2,393 research outputs found
Contemporary Integrative Interpersonal Theory: Integrating Structure, Dynamics, Temporal Scale, and Levels of Analysis
Theoretical accounts of psychopathology often emphasize social context as etiologically centralto psychological dysfunction, and interpersonal impairments are widely implicated for many legacy diagnostic categories that span domains of psychopathology (e.g., affective, personality, thought disorders). Contemporary Integrative Interpersonal Theory (CIIT) seeks to explain the emergence, expression, and maintenance of socio-affective functioning and dysfunction across levels and timescales of analysis. We emphasize the importance of cohesively addressing the often-segregated challenges of establishing empirically supported structure, functional accounts of dynamic processes, and how together these facilitate theoretical and methodological consistency across levels of analysis ranging from biology to behavior. We illustrate CIIT’s potential to serve as an integrative theory for generating falsifiable hypotheses that support strong inference investigations into the nature of psychological dysfunction across a range of traditional diagnostic constructs and superordinate spectra of psychopathology
Personality heterogeneity in female adolescent inpatients with features of eating disorders
Objective: This study examined evidence for personality variability in adolescents with eating disorder features in light of previous evidence that personality variability in adult women with eating disorder symptoms carries important clinical implications.
Method: Millon Adolescent Clinical Inventory personality data from adolescent girls with disturbed eating who were psychiatrically hospitalized were cluster analyzed, and resulting groups were compared in eating and comorbid psychopathology.
Results: Three subgroups were identified among the 153 patients with eating disorder features: high functioning, internalizing, and externalizing. The internalizing group was marked by eating-related and mood dysfunction; the externalizing group by elevated eating and mood psychopathology as well as impulsivity, aggression, and substance use; and the high-functioning group by lower levels of psychopathology and relatively high self-esteem.
Conclusions: These findings converge with previous research using different personality models in adult samples and highlight the clinical use of considering personality heterogeneity among adolescent and adult women with disturbed eating
The heterogeneous nature of Fe delivery from melting icebergs
The micronutrient iron (Fe) can be transported from marine terminating glaciers to the ocean by icebergs. There are however few observations of iceberg Fe content, and the flux of Fe from icebergs to the offshore surface ocean is poorly constrained. Here we report the dissolved Fe (DFe), total dissolvable Fe (TdFe) and ascorbic acid extractable Fe (FeAsc) sediment content of icebergs from Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. The concentrations of DFe (range 0.63 nM – 536 nM, mean 37 nM, median 6.5 nM) and TdFe (range 46 nM – 57 µM, mean 3.6 µM, median 144 nM) both demonstrated highly heterogeneous distributions and there was no significant correlation between these two fractions. FeAsc (range 0.0042 to 0.12 wt. %) was low compared to both previous measurements in Kongsfjorden and to current estimates of the global mean. FeAsc content per volume ice did however, as expected, show a significant relationship with sediment loading (which ranged from < 0.1 – 234 g L-1 of meltwater). In the Arctic, icebergs lose their sediment load faster than ice volume due to the rapid loss of basal ice after calving. We therefore suggest that the loss of basal ice is a potent mechanism for the reduction of mean TdFe and FeAsc per volume of iceberg. Delivery of TdFe and FeAsc to the ocean is thereby biased towards coastal waters where, in Kongsfjorden, DFe (18 ± 17 nM) and TdFe (mean 8.1 µM, median 3.7 µM) concentrations were already elevated
Herschel-SPIRE-Fourier Transform Spectroscopy of the nearby spiral galaxy IC342
We present observations of the nearby spiral galaxy IC342 with the Herschel
Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver (SPIRE) Fourier Transform
Spectrometer. The spectral range afforded by SPIRE, 196-671 microns, allows us
to access a number of 12CO lines from J=4--3 to J=13--12 with the highest J
transitions observed for the first time. In addition we present measurements of
13CO, [CI] and [NII]. We use a radiative transfer code coupled with Bayesian
likelihood analysis to model and constrain the temperature, density and column
density of the gas. We find two 12CO components, one at 35 K and one at 400 K
with CO column densities of 6.3x10^{17} cm^{-2} and 0.4x10^{17} cm^{-2} and CO
gas masses of 1.26x10^{7} Msolar and 0.15x10^{7} Msolar, for the cold and warm
components, respectively. The inclusion of the high-J 12CO line observations,
indicate the existence of a much warmer gas component (~400 K) confirming
earlier findings from H_{2} rotational line analysis from ISO and Spitzer. The
mass of the warm gas is 10% of the cold gas, but it likely dominates the CO
luminosity. In addition, we detect strong emission from [NII] 205microns and
the {3}P_{1}->{3}P_{0} and {3}P_{2} ->{3}P_{1} [CI] lines at 370 and 608
microns, respectively. The measured 12CO line ratios can be explained by
Photon-dominated region (PDR) models although additional heating by e.g. cosmic
rays cannot be excluded. The measured [CI] line ratio together with the derived
[C] column density of 2.1x10^{17} cm^{-2} and the fact that [CI] is weaker than
CO emission in IC342 suggests that [CI] likely arises in a thin layer on the
outside of the CO emitting molecular clouds consistent with PDRs playing an
important role.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of
the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS
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