1,176 research outputs found
Craft idiocy, Erikson and Footballing Identities.
In our opinion the current talent development strategies and schemes of the England Football Association and clubs resulted in the development of unhealthy personalities and an un-mature sense of self-identity through the high exposure to a single area of competence. In particular, academy players are in danger of developing self-identities that are characterized as foreclosed. In some way this mirrors the concept called ‘craft idiocy’ (Marx, 1955). Craft idiocy refers to the notion that through their specialisation experts know aspects of their immediate tasks but lack understanding of other methods and abilities and are thus at a disadvantage within societal interrelations. Although there are some positive aspects of a strong athletic identity, there appears to be a growing body of literature that highlights the negative consequences of such a self-concept (e.g., lower psychosocial maturation, lower interpersonal maturity, and lower career planning development). The danger is thus that footballers invest heavily in an athletic identity only to find themselves ‘craft idiots’ once the game is over. We suggest that Erikson’s theory of psychosocial development provides a useful framework for the exploration of a ‘healthy’ development
Studies in Cyperaceae in southern Africa 35: a field study of Bolboschoenus maritimus s.l. in a western Cape wetland
An account is given of reproductive features, especially the inflorescence, spikelets and achenes, including pericarp anatomy and embryos, of a population of Bolboschoenus maritimus (L.) Palla sensu lato at Verlorenvlei, an estuarine lake on the west coast of Cape Province (now Northern Cape), South Africa. The variation encountered is recorded by means of illustrations and tables, and speculative explanation of the range of morphological form reported is offered to promote further study. Some comparisons of achenes, pericarp anatomy and embryos from populations in the general area of the Northern and Eastern Cape are made with those from Verlorenvlei
Metachronal wave and hydrodynamic interaction for deterministic switching rowers
We employ a model system, called rowers, as a generic physical framework to
define the problem of the coordinated motion of cilia (the metachronal wave) as
a far from equilibrium process. Rowers are active (two-state) oscillators
interacting solely through forces of hydrodynamic origin. In this work, we
consider the case of fully deterministic dynamics, find analytical solutions of
the equation of motion in the long wavelength (continuum) limit, and
investigate numerically the short wavelength limit. We prove the existence of
metachronal waves below a characteristic wavelength. Such waves are unstable
and become stable only if the sign of the coupling is reversed. We also find
that with normal hydrodynamic interaction the metachronal pattern has the form
of stable trains of traveling wave packets sustained by the onset of
anti-coordinated beating of consecutive rowers.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Carcinogenesis in Prostate Cancer: The role of Long Non-Coding RNAs
LncRNAs appear to play a considerable role in tumourigenesis through regulating key processes in cancer cells such as proliferative signalling, replicative immortality, invasion and metastasis, evasion of growth suppressors, induction of angiogenesis and resistance to apoptosis. LncRNAs have been reported to play a role in prostate cancer, particularly in regulating the androgen receptor signalling pathway. In this review article, we summarise the role of 34 lncRNAs in prostate cancer with a particular focus on their role in the androgen receptor signalling pathway and the epithelial to mesenchymal transition pathway
Time-periodic phases in populations of nonlinearly coupled oscillators with bimodal frequency distributions
The mean field Kuramoto model describing the synchronization of a population
of phase oscillators with a bimodal frequency distribution is analyzed (by the
method of multiple scales) near regions in its phase diagram corresponding to
synchronization to phases with a time periodic order parameter. The richest
behavior is found near the tricritical point were the incoherent, stationarily
synchronized, ``traveling wave'' and ``standing wave'' phases coexist. The
behavior near the tricritical point can be extrapolated to the rest of the
phase diagram. Direct Brownian simulation of the model confirms our findings.Comment: Revtex,16 pag.,10 fig., submitted to Physica
M-theory on eight-manifolds revisited: N=1 supersymmetry and generalized Spin(7) structures
The requirement of supersymmetry for M-theory backgrounds of the
form of a warped product , where is an eight-manifold
and is three-dimensional Minkowski or AdS space, implies the
existence of a nowhere-vanishing Majorana spinor on . lifts to a
nowhere-vanishing spinor on the auxiliary nine-manifold , where
is a circle of constant radius, implying the reduction of the structure
group of to . In general, however, there is no reduction of the
structure group of itself. This situation can be described in the language
of generalized structures, defined in terms of certain spinors of
. We express the condition for supersymmetry
in terms of differential equations for these spinors. In an equivalent
formulation, working locally in the vicinity of any point in in terms of a
`preferred' structure, we show that the requirement of
supersymmetry amounts to solving for the intrinsic torsion and all irreducible
flux components, except for the one lying in the of , in
terms of the warp factor and a one-form on (not necessarily
nowhere-vanishing) constructed as a bilinear; in addition, is
constrained to satisfy a pair of differential equations. The formalism based on
the group is the most suitable language in which to describe
supersymmetric compactifications on eight-manifolds of structure,
and/or small-flux perturbations around supersymmetric compactifications on
manifolds of holonomy.Comment: 24 pages. V2: introduction slightly extended, typos corrected in the
text, references added. V3: the role of Spin(7) clarified, erroneous
statements thereof corrected. New material on generalized Spin(7) structures
in nine dimensions. To appear in JHE
Searching for chiral logs in the static-light decay constant
Using the clover fermion action in unquenched QCD with pion masses as low as
420 MeV, we look for evidence for chiral logs in the static-light decay
constant. There is some evidence for a chiral log term, if the original static
theory of Eichten and Hill is used. However, the more precise data from the
static action of the ALPHA collaboration do not show any evidence for
non-linear dependence of the static-light decay constant on the light quark
mass. We make some comments on the connection between chiral perturbation
theory for decay constants of the pion and static-light meson
Comparison of s- and d-wave gap symmetry in nonequilibrium superconductivity
Recent application of ultrafast pump/probe optical techniques to
superconductors has renewed interest in nonequilibrium superconductivity and
the predictions that would be available for novel superconductors, such as the
high-Tc cuprates. We have reexamined two of the classical models which have
been used in the past to interpret nonequilibrium experiments with some
success: the mu* model of Owen and Scalapino and the T* model of Parker.
Predictions depend on pairing symmetry. For instance, the gap suppression due
to excess quasiparticle density n in the mu* model, varies as n^{3/2} in d-wave
as opposed to n for s-wave. Finally, we consider these models in the context of
S-I-N tunneling and optical excitation experiments. While we confirm that
recent pump/probe experiments in YBCO, as presently interpreted, are in
conflict with d-wave pairing, we refute the further claim that they agree with
s-wave.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figure
A pre-post study of behavioural determinants and practice change in Ugandan clinical officers
Background. Understanding the drivers of ‘provider behaviour’ has been highlighted as one of the six domains of behaviour change in strengthening healthcare systems.Objectives. To assess changes in healthcare provider behaviour, i.e. use of the Airway, Breathing, Circulation, Disability, Exposure (ABCDE) approach in acute illness management, after participating in a 1-day course on the assessment and management of acutely ill patients. We aimed to assess whether changes in psychological determinants of the ABCDE approach were associated with changes in the use of the approach.Methods. We used a pre-post design to study self-reported change in behaviour after a 1-day training course from pre-course to follow-up 1 month later. We also measured psychological determinants of behaviour immediately before and after and at 1-month follow-up. We explored if changes in psychological determinants were associated with change in practice 1 month later.Results. We found the following: firstly, use of the ABCDE approach increased at 1 month post-course from a median use of 50 - 90%. Secondly, the increase in the ABCDE approach was associated with a positive change in only one of the determinants of practice from pre- to post-course: perception of environmental determinants (r=0.323; p<0.05). Finally, there were no other significant associations with practice change or practice at follow-up.Conclusions. Change in perceptions of availability of resources was associated with increased use of an ABCDE approach, but evidence was limited owing to the pre-post design
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