is now time to change the direction of video game research and investigate the emotional responses induced by games that imitate potentially real life situations
Furthering alternative cultures of valuation in higher education research
The value of higher education is often implicit or assumed in educational research. The underlying and antecedent premises that shape and influence debates about value remain unchallenged which perpetuates the dominant, but limiting, terms of the debate and fosters reductionism. I proceed on the premise that analyses of value are not selfâsupporting or self-referential but are embedded within prevailing cultures of valuation. I contend that challenging, and providing alternatives to, dominant narratives of higher education requires an appreciation of those cultures. I therefore highlight some of the existing cultures of valuation and their influence. I then propose Sayerâs concept of lay normativity as a culture of valuation and discuss how it translates into the practices of research into higher education, specifically the practice of analysis. I animate the discussion by detecting the presence of lay normativity in the evaluative space of the capability approach
Increased Risk of Hypertension Associated with Spondyloarthritis Disease Duration: Results from the ASAS-COMOSPA Study
Objective: Spondyloarthritis (SpA) is associated with a number of cardiovascular (CV) comorbidities. We examined the association of SpA disease duration and delay in diagnosis with CV-related conditions.
Methods: Using data from the COMOSPA study, the associations between SpA disease duration and CV-related conditions were evaluated in univariable and multivariable logistic regression models. Each model examined 1 CV-related factor as dependent and âSpA disease durationâ as a predictor, adjusted for relevant confounders.
Results: Data from 3923 subjects (median SpA disease duration 5.1 yrs, interquartile range 1.3â11.8 yrs) were available for analysis. The main CV-related conditions were hypertension (HTN; 22.4%), ischemic heart disease (2.6%), stroke (1.3%), and diabetes mellitus (5.5%). HTN was associated with SpA disease duration in both univariable and multivariable analysis, with an OR of 1.129 (95% CI 1.072â1.189; p < 0.001) for each 5-year increase in SpA disease duration. Other factors associated with HTN were age, male sex, current body mass index, ever steroid therapy, and ever synthetic disease-modifying antirheumatic drug therapy, but not nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAID). In subgroup analysis, the strongest association of HTN and disease duration was seen in subjects with the axial-only SpA phenotype (OR 1.202, 95% CI 1.053â1.372) but not in those with peripheral-only SpA (OR 0.902, 95% CI 0.760â1.070). The other CV conditions were not associated with SpA disease duration.
Conclusion: Duration of SpA disease in the ASAS-COMOSPA cohort is associated with higher odds of HTN, particularly in those with axial disease, but not with other CV-related conditions. The association with HTN does not appear to be related to NSAID exposure
Neural correlates and determinants of approach-avoidance conflict in the prelimbic prefrontal cortex
The recollection of environmental cues associated with threat or reward allows animals to select the most appropriate behavioral responses. Neurons in the prelimbic cortex (PL) respond to both threat-and reward-associated cues. However, it remains unknown whether PL regulates threat-avoidance vs. reward-approaching responses when an animalsâ decision depends on previously associated memories. Using a conflict model in which male Long-Evans rats retrieve memories of shock and food-paired cues, we observed two distinct phenotypes during conflict: I) rats that continued to press a lever for food (Pressers); and ii) rats that exhibited a complete suppression in food seeking (Non-pressers). Single-unit recordings revealed that increased risk-taking behavior in Pressers is associated with persistent food-cue responses in PL, and reduced spontaneous activity in PL glutamatergic (PLGLUT) neurons during conflict. Activating PLGLUT neurons in Pressers attenuated foodseeking responses in a neutral context, whereas inhibiting PLGLUT neurons in Non pressers reduced defensive responses and increased food approaching during conflict. Our results establish a causal role for PLGLUT neurons in mediating individual variability in memory-based risky decision making by regulating threat-avoidance vs. reward-approach behaviors.Fil: Fernandez Leon, Jose Alberto. Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. Centro de Investigaciones en FĂsica e IngenierĂa del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. - Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Centro CientĂfico TecnolĂłgico Conicet - Tandil. Centro de Investigaciones en FĂsica e IngenierĂa del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. - Provincia de Buenos Aires. GobernaciĂłn. ComisiĂłn de Investigaciones CientĂficas. Centro de Investigaciones en FĂsica e IngenierĂa del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires; Argentina. University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston; Estados UnidosFil: Engelke, Douglas S.. University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston; Estados UnidosFil: Aquino Miranda, Guillermo. University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston; Estados UnidosFil: Goodson, Alexandria. University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston; Estados Unidos. Rice University; Estados UnidosFil: Rasheed, MarĂa N.. University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston; Estados UnidosFil: Do Monte, Fabricio H.. University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston; Estados Unidos. Rice University; Estados Unido
Distinctive Responsiveness to Stromal Signaling Accompanies Histologic Grade Programming of Cancer Cells
Whether stromal components facilitate growth, invasion, and dissemination of cancer cells or suppress neoplastic lesions from further malignant progression is a continuing conundrum in tumor biology. Conceptualizing a dynamic picture of tumorigenesis is complicated by inter-individual heterogeneity. In the post genomic era, unraveling such complexity remains a challenge for the cancer biologist. Towards establishing a functional association between cellular crosstalk and differential cancer aggressiveness, we identified a signature of malignant breast epithelial response to stromal signaling. Proximity to fibroblasts resulted in gene transcript alterations of >2-fold for 107 probes, collectively designated as Fibroblast Triggered Gene Expression in Tumor (FTExT). The hazard ratio predicted by the FTExT classifier for distant relapse in patients with intermediate and high grade breast tumors was significant compared to routine clinical variables (dataset 1, nâ=â258, HR â 2.11, 95% CI 1.17â3.80, p-value 0.01; dataset 2, nâ=â171, HR - 3.07, 95% CI 1.21â7.83, p-value 0.01). Biofunctions represented by FTExT included inflammatory signaling, free radical scavenging, cell death, and cell proliferation. Unlike genes of the âproliferation clusterâ, which are overexpressed in aggressive primary tumors, FTExT genes were uniquely repressed in such cases. As proof of concept for our correlative findings, which link stromal-epithelial crosstalk and tumor behavior, we show a distinctive differential in stromal impact on prognosis-defining functional endpoints of cell cycle progression, and resistance to therapy-induced growth arrest and apoptosis in low vs. high grade cancer cells. Our experimental data thus reveal aspects of âparacrine cooperativityâ that are exclusively contingent upon the histopathologically defined grade of interacting tumor epithelium, and demonstrate that epithelial responsiveness to the tumor microenvironment is a deterministic factor underlying clinical outcome. In this light, early attenuation of epithelial-stromal crosstalk could improve the management of cases prone to be clinically challenging
Magnetohydrodynamic jets from different magnetic field configurations
Using axisymmetric MHD simulations we investigate how the overall jet
formation is affected by a variation in the disk magnetic flux profile and/or
the existence of a central stellar magnetosphere. Our simulations evolve from
an initial, hydrostatic equilibrium state in a force-free magnetic field
configuration. We find a unique relation between the collimation degree and the
disk wind magnetization power law exponent. The collimation degree decreases
for steeper disk magnetic field profiles. Highly collimated outflows resulting
from a flat profile tend to be unsteady. We further consider a magnetic field
superposed of a stellar dipole and a disk field in parallel or anti-parallel
alignment. Both stellar and disk wind may evolve in a pair of outflows,
however, a reasonably strong disk wind component is essential for jet
collimation. Strong flares may lead to a sudden change in mass flux by a factor
two. We hypothesize that such flares may eventually trigger jet knots.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; proceedings from conference: Protostellar Jets in
Context, held in Rhodes, July 7-12, 200
Logarithmic perturbation theory for radial Klein-Gordon equation with screened Coulomb potentials via expansions
The explicit semiclassical treatment of logarithmic perturbation theory for
the bound-state problem within the framework of the radial Klein-Gordon
equation with attractive real-analytic screened Coulomb potentials, contained
time-component of a Lorentz four-vector and a Lorentz-scalar term, is
developed. Based upon -expansions and suitable quantization conditions a
new procedure for deriving perturbation expansions is offered. Avoiding
disadvantages of the standard approach, new handy recursion formulae with the
same simple form both for ground and excited states have been obtained. As an
example, the perturbation expansions for the energy eigenvalues for the
Hulth\'en potential containing the vector part as well as the scalar component
are considered.Comment: 14 pages, to be submitted to Journal of Physics
"From âWhat the hell is going on?â to the âMushy middle groundâ to âgetting used to a new normalâ: Young peopleâs biographical narratives around navigating parental dementia"
The number of young people who have a parent with dementia is rising as a result of improvements in diagnosis of young onset variants and demographic shifts. There has, however, been very little research focusing on this group. Accounts elicited as part of the Perceptions and Experiences of Young People With a Parent With Dementia described the period, usually some years, leading up to a diagnosis of a dementia and then the progress of the condition post diagnosis. These narratives were characterised by confusion, uncertainty, trauma and distress as the young people struggled to make sense of the significant and often extreme, behavioural and attitudinal changes that were symptoms of the illness. This paper describes and discusses how the young people experienced and navigated the temporal messiness and consequent biographical disruption arising from parental dementia
Accretion dynamics in the classical T Tauri star V2129 Oph
We analyze the photometric and spectroscopic variability of the classical T
Tauri star V2129 Oph over several rotational cycles to test the dynamical
predictions of magnetospheric accretion models. The photometric variability and
the radial velocity variations in the photospheric lines can be explained by
rotational modulation due to cold spots, while the radial velocity variations
of the He I (5876 \AA) line and the veiling variability are due to hot spot
rotational modulation. The hot and cold spots are located at high latitudes and
about the same phase, but the hot spot is expected to sit at the chromospheric
level, while the cold spot is at the photospheric level. Using the
dipole+octupole magnetic-field configuration previously proposed in the
literature for the system, we compute 3D MHD magnetospheric simulations of the
star-disk system. We use the simulation's density, velocity and scaled
temperature structures as input to a radiative transfer code, from which we
calculate theoretical line profiles at all rotational phases. The theoretical
profiles tend to be narrower than the observed ones, but the qualitative
behavior and the observed rotational modulation of the H\alpha and H\beta
emission lines are well reproduced by the theoretical profiles. The
spectroscopic and photometric variability observed in V2129 Oph support the
general predictions of complex magnetospheric accretion models with
non-axisymmetric, multipolar fields.Comment: Accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysic
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