1,368 research outputs found

    Heller v. Osburnsen: Slapping Down the Frivolous Appellant

    Get PDF
    Heller v. Osburnsen: Slapping Down The Frivolous Appellan

    Heller v. Osburnsen: Slapping Down the Frivolous Appellant

    Get PDF
    Heller v. Osburnsen: Slapping Down The Frivolous Appellan

    Rights in Collision: The Individual Right of Privacy and the Public Right To Know

    Get PDF
    Rights In Collision: The Individual Right Of Privacy And The Public Right To Kno

    The epidemiology of head injuries in an urban/rural population, together with an evaluation of a more selective admission policy

    Get PDF
    The epidemiological characteristics of two groups of patients with head injuries attending the accident and emergency department at Chester Royal Infirmary are detailed. This hospital serves a mixed urban /rural population of approximately 260,000. The earlier study comprised all those who attended during the twelve months ending 30.6.77 and was retrospective. The later study included all attenders in the year ending 30.11.80 and was prospective. During each study period patient characteristics, including age last birthday, sex, time, day and month of attendance were recorded, in addition to cause of injury and predisposing factors or associations such as alcohol. Some elements of the history and examination were also noted. X -ray usage was documented as well as the proportion of patients with radiologically apparent skull fractures. Some treatment measures were quantified. For admitted patients, in addition to the above characteristics, reasons for admission and length of stay were examined. Macroscopic post -mortem findings were described for all patients who died, including those who died prior to arrival at hospital. Analysis of deaths included the calculation of Injury Severity Scores. Results were discussed in the light of an extensive review of the literature.A more selective admission policy was introduced during the prospective study. As a result of this change head injury admissions were reduced by half. Comparison of the results during the prospective study with those during the retrospective study, when a more orthodox admission policy was in use, revealed that the more selective policy was associated with no worse results than is current practice. Recognition and treatment of acute post- traumatic intracranial haematomas, whilst the patient was alive, was more likely during the prospective study. Likewise survival of patients with such lesions was more likely during the prospective study. These latter differences between the two study groups were, however, not statistically significant

    MirrorMirror:A Mobile Application to Improve Speechreading Acquisition

    Get PDF

    Photoperiodism in Hamsters: Abrupt Versus Gradual Changes in Day Length Differentially Entrain Morning and Evening Circadian Oscillators

    Full text link
    In studies of photoperiodism, animals typically are transferred abruptly from a long (e.g., 16 h light per day [16L]) to a short (8L) photoperiod, and circadian oscillators that regulate pineal melatonin secretion are presumed to reentrain rapidly to the new photocycle. Among rats and Siberian hamsters, however, reentrainment rates vary depending on whether additional darkness is added to morning or evening, and a subset of hamsters (nonresponders) fails ever to reentrain normally to short photoperiods. The authors assessed whether several short-day responses occurred at different rates when darkness was extended into morning versus evening hours and the effectiveness of abrupt versus gradual shortening in day lengths (DLs). Entrainment patterns of photoresponsive hamsters also were compared to those of photononresponsive hamsters. Responsive hamsters transferred on a single day from 16L to 8L underwent more rapid gonadal regression, weight loss, decreases in follicle-stimulating hormone titers, and expansion of nocturnal locomotor activity when darkness was added to morning versus evening. When the dark phase was extended gradually by 8 h over 16 weeks, short-day responses occurred at the same rate whether darkness was appended to morning or evening or was added symmetrically. Darkness added to evening promoted more rapid short-day responses when it was added gradually rather than abruptly, despite the fact that average DLs were significantly shorter for the latter group. Among nonresponders, morning extensions of darkness transiently increased activity duration, whereas evening extensions did not. Gradual and abrupt decreases in DL differentially affect entrainment of evening and morning circadian oscillators. The authors argue for the incorporation of simulated natural photoperiods in studies of photoperiodism.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66702/2/10.1177_074873049701200204.pd

    A functional analysis of two transdiagnostic, emotion-focused interventions on nonsuicidal self-injury

    Full text link
    OBJECTIVE: Nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) is prevalent and associated with clinically significant consequences. Developing time-efficient and cost-effective interventions for NSSI has proven difficult given that the critical components for NSSI treatment remain largely unknown. The aim of this study was to examine the specific effects of mindful emotion awareness training and cognitive reappraisal, 2 transdiagnostic treatment strategies that purportedly address the functional processes thought to maintain self-injurious behavior, on NSSI urges and acts. METHOD: Using a counterbalanced, combined series (multiple baseline and data-driven phase change) aggregated single-case experimental design, the unique and combined impact of these 2 4-week interventions was evaluated among 10 diagnostically heterogeneous self-injuring adults. Ecological momentary assessment was used to provide daily ratings of NSSI urges and acts during all study phases. RESULTS: Eight of 10 participants demonstrated clinically meaningful reductions in NSSI; 6 participants responded to 1 intervention alone, whereas 2 participants responded after the addition of the alternative intervention. Group analyses indicated statistically significant overall effects of study phase on NSSI, with fewer NSSI urges and acts occurring after the interventions were introduced. The interventions were also associated with moderate to large reductions in self-reported levels of anxiety and depression, and large improvements in mindful emotion awareness and cognitive reappraisal skills. CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest that brief mindful emotion awareness and cognitive reappraisal interventions can lead to reductions in NSSI urges and acts. Transdiagnostic, emotion-focused therapeutic strategies delivered in time-limited formats may serve as practical yet powerful treatment approaches, especially for lower-risk self-injuring individuals.Dr. Barlow receives royalties from Oxford University Press, Guilford Publications Inc., Cengage Learning, and Pearson Publishing. Grant monies for various projects come from the National Institute of Mental Health (F31MH100761), the National Institute of Alcohol and Alcohol Abuse, and Colciencias (Government of Columbia Initiative for Science, Technology, and Health Innovation). Consulting and honoraria during the past several years have come from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the Foundation for Informed Medical Decision Making, the Department of Defense, the Renfrew Center, the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Universidad Catolica de Santa Maria (Arequipa, Peru), New Zealand Psychological Association, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Mayo Clinic, and various American Universities. (F31MH100761 - National Institute of Mental Health; National Institute of Alcohol and Alcohol Abuse; Colciencias (Government of Columbia Initiative for Science, Technology, and Health Innovation))Accepted manuscrip

    The effects of augmented biofeedback on novel motor-task learning

    Get PDF
    Biofeedback has been shown to be an influential part of skill acquisition and performance, however, the use of biofeedback for novice, sports specific skill learning has not been assessed. Non-rowers (n=3) performed a 10-minute, novel-rowing task, where joint and rowing ergometer kinematics recorded. Following six non-instructed, subjective reinforcement sessions, participants completed a further six sessions whilst receiving real-time biofeedback. The results show that all subjects changed their rowing technique, moving towards the pattern prescribed by the biofeedback intervention. The elbow remained in greater extension until later in the pull, which induced changes in the temporal aspects of both knee and lumbar spine kinematics

    Final Report: Sensorpedia Phase 3

    Get PDF
    This report is a summary of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory s (ORNL s) Phase 3 development of Sensorpedia, a sensor information sharing platform. Sensorpedia is ORNL s Wikipedia for Sensors. The overall goal of Sensorpedia is to enable global scale sensor information sharing for scientific research, national security and defense, public health and safety, emergency preparedness and response, and general community awareness and outreach
    • …
    corecore