1,782 research outputs found

    To tell or not to tell? Youth\u27s responses to unwanted internet experiences.

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    Abstract This study is one of the first that investigated youth\u27s response to unwanted Internet experiences, not only for those youth who were bothered or distressed but for all youth who reported the experience. Three types of response were examined: telling someone about the incident and ending the unwanted situation by active or passive coping. Responses to the following unwanted Internet experiences were analysed: Sexual solicitation, online harassment and unwanted exposure to pornography. The study was based on data from the Third Youth Internet Safety Survey (YISS-3), a telephone survey with a nationally representative U.S. sample of 1,560 Internet users, ages 10 to 17, and their caretakers. Youth\u27s responses to unwanted Internet experiences differ depending on the type of unwanted experiences, whether they are distressed or have other negative reactions caused by the incident and - to some degree - other youth characteristics and incident characteristics. For example, not all youth who are distressed tell someone and not all youth who tell someone are distressed. Also, the reasons for telling may differ depending on whom they tell, and youth tell somebody less often about their victimization if they also are online perpetrators, but of different types of unwanted Internet experiences. Internet safety information for parents and parents\u27 active mediation of Internet safety does not seem to result in youth telling more often about unwanted Internet experiences

    The Acute Open-Chest Model

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    The Controversy of Peri-operative ß-blockade: What Should I Do?

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    Emergent Orientation Selectivity from Random Networks in Mouse Visual Cortex

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    The connectivity principles underlying the emergence of orientation selectivity in primary visual cortex (V1) of mammals lacking an orientation map (such as rodents and lagomorphs) are poorly understood. We present a computational model in which random connectivity gives rise to orientation selectivity that matches experimental observations. The model predicts that mouse V1 neurons should exhibit intricate receptive fields in the two-dimensional frequency domain, causing a shift in orientation preferences with spatial frequency. We find evidence for these features in mouse V1 using calcium imaging and intracellular whole-cell recordings. Pattadkal et al. show that orientation selectivity can emerge from random connectivity, and offer a distinct perspective for how computations occur in the neocortex. They propose that a random convergence of inputs can provide signals for orientation preference in contrast with the dominant model that requires a precise arrangement.Fil: Pattadkal, Jagruti J.. University of Texas at Austin; Estados UnidosFil: Mato, German. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Gerencia del Área de Energía Nuclear. Instituto Balseiro; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: van Vreeswijk, Carl. Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique; FranciaFil: Priebe, Nicholas J.. University of Texas at Austin; Estados UnidosFil: Hansel, David. Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique; Franci

    A new scale to assess the therapeutic relationship in community mental health care: STAR

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    Background. No instrument has been developed specifically for assessing the clinician-patient therapeutic relationship (TR) in community psychiatry. This study aimed to develop a measure of the TR with clinician and patient versions using psychometric principles for test construction. Method. A four-stage prospective study was undertaken, comprising qualitative semi-structured interviews about TRs with clinicians and patients and their assessment of nine established scales for their applicability to community care, administering an amalgamated scale of more than 100 items, followed by Principal Components Analysis (PCA) of these ratings for preliminary scale construction. test-retest reliability of the scale and administering the scale in a new sample to confirm its factorial structure. The sample consisted of patients with severe mental illness and a designated key worker in the care of 17 community mental health teams in England and Sweden. Results. New items not covered by established scales were identified, including clinician helpfulness in accessing services, patient aggression and family interference. The new patient (STAR-P) and clinician scales (STAR-C) each have 12 items comprising three subscales: positive collaboration and positive clinician input in both versions, non-supportive clinician input in the patient version, and emotional difficulties in the clinician version. Test-retest reliability was r = 0(.)76 for STAR-P and r = 0(.)68 for STAR-C. The factorial structure of the new scale was confirmed with a good fit. Conclusions. STAR is a specifically developed, brief scale to assess TRs in community psychiatry with good psychometric properties and is suitable for use in research and routine care

    CARDIOVASCULAR EFFECTS OF DILTIAZEM IN THE DOG

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    SUMMARY The effects of two bolus injections (0.2 mg kg−1) and two infusion rates (0.2 mg min−1 and 0.4 mg min−1) ofdiltiazem on global and regional left (LV) and right ventricular (RV) performance (ultrasonic dimension technique), on coronary (electromagnetic flow meters) and systemic haemodynamics, and on electrophysiology (PR, QRS, QTC intervals) were studied in eight open-chest dogs anaesthetized with droperidol and fentanyl. The two bolus injections of diltiazem resulted in plasma concentrations of 688 ± 115 and 650 ± 85 ng ml−1 (means ± SE), respectively, and caused substantial decreases in systemic and coronary vascular resistances, and in aortic pressure, and increases in LV segment shortening, stroke volume and aortic flow. Electro -physiological variables were little affected. At the low infusion rate (plasma concentration 140 ± 23 ng ml−1) coronary and systemic vaso-dilatation occurred, but global and regional RV and LV performance were little affected. PR interval increased by 15%. At the higher infusion rate (plasma concentration 282 ± 33 ng ml−1) coronary and systemic vasodilatation were maintained. Aortic pressure decreased slightly. Whereas LV end-diastolic and end-systolic dimensions remained unchanged, they increased in the RV. In addition, the PR interval increased by 35%, and three animals developed atrio-ventricular block type I. The data indicate that diltiazem is a potent coronary and systemic vasodilator with little effect on global RV and L V performance. However, at a higher infusion rate RV dimensions clearly tend to increase, and conduction abnormalities develo
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