1,900 research outputs found
Charting self-esteem during marital dissolution.
ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to chart changes in self-esteem before and after marital dissolution to identify the factors that shape individuals' self-esteem during this life transition.MethodWe analyzed 10 annual waves of self-esteem data from 291 divorcees from a nationally representative panel study of the Netherlands (N ~ 13,000). We charted the course of self-esteem before and after marital dissolution and tested a broad set of moderator variables that may shape individuals' self-esteem trajectories.ResultsThe average divorcee experienced significant decrease in self-esteem preceding marital dissolution and remained stable afterward. There were substantial individual differences in self-esteem trajectories, both before and after marital separation. Divorcees who experienced financial hardship, were affiliated with a church or religion, or scored low in Conscientiousness showed the most pronounced decrease in self-esteem during the years approaching marital dissolution.ConclusionThis study highlights the importance of assessing people multiple times before and after marital dissolution to dissect how people approach and respond to this life event. Results are consistent with perspectives that view divorce as an opportunity to abate the strains of an unhappy marriage
The eyes have it: Infant gaze as an indicator of hunger and satiation
Infant gaze serves as a measure of attention to food cues in adults and children and may play a role in signalling infant hunger and satiation. Maternal responsiveness to infant satiation cues, including gaze, supports healthy appetite development and may reduce obesity risk. However, mothers often experience difficulty in interpreting feeding cues, and there have been few attempts to study cues systematically. This study aimed to develop a reliable coding scheme for categorising and tracking infant gaze behaviours during complementary feeding (CF). Twenty infants aged between six and eighteen months were filmed during typical meals on two occasions at home. The Infant Gaze at Mealtime (IGM) coding scheme was devised from the analysis of a sample of videos, a piloting and testing process, and the feeding cues and developmental psychology literature. Inter and intra-rater reliability tests of the scheme with 20% of the study videos revealed high levels of reliability. When applied to the full sample of 225 video clips, the IGM coding scheme revealed a significant decrease over time in the frequency of infants gazing at food and a significant increase in exploratory gaze behaviour within a meal. These changes were consistent across main and dessert courses, suggesting they may be indicative of changes in infant feeding state. The results suggest that infant gaze may offer a means of identifying infant hunger and satiation and, as an easily observed behaviour, an effective tool for mothers and professionals for promoting responsive feeding
Exact Monte Carlo time dynamics in many-body lattice quantum systems
On the base of a Feynman-Kac--type formula involving Poisson stochastic
processes, recently a Monte Carlo algorithm has been introduced, which
describes exactly the real- or imaginary-time evolution of many-body lattice
quantum systems. We extend this algorithm to the exact simulation of
time-dependent correlation functions. The techniques generally employed in
Monte Carlo simulations to control fluctuations, namely reconfigurations and
importance sampling, are adapted to the present algorithm and their validity is
rigorously proved. We complete the analysis by several examples for the
hard-core boson Hubbard model and for the Heisenberg model
A systematic review of practices to promote vegetable acceptance in the first three years of life.
Background: Although most children do not meet vegetable intake recommendations no clear universal guidelines exist on the best method of introducing and promoting vegetables in infants.
Objective: To identify strategies to promote vegetable acceptance in children from the start of complementary feeding until 3 years of age.
Design: A comprehensive search strategy was performed using the databases Scopus and Pubmed. Articles published before March 2018 measuring vegetable intake and/or liking were included.
Results: 46 papers, 25 experimental (intervention) studies, and 21 observational studies were included. Intervention studies revealed that repeated exposure increased acceptance of the target vegetable, whereas exposure to variety was found to be particularly effective in increasing acceptance of a new vegetable. Starting complementary feeding with vegetables increased vegetable acceptance, whereas starting with fruits did not. Visual exposure to an unfamiliar vegetable increased the acceptance of that vegetable even without consuming it, while visual exposure to a familiar vegetable did not. A stepwise introduction of vegetables resulted in better initial acceptance of vegetables than introducing vegetables directly. Observational studies showed that vegetable consumption was associated with frequency of exposure, exposure to variety, and modelling. A majority of studies found a positive association between breastfeeding and vegetable acceptance, but only two out of seven studies found an association between age of vegetable introduction and their acceptance.
Conclusions: Based on the papers reviewed, we conclude that introducing vegetables at the beginning of complementary feeding, giving a different type of vegetable every day and ensuring repeated exposure to the same vegetable following an interval of a few days are the most promising strategies to promote vegetable intake in children starting complementary feeding until they are 3 years of age
Optimization of ground and excited state wavefunctions and van der Waals clusters
A quantum Monte Carlo method is introduced to optimize excited state trial
wavefunctions. The method is applied in a correlation function Monte Carlo
calculation to compute ground and excited state energies of bosonic van der
Waals clusters of upto seven particles. The calculations are performed using
trial wavefunctions with general three-body correlations
Random walks near Rokhsar-Kivelson points
There is a class of quantum Hamiltonians known as
Rokhsar-Kivelson(RK)-Hamiltonians for which static ground state properties can
be obtained by evaluating thermal expectation values for classical models. The
ground state of an RK-Hamiltonian is known explicitly, and its dynamical
properties can be obtained by performing a classical Monte Carlo simulation. We
discuss the details of a Diffusion Monte Carlo method that is a good tool for
studying statics and dynamics of perturbed RK-Hamiltonians without time
discretization errors. As a general result we point out that the relation
between the quantum dynamics and classical Monte Carlo simulations for
RK-Hamiltonians follows from the known fact that the imaginary-time evolution
operator that describes optimal importance sampling, in which the exact ground
state is used as guiding function, is Markovian. Thus quantum dynamics can be
studied by a classical Monte Carlo simulation for any Hamiltonian that is free
of the sign problem provided its ground state is known explicitly.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, RevTe
Outbreak of tropical rat mite (Ornithonyssus bacoti) dermatitis in a home for disabled persons
Five mentally handicapped individuals living in a home for disabled persons in Southern Germany were seen in our outpatient department with pruritic, red papules predominantly located in groups on the upper extremities, neck, upper trunk and face. Over several weeks 40 inhabitants and 5 caretakers were affected by the same rash. Inspection of their home and the sheds nearby disclosed infestation with rat populations and mites. Finally the diagnosis of tropical rat mite dermatitis was made by the identification of the arthropod Ornithonyssus bacoti or so-called tropical rat mite. The patients were treated with topical corticosteroids and antihistamines. After elimination of the rats and disinfection of the rooms by a professional exterminator no new cases of rat mite dermatitis occurred. The tropical rat mite is an external parasite occurring on rats, mice, gerbils, hamsters and various other small mammals. When the principal animal host is not available, human beings can become the victim of mite infestation. Copyright (c) 2007 S. Karger AG, Base
The program implications of administrative relationships between local health departments and state and local government.
A typology of organizational arrangements between state and local public health agencies was used as a framework within which the organizational environment of the local health department was studied for its effects on progam development and implementation by local public health departments. Data collected in a national sample of local health officers were used in measuring the effect of four different patterns of administrative relationships on the selected characteristics of local health department programs. Important differences were observed among the four organizational types with regard to constraints on programs and program priorities, and health officers' perceptions of the primary functions of local health departments and sources of local health department funding. These findings were then used as a baseline from which to consider the possible impact of recent federal health budgetary proposals (specifically, block grants) both on existing patterns of intergovernmental relations and on the funding and operation of local health department programs. It was determined that the most likely general development arising from these proposed changes in federal budgetary policy is that the administrative control of state health agencies over those at local level is likely to be enhanced. Other likely developments include changes in the programs and priorities of local health departments related to reductions in overall funding levels for human services and forced competition for fewer dollars by an enlarged constituency
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