1,224 research outputs found
The Impact of Perspective Change As a Cognitive Reappraisal Strategy on Affect: A Systematic Review
The strategic or deliberate adoption of a cognitively distanced, third-person perspective
is proposed to adaptively regulate emotions. However, studies of psychological disorders
suggest spontaneous adoption of a third-person perspective reflects counter-productive
avoidance. Here, we review studies that investigate the deliberate adoption of a
third- or first-person vantage perspective and its impact on affect in healthy people,
“sub-clinical” populations and those with psychological disorders. A systematic search
was conducted across four databases. After exclusion criteria were applied, 38 studies
were identified that investigated the impact of both imagery and verbal instructions
designed to encourage adoption of a third-person perspective on self-reported
affect. The identified studies examined a variety of outcomes related to recalling
memories, imagining scenarios and mood induction. These were associated with specific
negative emotions or mood states (dysphoria/sadness, anxiety, anger), mixed or neutral
affect autobiographical memories, and self-conscious affect (e.g., guilt). Engaging a
third-person perspective was generally associated with a reduction in the intensity
of positive and negative affect. Studies that included measures of semantic change,
suggested that this is a key mediator in reduction of affect following perspective change.
Strategically adopting a “distanced,” third-person perspective is linked to a reduction
in affect intensity across valence, but in addition has the potential to introduce new
information that regulates emotion via semantic change. Such reappraisal distinguishes
deliberate adoption of a distanced perspective from the habitual and/or spontaneous
shift in perspective that occurs in psychopatholog
Field surveillance model for HPAI in Vietnam in a vaccination context : methodology and preliminary results
Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza H5N1 epizooty started in Vietnam late 2003 and resulted into more than 50 millions poultry culled and 93 human cases (42 fatal cases). In 2005, the Government decided to apply a mass vaccination campaign to limit virus circulation and to reduce the threat to human health. Then, neither outbreaks in poultry nor in human have been notified for about one year. With a majority of poultry vaccinated in the higher risk areas, the clinical expression of H5N1 inevitably changed and as a result the surveillance approach should be adapted. Routine virological surveillance and recent outbreaks showed that virus is still circulating. Within a FAO project funded by Japanese Government, a model is tested to strengthen the surveillance of H5N1 infection among backyard and commercial poultry. This model was designed to increase the detection and the notification of suspect poultry health events that could be avian influenza. An awareness campaign explained to key stakeholders that due to vaccination, criteria to detect a H5N1 outbreak should change. A targeted surveillance programme is also tested including a disease-free certification for vaccinated semi-commercial broilers farms and an active community animal disease surveillance component in selected villages. The methodogy of this surveillance model and preliminary results are presented
Low intensity transcranial magnetic stimulation modulates skilled motor learning in adult mice
Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is commonly used to modulate cortical plasticity in clinical and non-clinical populations. Clinically, rTMS is delivered to targeted regions of the cortex at high intensities (>1 T). We have previously shown that even at low intensities, rTMS induces structural and molecular plasticity in the rodent cortex. To determine whether low intensity rTMS (LI-rTMS) alters behavioural performance, daily intermittent theta burst LI-rTMS (120 mT) or sham was delivered as a priming or consolidating stimulus to mice completing 10 consecutive days of skilled reaching training. Relative to sham, priming LI-rTMS (before each training session), increased skill accuracy (~9%) but did not alter the rate of learning over time. In contrast, consolidating LI-rTMS (after each training session), resulted in a small increase in the rate of learning (an additional ~1.6% each day) but did not alter the daily skill accuracy. Changes in behaviour with LI-rTMS were not accompanied with long lasting changes in brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) expression or in the expression of plasticity markers at excitatory and inhibitory synapses for either priming or consolidation groups. These results suggest that LI-rTMS can alter specific aspects of skilled motor learning in a manner dependent on the timing of intervention
An investigation into the effectiveness of a brief imagery-based "defusion" strategy in reducing nicotine cravings
Volume 1 of this thesis is presented in three parts. Part 1 is a systematic review of experimental or quasi-experimental studies that investigate the impact of the strategic adoption of vantage perspective on affect. Vantage perspective describes either adopting a first- or third-person perspective, either in mental imagery or verbal modalities. Part 2 describes a study exploring the impact of two mental imagery craving regulation strategies in cigarette smokers on craving, affect and smoking behaviour. One strategy is based on “defusion,” a technique used within Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, and the other is based on the use of imagery replacement, a cognitive psychology approach. Smoking behaviour is measured explicitly through latency to smoke and number of cigarettes smoked, and implicitly through the use of a stimulus-response task measuring approach and avoidance behaviour. Part 3 is a critical appraisal of three elements of the empirical paper, designing the mental imagery craving regulation strategies, the limitations of the study design, and the difficulties of the recruitment process and the subsequent impact on the empirical study
The Equifinality of Archaeological Networks: an Agent-Based Exploratory Lab Approach
When we find an archaeological network, how can we explore the necessary versus contingent processes at play in the formation of that archaeological network? Given a set of circumstances or processes, what other possible network shapes could have emerged? This is the problem of equifinality, where many different means could potentially arrive at the same end result: the networks that we observe. This paper outlines how agent-based modelling can be used as a laboratory for exploring different processes of archaeological network formation. We begin by describing our best guess about how the (ancient) world worked, given our target materials (here, the networks of production and patronage surrounding the Roman brick industry in the hinterland of Rome). We then develop an agent-based model of the Roman extractive economy which generates different kinds of networks under various assumptions about how that economy works. The rules of the simulation are built upon the work of Bang (2006; 2008) who describes a model of the Roman economy which he calls the ‘imperial Bazaar’. The agents are allowed to interact, and the investigators compare the kinds of networks this description generates over an entire landscape of economic possibilities. By rigorously exploring this landscape, and comparing the resultant networks with those observed in the archaeological materials, the investigators will be able to employ the principle of equifinality to work out the representativeness of the archaeological network and thus the underlying processes
Super-heavy fermion material as metallic refrigerant for adiabatic demagnetization cooling
Low-temperature refrigeration is of crucial importance in fundamental
research of condensed matter physics, as the investigations of fascinating
quantum phenomena, such as superconductivity, superfluidity and quantum
criticality, often require refrigeration down to very low temperatures.
Currently, cryogenic refrigerators with He gas are widely used for cooling
below 1 Kelvin. However, usage of the gas is being increasingly difficult due
to the current world-wide shortage. Therefore, it is important to consider
alternative methods of refrigeration. Here, we show that a new type of
refrigerant, super-heavy electron metal, YbCoZn, can be used for
adiabatic demagnetization refrigeration, which does not require 3He gas. A
number of advantages includes much better metallic thermal conductivity
compared to the conventional insulating refrigerants. We also demonstrate that
the cooling performance is optimized in YbScCoZn by
partial Sc substitution with 0.19. The substitution induces chemical
pressure which drives the materials close to a zero-field quantum critical
point. This leads to an additional enhancement of the magnetocaloric effect in
low fields and low temperatures enabling final temperatures well below 100 mK.
Such performance has up to now been restricted to insulators. Since nearly a
century the same principle of using local magnetic moments has been applied for
adiabatic demagnetization cooling. This study opens new possibilities of using
itinerant magnetic moments for the cryogen-free refrigeration
The structure of mercantile communities in the Roman world : how open were Roman trade networks?
Fragmented in space: the oral history narrative of an Arab Christian from Antioch, Turkey
This study uses the case of Can Kılçıksız, an Arab Christian refugee youth from Antioch, Turkey, to argue that globalization may result in fragmented families and subjectivities and can also accelerate processes initiated by modernity and the construction of national identities. Can Kılçıksız and his siblings now live in Turkey, Germany, France and Finland. His life story suggests that males of Arab Christian origin from Antioch who had access to schooling are more likely to be involved in politics whereas females tend to be drawn to evangelical Christian organizations. The case also suggests that sibling ties might prove more durable in the course of transnational migration than conjugal ties. The case of Can Kılçıksız shows that the time/space linked to childhood through memory can play an important role in identity construction of subjects circulating in transnational space
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