370 research outputs found
Police Officers’ Perceptions of Body-Worn Cameras in the Buffalo and Rochester Police Departments
Police body-worn cameras have been advanced as a solution to disparate perceptions among the citizenry, public officials, community leaders, and the police themselves in the highly contested arena of police-citizen encounters. However, as with previous technological innovations in policing, it is important that the police themselves are comfortable with the technology. This is a report of a survey conducted on police officers’ perceptions of body-worn cameras in Buffalo and Rochester police departments, which uses a survey instrument administered with the Los Angeles Police Department. This study found similar attitudes toward body cameras not only among Buffalo and Rochester police officers, but also with Los Angeles. Recommendations include using the Bureau of Justice National Toolkit when considering a body-worn camera program, which addresses many of the concerns police officers expressed in this study
Resilience and Quality of Life in Mood Disorders and Diabetes: Correlations with Personality Traits, Coping and Self-esteem
Introduction
The topic of resilience is obtaining a growing interest in psychiatric research. Resilience refers to positive
adaptation or ability to maintain or regain mental health despite experiencing adversity. It is a dynamic,
context- and time-specific process, and may vary across all life domains. Pathways to resilience are
multiple and reciprocally interacting, and include biological, psychological, social and dispositional attributes.
These factors play an important role both in psychiatric and somatic chronic disorders.
Aims
Our aim is to evaluate and compare resilience in mood disorder patients and diabetic ones. We also mean
to investigate personality features, coping abilities, self-esteem and quality of life, and their possible
correlation with resilience in these two populations.
Methods
Mood disorder and diabetic patients will be recruited at the Psychiatry Institute (SC Psichiatria) and
Endocrinology Ward (SC Endocrinologia), respectively. Socio-demographic data will be gathered and
patients will be asked to fill the following self-administered scales: Resilience Scale for Adult (RSA), Coping
Orientation to Problems Experienced Inventory \u2013 Brief (Brief Cope), Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale (RSES),
Paykel List Of Stressful Events, Temperamental and Character Inventory (TCI), Short Form 36 (SF-36).
Results/Conclusions
Data collection is ongoing. We expect that the findings from this research may allow to develop strategies to
support patients with chronic diseases, both as far as outcome and subjective well-being are concerned,
according to the World Health Organization definition of 'mental\u201d and 'physical\u201d health
Orthorexia and anorexia nervosa: Two distinct phenomena? A cross-cultural comparison of orthorexic behaviours in clinical and non-clinical samples
BACKGROUND: Orthorexia nervosa (ON) is defined as pathological healthful eating. The aim of this study was to investigate whether there is any difference in orthorexic behaviours between clinical and non-clinical groups, and in different cultural contexts. . METHODS: Recruitment involved both female patients with anorexia nervosa (AN) and healthy controls (HC) from Italy and Poland (N = 23 and N = 35 AN patients; and N = 39 and N = 39 HCs, in Italy and Poland, respectively). Assessment of orthorexic behaviours was performed with the ORTO-15 test. RESULTS: Statistically significant differences were found between Italian women in the AN and HC group, whereas no difference between Polish women in the AN and HC group was found. Both Italian groups scored significantly higher than the Polish ones on the ORTO-15. CONCLUSIONS: Differences have been found between the Italian and Polish samples, both in the percentage of individuals with orthorexic behaviours as suggested by an ORTO 15 score below the cutoff, and in the mean ORTO 15 scores in the AN and HC groups, suggesting cross-cultural differences in orthorexic behaviours, whose meaning is currently difficult to understand
The moderating effects of mindful eating on the relationship between emotional functioning and eating styles in overweight and obese women
The aim of the current study was to examine the moderating effect of mindful eating on the relationship between emotional functioning and eating styles in overweight and obese women.
One hundred and eighty four overweight and obese adult women (BMI 30.12\u2009\ub1\u20093.77 kg/m2) were assessed with the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale, the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule, the Three Factor Eating Questionnaire and the Mindful Eating Scale.
Mindful eating significantly moderated several of the relationships between emotional functioning and eating styles.
When mindful eating techniques are included as part of an intervention for overweight or obese individuals, it is even more important that those interventions should also include techniques to reduce emotion dysregulation and negative affect
Cinema in the training of psychiatry residents: focus on helping relationships
Background: Medical schools are currently charged with a lack of education as far as empathic/relational skills and the meaning of being a health-care provider are concerned, thus leading to increased interest in medical humanities. Discussion. Medical humanities can offer an insight into human illness and in a broader outlook into human condition, understanding of one self, responsibility. An empathic relation to patients might be fostered by a matching approach to humanities and sciences, which should be considered as subjects of equal relevance, complementary to one another. Recently, movies have been used in medical - especially psychiatric - trainees education, but mainly within the limits of teaching a variety of disorders. A different approach dealing with the use of cinema in the training of psychiatry residents is proposed, based on Jung and Hillman's considerations about the relation between images and archetypes, archetypal experience and learning. Summary. Selected full-length movies or clips can offer a priceless opportunity to face with the meaning of being involved in a care-providing, helping profession
Surfactants, nanomedicines and nanocarriers: a critical evaluation on clinical trials
Advances, perspectives and innovation in drug delivery have increased in recent years; however, there is limited information available regarding the actual presence of surfactants, nanomed-icines and nanocarriers in investigational medicinal products submitted as part of a request for authorization of clinical trials, particularly for those authorized in the European Economic Area. We retrieve, analyze and report data available at the Clinical Trial Office of the Italian Medicines Agency (AIFA), increasing the transparency and availability of relevant information. An analysis of quality documentation submitted along with clinical trials authorized by the AIFA in 2018 was carried out, focusing on the key terms “surfactant”, “nanomedicine” and “nanocarrier”. Results suggest potential indications and inputs for further reflection and actions for regulators to actively and safely drive innovation from a regulatory perspective and to transpose upcoming evolution of clinical trials within a strong regulatory framework
The psychopathology of body image in orthorexia nervosa
The human body has a complex meaning and role in everybody\u2019s life and experience. Body
image has two main components: body percept (the internal visual image of body shape and
size) and body concept (the level of satisfaction with one\u2019s body), whose specific alterations
may lead to different conditions, such as overestimation of one\u2019s own body dimensions,
negative feelings and thoughts towards the body, body avoidance and body checking behavior. Moreover, body dissatisfaction can be associated with a variety of other mental health
and psychosocial conditions, but only a few studies have explored the body image construct
in orthorexia nervosa (ON). ON is a condition characterized by concern and fixation about
healthy eating, with mixed results available in the literature about the presence of body image
disorders. The aim of this manuscript is to present the main findings from the literature about
the psychopathology of body image in ON. Summarizing, while theoretically the presence of
body image disturbances should help clinicians to differentiate ON from eating disorders,
further research is needed to confirm this finding. It is not clear whether the body image
disorder in ON depends on an altered body percept or body concept, and the relationship between the disordered eating behavior and body image disorder still needs to be disentangled.
Further studies regarding the relationship between ON and body image could be helpful to
better understand the relevance of body image as a transdiagnostic factor and its potential
value as target for treatment intervention
Anti-tumour therapeutic efficacy of OX40L in murine tumour model
OX40 ligand (OX40L), a member of TNF superfamily, is a co-stimulatory molecule involved in T cell activation. Systemic administration of mOX40L fusion protein significantly inhibited the growth of experimental lung metastasis and subcutaneous (s.c.) established colon (CT26) and breast (4T1) carcinomas. Vaccination with OX40L was significantly enhanced by combination treatment with intra-tumour injection of a disabled infectious single cycle-herpes simplex virus (DISC-HSV) vector encoding murine granulocyte macrophage-colony stimulating factor (mGM-CSF). Tumour rejection in response to OX40L therapy required functional CD4+ and CD8+ T cells and correlated with splenocyte cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) activity against the AH-1 gp70 peptide of the tumour associated antigen expressed by CT26 cells. These results demonstrate the potential role of the OX40L in cancer immunotherapy
Automotive Communications in LTE: A Simulation-Based Performance Study
2017 IEEE 86th Vehicular Technology Conference (VTC-Fall)The integration of automotive communications in 5G systems must build on a clear understanding of the performance of services for connected vehicles in today's LTE deployments. In this paper, we carry out a simulation-based performance evaluation of automotive communications in LTE, with particular attention to realism: to that end, we investigate the impact of different road traffic models, employ a state-of-the-art commercial LTE tool, and study a practical service use case. Our results demonstrate that unrealistic road traffic datasets can bias network simulations in urban vehicular environments, and provide insights on the limitations of the current radio access architecture, when confronted to connected vehicles.This research has received funding from the People Pro-gramme (Marie Curie Actions) of the European Unions Sev-enth Framework Programme (FP7/2007- 2013) under REA grant agreement n.630211, ReFleX. Also, this work has been performed in the framework of the H2020-ICT-2014-2 project 5G NORMA
Demo: vrAIn proof-of-concept: a deep learning approach for virtualized RAN resource control
Proceeding of: 25th Annual International Conference on Mobile Computing and Networking (MobiCom'19), October 21-25, 2019, Los Cabos, Mexico.While the application of the NFV paradigm into the network is proceeding full steam ahead, there is still one last milestone to be achieved in this context: the virtualization of the radio access network (vRAN). Due to the very complex dependency between the radio conditions and the computing resources needed to provide the baseband processing functionality, attaining an efficient resource control is particularly challenging. In this demonstration, we will showcase vrAIn, a vRAN dynamic resource controller that employs deep reinforcement learning to perform resource assignment decisions. vrAIn, which is implemented using an open-source LTE stack over a Linux platform, can achieve substantial savings in the used CPU resources while maintaining the target QoS for the attached terminals and maximizing throughput when there is a deficit of computational capacity.The work of University Carlos III of Madrid was supported by H2020 5G-MoNArch project (grant agreement no. 761445) and H2020 5G-TOURS project (grant agreement no. 856950). The work of NEC Laboratories Europe was supported by H2020 5G-TRANSFORMER project (grant agreement no. 761536) and 5GROWTH project (grant agreement no. 856709). The work of University of Cartagena was supported by Grant
AEI/FEDER TEC2016-76465-C2-1-R (AIM) and Grant FPU14/03701
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