1,205 research outputs found

    Maternal emotion regulation, reactions to childrens’ negative emotions and youth’s adjustment

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    Tese de mestrado, Psicologia (Secção de Psicologia ClĂ­nica e da SaĂșde, NĂșcleo de Psicologia da SaĂșde e da Doença), Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Psicologia, 2016Parents that are able to adequately self-regulate emotions will be more capacitated to help their children regulate their emotions. These processes influence the socialization of child’s emotions and have an undeniable influence on the child’s emotional and social development. Parental emotion regulation also involves the ability to tolerate the child’s negative emotions. When parents are unable to tolerate and be exposed to emotionally charged situations, they might try and change their form and frequency to avoid or reduce exposure. Parental Experiential Avoidance (parental EA) represents this inability. The purpose of this study was to study the relationships between maternal emotion regulation, maternal reactions to child’s negative emotions, and child’s adjustment. Additionally, we intended to analyze gender and age group differences in regard to Mothers’ Emotion Regulation and Mothers’ Coping with Children’s Negative Emotions. The sample was composed by 247 portuguese mothers that filled out on-line two scales to evaluate their emotion regulation (EREP) and reactions to child’s emotions (CCNES) and a questionnaire pertaining to their child’s (3 to 15 years old) adjustment (SDQ). Results, overall, supported the hypothesis. Maternal negative reactions/negative emotion regulation was positively statistically significant correlated to child’s adjustment problems; and the maternal constructive reactions/positive emotion regulation was positively statistically significant correlated to child’s positive adjustment. Negative and positive maternal emotion regulation dimensions were positively statistically significant correlated to, respectively, negative and constructive maternal reactions to child’s negative emotions. The results also showed significant differences between girls and boys regarding Emotion-Focused Reactions, wherein mothers used it more on girls than on boys. Mothers used less Distress Reactions with pre-school children but more Emotion-Focused Reactions compared with elementary school children, pre-adolescents and adolescents. Mother’s used Minimization Reactions significantly less with pre-school children in comparison with other age groups. For Emotional Inaction, mothers presented significantly higher levels for adolescents than for pre-school children.A autorregulação parental integra processos cognitivos, comportamentais e afetivos diferentes que, em conjunto, proporcionam aos pais a capacidade de planear e antecipar, de regular emoçÔes, de cooperar com outros, de avaliar resultados e remodelar açÔes. Mais concretamente, a capacidade de regulação emocional dos pais Ă© muito importante para gerir as situaçÔes quotidianas de interação com os filhos, mas tambĂ©m para ajudar as crianças a regular as suas prĂłprias emoçÔes. Um pai que Ă© capaz de se autorregular serĂĄ capaz de adequadamente pĂŽr em prĂĄtica capacidades que se traduzam na resolução de problemas, estabelecimento de objetivos, implementação de mudanças comportamentais e agir, com o objetivo final de proporcionar um desenvolvimento positivo para os filhos. A operacionalização adotada pelo presente estudo da regulação emocional parental inclui nĂŁo sĂł a capacidade dos pais regularem e expressarem as prĂłprias emoçÔes adequadamente, mas tambĂ©m a capacidade dos pais de serem atentos, reconhecerem e compreenderem as emoçÔes da criança; e de aceitarem e tolerarem as emoçÔes negativas reconhecendo o papel das emoçÔes positivas e negativas na vida da criança e na parentalidade. Esta Ășltima dimensĂŁo Ă© particularmente relevante, tendo em conta que capacidade de tolerar emoçÔes Ă© importante para uma adequada regulação emocional parental como o revelam os estudos mais recentes sobre o Evitamento Experiencial parental (EE parental). As reaçÔes parentais Ă  emocionalidade negativa das crianças sĂŁo uma componente importante do processo de socialização das emoçÔes da criança, que dependem da capacidade dos pais se regularem emocionalmente. Os resultados de estudos anteriores revelam que o ajustamento da criança Ă© influenciado pelas reaçÔes parentais Ă s suas emoçÔes que podem ser tanto apoiantes como nĂŁo-apoiantes, e que ditam o clima emocional familiar, causando impacto na forma como a criança encara a experiĂȘncia emocional. De forma geral, as diversas reaçÔes parentais Ă s emoçÔes dos filhos podem em diferentes graus desenvolver uma sensação de segurança emocional, sentimentos positivos face Ă s relaçÔes sociais e uma regulação emocional adequada que se traduzem num ajustamento positivo geral. O presente estudo teve como objetivo geral a compreensĂŁo da relação entre regulação emocional maternal, reaçÔes maternais Ă s emoçÔes negativas da criança, e o ajustamento da criança. Os objetivos mais especĂ­ficos foram: 1) explorar a relação entre a regulação emocional maternal e as reaçÔes maternas Ă s emoçÔes negativas da criança, 2) analisar a relação entre estas duas dimensĂ”es parentais e o ajustamento da criança, 3) e analisar as diferenças entre gĂ©neros e grupos etĂĄrios relativamente Ă s dimensĂ”es parentais. A amostra de estudo foi constituĂ­da por 247 mĂŁes portuguesas (idades entre 22 e 58) que preencheram on-line duas escalas relativas Ă s suas reaçÔes Ă  emocionalidade negativa das suas crianças (ReaçÔes Parentais Ă s EmoçÔes Negativas dos Filhos - CCNES) e Ă  sua regulação emocional (Escala de Regulação Emocional Parental - EREP), e um questionĂĄrio relativo Ă  adaptação das suas crianças (QuestionĂĄrio de Capacidades e Dificuldades - SDQ). As crianças deste estudo tinham idades entre os 3 e 15 anos. Os dados deste estudo foram recolhidos no contexto de um projeto de investigação mais alargado “Projeto-P” desenvolvido por Barros, Pereira e Marques (2016) Apesar do estudo mais alargado prever a participação de pais e de mĂŁes, o estudo foi realizado apenas com mĂŁes, uma vez que os pais tiveram uma baixa adesĂŁo (n=25). Os resultados do estudo apoiaram, maioritariamente, as hipĂłteses formuladas. As correlaçÔes positivas entre as escalas que refletem dificuldades na regulação emocional da mĂŁe (EREP) e as reaçÔes negativas das mĂŁes Ă s emoçÔes da criança (CCNES) apoiam a ideia de que uma regulação parental positiva Ă© importante para que os pais possam reagir de forma mais construtiva Ă s emoçÔes das crianças. Em relação Ă s associaçÔes entre as duas dimensĂ”es parentais e o ajustamento das crianças, reaçÔes negativas da mĂŁe Ă s emoçÔes negativas das crianças e regulação emocional negativa da mĂŁe revelaram uma correlação positiva e estatisticamente significativa com os indicadores de problemas de ajustamento da criança e uma correlação negativa com os indicadores de ajustamento positivo da criança. Estes resultados, embora correlacionais corroboram a ideia geral de que a regulação emocional dos pais e as reaçÔes parentais Ă s emoçÔes dos filhos tĂȘm um impacto no desenvolvimento emocional e social da criança. Em relação Ă s diferenças de sexo da criança, apenas se encontrou uma diferença estatisticamente significativa entre mĂŁes de crianças do sexo feminino e mĂŁes do sexo masculino para as ReaçÔes Focadas nas EmoçÔes, corroborando uma ideia de que, o sexo da criança instiga formas diferentes do socialização da emoçÔes dos pais. Quanto Ă s diferenças entre grupos etĂĄrios, as mĂŁes utilizaram menos ReaçÔes de Perturbação Emocional (Distress) com crianças em idade prĂ©-escolar (3-5 anos) do que com crianças de idade escolar (6-9 anos) e prĂ©-adolescentes (10-13 anos), e utilizaram mais ReaçÔes Focadas na EmoçÔes com crianças em idade prĂ©-escolar (3-5 anos) do que com prĂ©-adolescentes (10-13 anos) e adolescentes (14-15 anos). Adicionalmente, as mĂŁes utilizaram mais ReaçÔes de Minimização Ă  medida que a idade da criança avançava, sendo que usaram significativamente menos com crianças em idade prĂ©-escolar (3-5 anos) em comparação com os outros trĂȘs grupos etĂĄrios. Finalmente, para Inação Emocional, as mĂŁes apresentaram significativamente valores mais elevados para adolescentes (14-15 anos) do que para crianças em idade prĂ©-escolar (3-5 anos). No geral, os pais de crianças mais velhas apresentam menos ReaçÔes Focadas nas EmoçÔes e mais ReaçÔes de Minimização por comparação aos pais de crianças mais novas, sendo isto consistente com a ideia que as capacidades das crianças de se autorregularem emocionalmente melhoram ao longo do tempo fazendo com que os pais nĂŁo tenham de intervir tanto. As diferenças para Inação Emocional mostraram-se consistentes com a ideia de que, em idades mais precoces (3-5 anos), os pais sabem reagir e intervir nas reaçÔes emocionais dos seus filhos. Esta capacidade varia ao longo do tempo sendo que na adolescĂȘncia pode diminuir graças a questĂ”es de conflito muito comuns nesta fase que facilitam reaçÔes parentais inadequadas Ă s situaçÔes de emocionalidade negativa dos adolescentes As limitaçÔes dos estudo sĂŁo identificadas e exploradas, e sĂŁo apresentadas orientaçÔes para estudos futuros

    Space, image and display in Russian Central Asia, 1881-1914

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    This thesis investigates the relationship between environment and empire in late tsarist Central Asia, and suggests that the making and unmaking of space was integral to the imperial experience. It contends that land and its representation were crucial to processes undertaken on local and imperial scales to re-fashion parts of Central Asia from a ‘vast’, ‘alien’ and ‘inhospitable’ colony into an integrated frontier of empire. In examining the environment as a site for the physical enactment and negotiation of Russian rule, the chapters investigate how imperial settlers interacted with the region’s built and natural landscapes, through the planning of transport routes, the creation of settlements, irrigation, afforestation and planting projects. I use visual sources as the project’s access points into the Russian spatial imaginary: vital interfaces between material and metaphorical space that documented the changing environment but were also used to project future ambitions, to inscribe meaning, and to appropriate, segregate, contest and re-order terrain. Environment, image and the spatial imagination were entwined in a symbiotic relationship, with attempts to modify Central Asia’s landscapes, and the visual representations of these actions, revealing that the concept of Turkestan as a monolithic colonial space underwent significant fragmentation. The physical and imaginative transformation of terrain gave rise to new characterisations of the region as a modern, connected, innovative and fertile site, notions that were debated and disputed by a variety of state and sub-state actors in Central Asia and the imperial centre. I argue that the public circulation of images speaks to the importance of the environment as a visual component in the legitimisation of Russia’s presence on Central Asian soil, and as a key arena for the evolution of local and imperial spatial identities, some of which threatened to precipitate the eventual dissolution of the Turkestan Governor Generalship

    Outcomes of preexisting diabetes mellitus in breast, colorectal, and prostate cancer.

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer Verlag via the DOI in this record.PURPOSE: Preexisting diabetes is associated with increased morbidity and mortality in cancer. We examined the impact of incident cancer on the long-term outcomes of diabetes. METHODS: Using the United Kingdom Clinical Practice Research Datalink, we identified three cohorts of diabetes patients subsequently diagnosed with breast, colorectal, or prostate cancer, each matched to diabetic noncancer controls. Patients were required to have survived at least 1 year after cancer diagnosis (cases) or a matched index date (controls), and were followed up to 10 years for incident microvascular and macrovascular complications and mortality. Multivariate competing risks regression analyses were used to compare outcomes between cancer patients and controls. RESULTS: Overall, there were 3382 cancer patients and 11,135 controls with 59,431 person-years of follow-up. In adjusted analyses, there were no statistically significant (p ≀ 0.05) differences in diabetes complication rates between cancer patients and their controls in any of the three cancer cohorts. Combined, cancer patients were less likely (adjusted hazard ratio [HR] 0.88; 95% CI = 0.79-0.98) to develop retinopathy. Cancer patients were more likely to die of any cause (including cancer), but prostate cancer patients were less likely to die of causes associated with diabetes (HR 0.61; 95% CI = 0.43-0.88). CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: There is no evidence that incident cancer had an adverse impact on the long-term outcomes of preexisting diabetes. IMPLICATIONS FOR CANCER SURVIVORS: These findings are important for cancer survivors with preexisting diabetes because they suggest that substantial improvements in the relative survival of several of the most common types of cancer are not undermined by excess diabetes morbidity and mortality.This study was funded by the Population Research Committee, Cancer Research UK. Quality and Outcomes of Care for Chronic Conditions in Older Patients Diagnosed with Breast, Colorectal, or Prostate Cancer Compared to Non-Cancer Controls: An Observational Study Using the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD). Reference # 16609. 1 July 2013–29 February, 2016. In addition, Dr. Keating is supported by K24CA181510 from the US National Cancer Institute

    Outcomes of preexisting diabetes mellitus in breast, colorectal, and prostate cancer.

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer Verlag via the DOI in this record.PURPOSE: Preexisting diabetes is associated with increased morbidity and mortality in cancer. We examined the impact of incident cancer on the long-term outcomes of diabetes. METHODS: Using the United Kingdom Clinical Practice Research Datalink, we identified three cohorts of diabetes patients subsequently diagnosed with breast, colorectal, or prostate cancer, each matched to diabetic noncancer controls. Patients were required to have survived at least 1 year after cancer diagnosis (cases) or a matched index date (controls), and were followed up to 10 years for incident microvascular and macrovascular complications and mortality. Multivariate competing risks regression analyses were used to compare outcomes between cancer patients and controls. RESULTS: Overall, there were 3382 cancer patients and 11,135 controls with 59,431 person-years of follow-up. In adjusted analyses, there were no statistically significant (p ≀ 0.05) differences in diabetes complication rates between cancer patients and their controls in any of the three cancer cohorts. Combined, cancer patients were less likely (adjusted hazard ratio [HR] 0.88; 95% CI = 0.79-0.98) to develop retinopathy. Cancer patients were more likely to die of any cause (including cancer), but prostate cancer patients were less likely to die of causes associated with diabetes (HR 0.61; 95% CI = 0.43-0.88). CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: There is no evidence that incident cancer had an adverse impact on the long-term outcomes of preexisting diabetes. IMPLICATIONS FOR CANCER SURVIVORS: These findings are important for cancer survivors with preexisting diabetes because they suggest that substantial improvements in the relative survival of several of the most common types of cancer are not undermined by excess diabetes morbidity and mortality.This study was funded by the Population Research Committee, Cancer Research UK. Quality and Outcomes of Care for Chronic Conditions in Older Patients Diagnosed with Breast, Colorectal, or Prostate Cancer Compared to Non-Cancer Controls: An Observational Study Using the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD). Reference # 16609. 1 July 2013–29 February, 2016. In addition, Dr. Keating is supported by K24CA181510 from the US National Cancer Institute

    Quality of diabetes care in breast, colorectal, and prostate cancer

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    This is the final version. Available on open access from Springer via the DOI in this recordPURPOSE: Overlooking other medical conditions during cancer treatment and follow-up could result in excess morbidity and mortality, thereby undermining gains associated with early detection and improved treatment of cancer. We compared the quality of care for diabetes patients subsequently diagnosed with breast, colorectal, or prostate cancer to matched, diabetic non-cancer controls. METHODS: Longitudinal cohort study using primary care records from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink, United Kingdom. Patients with pre-existing diabetes were followed for up to 5 years after cancer diagnosis, or after an assigned index date (non-cancer controls). Quality of diabetes care was estimated based on Quality and Outcomes Framework indicators. Mixed effects logistic regression analyses were used to compare the unadjusted and adjusted odds of meeting quality measures between cancer patients and controls, overall and stratified by type of cancer. RESULTS: 3382 cancer patients and 11,135 controls contributed 44,507 person-years of follow-up. In adjusted analyses, cancer patients were less likely to meet five of 14 quality measures, including: total cholesterol ≀ 5 mmol/L (odds ratio [OR] = 0.82; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.75-0.90); glycosylated hemoglobin ≀ 59 mmol/mol (adjusted OR = 0.77; 95% CI, 0.70-0.85); and albumin creatinine ratio testing (adjusted OR = 0.83; 95% CI, 0.75-0.91). However, cancer patients were as likely as their matched controls to meet quality measures for other diabetes services, including retinal screening, foot examination, and dietary review. CONCLUSIONS: Although in the short-term, cancer patients were less likely to achieve target thresholds for cholesterol and HbA1c, they continued to receive high-quality diabetes primary care throughout 5 years post diagnosis. IMPLICATIONS FOR CANCER SURVIVORS: These findings are important for cancer survivors with pre-existing diabetes because they indicate that high-quality diabetes care is maintained throughout the continuum of cancer diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up.This study was funded by the Population Research Committee, Cancer Research UK. Quality and Outcomes of Care for Chronic Conditions in Older Patients Diagnosed with Breast, Colorectal, or Prostate Cancer Compared to Non-Cancer Controls: An Observational Study Using the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD). Reference # 16609. 1 July 2013–29 February, 2016. In addition, Dr. Keating is supported by K24CA181510 from the US National Cancer Institute

    Initial fixation placement in face images is driven by top-down guidance

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    The eyes are often inspected first and for longer period during face exploration. To examine whether this saliency of the eye region at the early stage of face inspection is attributed to its local structure properties or to the knowledge of its essence in facial communication, in this study we investigated the pattern of eye movements produced by rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) as they free viewed images of monkey faces. Eye positions were recorded accurately using implanted eye coils, while images of original faces, faces with scrambled eyes, and scrambled faces except for the eyes were presented on a computer screen. The eye region in the scrambled faces attracted the same proportion of viewing time and fixations as it did in the original faces, even the scrambled eyes attracted substantial proportion of viewing time and fixations. Furthermore, the monkeys often made the first saccade towards to the location of the eyes regardless of image content. Our results suggest that the initial fixation placement in faces is driven predominantly by ‘top-down’ or internal factors, such as the prior knowledge of the location of “eyes” within the context of a face

    Automated data analysis to rapidly derive and communicate ecological insights from satellite-tag data: A case study of reintroduced red kites

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    Analysis of satellite-telemetry data mostly occurs long after it has been collected, due to the time and effort needed to collate and interpret such material. Such delayed reporting does reduce the usefulness of such data for nature conservation when timely information about animal movements is required. To counter this problem we present a novel approach which combines automated analysis of satellite-telemetry data with rapid communication of insights derived from such data. A relatively simple algorithm (comprising speed of movement and turning angle calculated from fixes), allowed instantaneous detection of excursions away from settlement areas and automated calculation of home ranges on the remaining data Automating the detection of both excursions and home range calculations enabled us to disseminate ecological insights from satellite-tag data instantaneously through a dedicated web portal to inform conservationists and wider audiences. We recommend automated analysis, interpretation and communication of satellite tag and other ecological data to advance nature conservation research and practice

    Social interactions through the eyes of macaques and humans

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    Group-living primates frequently interact with each other to maintain social bonds as well as to compete for valuable resources. Observing such social interactions between group members provides individuals with essential information (e.g. on the fighting ability or altruistic attitude of group companions) to guide their social tactics and choice of social partners. This process requires individuals to selectively attend to the most informative content within a social scene. It is unclear how non-human primates allocate attention to social interactions in different contexts, and whether they share similar patterns of social attention to humans. Here we compared the gaze behaviour of rhesus macaques and humans when free-viewing the same set of naturalistic images. The images contained positive or negative social interactions between two conspecifics of different phylogenetic distance from the observer; i.e. affiliation or aggression exchanged by two humans, rhesus macaques, Barbary macaques, baboons or lions. Monkeys directed a variable amount of gaze at the two conspecific individuals in the images according to their roles in the interaction (i.e. giver or receiver of affiliation/aggression). Their gaze distribution to non-conspecific individuals was systematically varied according to the viewed species and the nature of interactions, suggesting a contribution of both prior experience and innate bias in guiding social attention. Furthermore, the monkeys’ gaze behavior was qualitatively similar to that of humans, especially when viewing negative interactions. Detailed analysis revealed that both species directed more gaze at the face than the body region when inspecting individuals, and attended more to the body region in negative than in positive social interactions. Our study suggests that monkeys and humans share a similar pattern of role-sensitive, species- and context-dependent social attention, implying a homologous cognitive mechanism of social attention between rhesus macaques and humans
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