5,547 research outputs found
Do We Need Paradigms? A Mixed Methods Perspective
Point/Counterpoin
Aging, Emotion, Attention, and Binding in the Taboo Stroop Task: Data and Theories.
How does aging impact relations between emotion, memory, and attention? To address this question, young and older adults named the font colors of taboo and neutral words, some of which recurred in the same font color or screen location throughout two color-naming experiments. The results indicated longer color-naming response times (RTs) for taboo than neutral base-words (taboo Stroop interference); better incidental recognition of colors and locations consistently associated with taboo versus neutral words (taboo context-memory enhancement); and greater speed-up in color-naming RTs with repetition of color-consistent than color-inconsistent taboo words, but no analogous speed-up with repetition of location-consistent or location-inconsistent taboo words (the consistency type by repetition interaction for taboo words). All three phenomena remained constant with aging, consistent with the transmission deficit hypothesis and binding theory, where familiar emotional words trigger age-invariant reactions for prioritizing the binding of contextual features to the source of emotion. Binding theory also accurately predicted the interaction between consistency type and repetition for taboo words. However, one or more aspects of these phenomena failed to support the inhibition deficit hypothesis, resource capacity theory, or socio-emotional selectivity theory. We conclude that binding theory warrants further test in a range of paradigms, and that relations between aging and emotion, memory, and attention may depend on whether the task and stimuli trigger fast-reaction, involuntary binding processes, as in the taboo Stroop paradigm
The Beliefs and Practices of Second Grade Teachers Who Implement Independent Reading and Its Effect on Students’ Reading Achievement and Reading Volume
The purpose of the present study was to explore the beliefs and practices of teachers who implement independent reading in their classrooms. Results showed that teachers who implemented independent reading believed in the importance of both the quantity and quality of student reading. The teachers’ practices of independent reading showed students selecting books that were “just-right” for them to read, social experiences around reading, guided practice through reading conferences with the teacher, and setting a purpose for reading through response activities. A nonexperimental comparative design was used to examine the effects of independent reading on reading volume and reading achievement. Results indicated that there were no statistically significant effects between the independent reading group and the no independent reading group for reading achievement or reading volume. Additionally, there was no statistically significant difference in growth of reading achievement between higher and lower readers in the independent reading group
Understanding the Philosophical Positions of Classical and Neo Pragmatists for Mixed Methods Research
Pragmatism is the most popular philosophy/paradigm in the international field of mixed methods research (MMR). This article therefore introduces, describes, and contrasts the philosophies of the most well known pragmatists, including the three most important classical pragmatists (Charles Sanders Peirce, William James and John Dewey) and two neopragmatists (Richard Rorty and Susan Haack). It is shown that Rorty and James fit well with qualitatively driven MMR (i. e., MMR where the qualitative component of the study is primary); Peirce fits well with quantitatively driven MMR (i. e., MMR where the quantitative component is primary); and Dewey fits well with MMR that attempts to treat qualitative and quantitative research/philosophy equally (i. e., equal-status mixed methods research). Importantly, it is shown here that pragmatism offers a way out of many philosophy of science quagmires facing social researchers and it offers a promising philosophy for mixed methods research practice
Cold collisions of OH and Rb. I: the free collision
We have calculated elastic and state-resolved inelastic cross sections for
cold and ultracold collisions in the Rb() + OH() system,
including fine-structure and hyperfine effects. We have developed a new set of
five potential energy surfaces for Rb-OH() from high-level {\em ab
initio} electronic structure calculations, which exhibit conical intersections
between covalent and ion-pair states. The surfaces are transformed to a
quasidiabatic representation. The collision problem is expanded in a set of
channels suitable for handling the system in the presence of electric and/or
magnetic fields, although we consider the zero-field limit in this work.
Because of the large number of scattering channels involved, we propose and
make use of suitable approximations. To account for the hyperfine structure of
both collision partners in the short-range region we develop a
frame-transformation procedure which includes most of the hyperfine
Hamiltonian. Scattering cross sections on the order of cm are
predicted for temperatures typical of Stark decelerators. We also conclude that
spin orientation of the partners is completely disrupted during the collision.
Implications for both sympathetic cooling of OH molecules in an environment of
ultracold Rb atoms and experimental observability of the collisions are
discussed.Comment: 20 pages, 16 figure
Cancer Pain: An Age-Based Analysis
Although cancer pain (consistent and breakthrough pain [BTP; pain flares interrupting well-controlled baseline pain]) is common among cancer patients, its characteristics, etiology, and impact on health-related quality of life (HRQOL) across the lifespan are poorly understood.This longitudinal study examines age-based differences and pain-related interference in young and old patients with cancer-related pain over 6 months. Patients in the community with stage III or IV breast, prostate, colorectal, or lung cancer, or stage II–IV multiple myeloma with BTP completed surveys (upon initial assessment, 3 and 6 months) assessing consistent pain, BTP, depressed affect, active coping ability, and HRQOL using previously validated measures.Respondents (N = 96) were 70% white and 66% female, with a mean age of 57 ± 10 years. There were no significant differences in pain severity based upon age. However, the younger group experienced more pain flares with greater frequency ( P = 0.05). The oldest group had better emotional functioning at baseline but worse physical functioning at 6 months. Younger groups also had worse cognitive functioning at 6 months ( P = 0.03). Pain interference was independent of age.These data provide evidence for the significant toll of cancer pain on overall health and well-being of young and old adults alike but demonstrate an increased toll for younger adults (especially financially). Beyond race and gender disparities, further health care disparities in the cancer and cancer pain were identified by age, illustrating the need for additional research across the lifespan in diverse cancer survivors.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/79337/1/j.1526-4637.2010.00957.x.pd
Photometric Calibration of the Supernova Legacy Survey Fields
We present the photometric calibration of the Supernova Legacy Survey (SNLS)
fields. The SNLS aims at measuring the distances to SNe Ia at (0.3<z<1) using
MegaCam, the 1 deg^2 imager on the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT). The
uncertainty affecting the photometric calibration of the survey dominates the
systematic uncertainty of the key measurement of the survey, namely the dark
energy equation of state. The photometric calibration of the SNLS requires
obtaining a uniform response across the imager, calibrating the science field
stars in each survey band (SDSS-like ugriz bands) with respect to standards
with known flux in the same bands, and binding the calibration to the UBVRI
Landolt standards used to calibrate the nearby SNe from the literature
necessary to produce cosmological constraints. The spatial non-uniformities of
the imager photometric response are mapped using dithered observations of dense
stellar fields. Photometric zero-points against Landolt standards are obtained.
The linearity of the instrument is studied. We show that the imager filters and
photometric response are not uniform and publish correction maps. We present
models of the effective passbands of the instrument as a function of the
position on the focal plane. We define a natural magnitude system for MegaCam.
We show that the systematics affecting the magnitude-to-flux relations can be
reduced if we use the spectrophotometric standard star BD +17 4708 instead of
Vega as a fundamental flux standard. We publish ugriz catalogs of tertiary
standards for all the SNLS fields.Comment: 46 pages, 23 figures. Accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysics. Online
material available at the CDS via anonymous ftp to cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr
(130.79.128.5) or http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/cgi-bin/qcat?J/A+A/ or
alternatively from: http://supernovae.in2p3.fr/snls3/regnault09_cds.tar.g
The Exoplanet Eccentricity Distribution from Kepler Planet Candidates
The eccentricity distribution of exoplanets is known from radial velocity
surveys to be divergent from circular orbits beyond 0.1 AU. This is
particularly the case for large planets where the radial velocity technique is
most sensitive. The eccentricity of planetary orbits can have a large effect on
the transit probability and subsequently the planet yield of transit surveys.
The Kepler mission is the first transit survey that probes deep enough into
period-space to allow this effect to be seen via the variation in transit
durations. We use the Kepler planet candidates to show that the eccentricity
distribution is consistent with that found from radial velocity surveys to a
high degree of confidence. We further show that the mean eccentricity of the
Kepler candidates decreases with decreasing planet size indicating that smaller
planets are preferentially found in low-eccentricity orbits.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Effects of Intermittent Emission: Noise Inventory for Scintillating Pulsar B0834+06
We compare signal and noise for observations of the scintillating pulsar
B0834+06, using very-long baseline interferometry and a single-dish
spectrometer. Comparisons between instruments and with models suggest that
amplitude variations of the pulsar strongly affect the amount and distribution
of self-noise. We show that noise follows a quadratic polynomial with flux
density, in spectral observations. Constant coefficients, indicative of
background noise, agree well with expectation; whereas second-order
coefficients, indicative of self-noise, are about 3 times values expected for a
pulsar with constant on-pulse flux density. We show that variations in flux
density during the 10-sec integration account for the discrepancy. In the
secondary spectrum, about 97% of spectral power lies within the pulsar's
typical scintillation bandwidth and timescale; an extended scintillation arc
contains about 3%. For a pulsar with constant on-pulse flux density, noise in
the dynamic spectrum will appear as a uniformly-distributed background in the
secondary spectrum. We find that this uniform noise background contains 95% of
noise in the dynamic spectrum for interferometric observations; but only 35% of
noise in the dynamic spectrum for single-dish observations. Receiver and sky
dominate noise for our interferometric observations, whereas self-noise
dominates for single-dish. We suggest that intermittent emission by the pulsar,
on timescales < 300 microseconds, concentrates self-noise near the origin in
the secondary spectrum, by correlating noise over the dynamic spectrum. We
suggest that intermittency sets fundamental limits on pulsar astrometry or
timing. Accounting of noise may provide means for detection of intermittent
sources, when effects of propagation are unknown or impractical to invert.Comment: 38 pages, 10 figure
- …