1,144 research outputs found
ADHD: Is There an App for That? A Suitability Assessment of Apps for the Parents of Children and Young People With ADHD
BACKGROUND: Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a highly comorbid disorder that can impact significantly on the individual and their family. ADHD is managed via pharmacological and nonpharmacological interventions. Parents also gain support from parent support groups, which may include chat rooms, as well as face-to-face meetings. With the growth of technology use over recent years, parents have access to more resources that ever before. A number of mobile apps have been developed to help parents manage ADHD in their children and young people. Unfortunately many of these apps are not evidence-based, and little is known of their suitability for the parents or whether they are helpful in ADHD management. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to explore the (1) parents' views of the suitability of the top ten listed apps for parents of children and young people with ADHD and (2) the views of clinicians that work with them on the suitability and value of the apps. METHODS: The top 10 listed apps specifically targeted toward the parents of children and young people with ADHD were identified via the Google Play (n=5) and iTunes store (n=5). Interviews were then undertaken with 7 parents of children or young people with ADHD and 6 clinicians who specialize in working with this population to explore their opinions of the 10 apps identified and what they believe the key components are for apps to be suitable and valuable for this population. RESULTS: Four themes emerged from clinician and parent interviews: (1) the importance of relating to the app, (2) apps that address ADHD-related difficulties, (3) how the apps can affect family relationships, and (4) apps as an educational tool. Two additional themes emerged from the clinician interviews alone: monitoring ADHD symptoms and that apps should be practical. Parents also identified an additional theme: the importance of the technology. Overall, the characteristics of the current top 10 listed apps did not appear to match well to the views of our sample. CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest that these apps may not fully meet the complex needs of this parent population. Further research is required to explore the value of apps with this population and how they can be tailored to their very specific needs
Active cooling control of the CLEO detector using a hydrocarbon coolant farm
We describe a novel approach to particle-detector cooling in which a modular
farm of active coolant-control platforms provides independent and regulated
heat removal from four recently upgraded subsystems of the CLEO detector: the
ring-imaging Cherenkov detector, the drift chamber, the silicon vertex
detector, and the beryllium beam pipe. We report on several aspects of the
system: the suitability of using the aliphatic-hydrocarbon solvent PF(TM)-200IG
as a heat-transfer fluid, the sensor elements and the mechanical design of the
farm platforms, a control system that is founded upon a commercial programmable
logic controller employed in industrial process-control applications, and a
diagnostic system based on virtual instrumentation. We summarize the system's
performance and point out the potential application of the design to future
high-energy physics apparatus.Comment: 21 pages, LaTeX, 5 PostScript figures; version accepted for
publication in Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Is There an App for That? Suitability Assessment of Apps for Children and Young People With ADHD
Background: Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a complex highly comorbid disorder, which can have a huge impact on those with ADHD, their family, and the community around them. ADHD is currently managed using pharmacological and nonpharmacological interventions. However, with advances in technology and an increase in the use of mobile apps, managing ADHD can be augmented using apps specifically designed for this population. However, little is known regarding the suitability and usability of currently available apps. Objective: The aim of this study was to explore the suitability of the top 10 listed apps for children and young people with ADHD and clinicians who work with them. It is hypothesized that mobile apps designed for this population could be more suitably designed for this population. Methods: The top 10 listed apps that are specifically targeted toward children and young people with ADHD in the United Kingdom were identified via the Google Play (n=5) and iTunes store (n=5). Interviews were then undertaken with 5 clinicians who specialize in treating this population and 5 children and young people with ADHD themselves, to explore their opinions of the 10 apps identified and what they believe the key components are for apps to be suitable for this population. Results: Five themes emerged from clinician and young people interviews: the accessibility of the technology, the importance of relating to apps, addressing ADHD symptoms and related difficulties, age appropriateness, and app interaction. Three additional themes emerged from the clinician interviews alone: monitoring symptoms, side effects and app effect on relationships, and the impact of common comorbid conditions. The characteristics of the apps did not appear to match well with the views of our sample. Conclusions: These findings suggest that the apps may not be suitable in meeting the complex needs associated with this condition. Further research is required to explore the value of apps for children and young people with ADHD and their families and, in particular, any positive role for apps in the management of ADHD in this age group. A systematic review on how technology can be used to engage this population and how it can be used to help them would be a useful way forward. This could be the platform to begin exploring the use of apps further
Charmonium absorption by nucleons
dissociation in collisions with nucleons is studied within a boson
exchange model and the energy dependence of the dissociation cross section is
calculated from the threshold for production to high
energies. We illustrate the agreement of our results with calculations based on
short distance QCD and Regge theory. The compatibility between our calculations
and the data on photoproduction on a nucleon is discussed. We evaluate
the elastic cross section using a forward dispersion relation and
demonstrate the overall agreement with the predictions from QCD sum rules. Our
results are compatible with the phenomenological dissociation cross section
evaluated from the experimental data on production from ,
and collisions.Comment: 14 pages, revtex, including 13 figures, accepted for publication in
Phys. Rev.
Measurement of \cal{B}(D^+ --> mu^+ nu) and the Pseudoscalar Decay Constant
In 60 pb-1 of data taken on the psi(3770) resonance with the CLEO-c detector,
we find 8 D+ to mu+ nu event candidates that are mostly signal, containing only
1 estimated background. Using this statistically compelling sample, we measure
preliminary values of B(D+ to mu+ nu) = (3.5 +- 1.4 +- 0.6)*10^{-4}, and
determine f_{D+} =(201+- 41+- 17) MeV.Comment: 17 pages postscript, also available through
http://www.lns.cornell.edu/public/CONF/2004/, Presented at ICHEP Aug
16-22,2004, Beijing, Chin
New Measurements of Upsilon(1S) Decays to Charmonium Final States
Using substantially larger data samples collected by the CLEO III detector,
we report on new measurements of the decays of Upsilon(1S) to charmonium final
states, including J/Psi, psi(2S), and chi_cJ. The latter two are first
observations of these decays. We measure the branching fractions as follows:
B(Y(1S)--> J/Psi+X)=(6.4+-0.4+-0.6)x10^-4, B(Y(1S)--> psi(2S)+X)/B(Y(1S)-->
J/Psi+X)=0.41+-0.11+-0.08, B(Y(1S)--> chi_c1+X)/B(Y(1S)-->
J/Psi+X)=0.35+-0.08+-0.06, B(Y(1S)--> chi_c2+X)/B(Y(1S)-->
J/Psi+X)=0.52+-0.12+-0.09, and B(Y(1S)--> chi_c0+X)/B(Y(1S)--> J/Psi+X)<7.4% at
90% confidence level. We also report on the momentum and angular spectra of
J/Psi's in Upsilon(1S) decay. The results are compared to predictions of the
color octet and color singlet models.Comment: 27 pages postscript,also available through
http://w4.lns.cornell.edu/public/CLNS/, submitted to PR
Search for X(3872) in gamma gamma Fusion and ISR at CLEO
We report on a search for the recently reported X(3872) state using 15.1
fb^{-1} e+ e- data taken in the \sqrt{s} = 9.46-11.30 GeV region. Separate
searches for the production of X(3872) in untagged gamma-gamma fusion and e+ e-
annihilation following initial state radiation (ISR) are made by taking
advantage of the unique correlation of J/psi -> l+ l- in X(3872) decay to pi+
pi- J/psi. No signals are observed in either case, and 90% confidence upper
limits are established as (2J+1)\Gamma_{\gamma\gamma}B(X -> pi+ pi- J/psi) <
12.9 eV and \Gamma_{ee}B(X -> pi+ pi- J/psi) < 8.3 eV.Comment: 8 pages postscript,also available through
http://www.lns.cornell.edu/public/CLNS/2004/, submitted to PR
Evidence for B^(*)_s bar{B}^(*)_s Production at the Upsilon(5S)
Using data collected by the CLEO III detector at CESR, we started a series of
investigations on the Upsilon(5S) resonance decay properties. The data sample
used for this analysis consists of 0.42 fb-1 of data taken on the Upsilon(5S)
resonance, 6.34 fb-1 of data collected on the Upsilon(4S) and 2.32 fb-1 of data
taken in the continuum below the Upsilon(4S). B_s mesons are expected to decay
predominantly into D_s meson, while the lighter B mesons decay into D_s only
about 10% of the time. We exploit this difference to make a preliminary model
dependent estimate of the ratio of B_s(*) anti-B_s(*) to the total b anti-b
quark pair production at the Upsilon(5S) energy to be (21 +- 3 +- 9)%.Comment: 17 pages postscript,also available through
http://www.lns.cornell.edu/public/CONF/2004/, Presented at ICHEP Aug
16-22,2004, Beijing, Chin
Observation of psi(3770)--> pi pi J/psi and Measurement of Gamma_{ee}[psi(2S)]
We observe signals for the decays psi(3770)--> X J/psi from data acquired
with the CLEO detector operating at the CESR e^+e^- collider with sqrt{s}=3773
MeV. We measure the following branching fractions B(psi(3770)--> XJ/psi) and
significances: (189 +- 20 +- 20) x 10^-5 (11.6sigma) for X=pi^+pi^-, (80 +- 25
+- 16) x 10^-5 (3.4sigma) for X=pi^0pi^0, and (87 +- 33 +- 22) x 10^-5
(3.5sigma) for X=eta, where the errors are statistical and systematic,
respectively. The radiative return process e^+e^- -->gamma psi(2S) populates
the same event sample and is used to measure Gamma_{ee}[psi(2S)]=(2.54 +- 0.03
+- 0.11) keV.Comment: 13 ages postscript,also available through
http://www.lns.cornell.edu/public/CLNS/2005/, Submitted to PR
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