814 research outputs found
Joseph C. Risser Sr., 1892–1982
This biographical sketch of Joseph C. Risser Sr. corresponds to the historic text, The Classic: The Iliac Apophysis: An Invaluable Sign in the Management of Scoliosis, available at DOI 10.1007/s11999-009-1096-z
Mixture of Kernels and Iterated Semidirect Product of Diffeomorphisms Groups
In the framework of large deformation diffeomorphic metric mapping (LDDMM),
we develop a multi-scale theory for the diffeomorphism group based on previous
works. The purpose of the paper is (1) to develop in details a variational
approach for multi-scale analysis of diffeomorphisms, (2) to generalise to
several scales the semidirect product representation and (3) to illustrate the
resulting diffeomorphic decomposition on synthetic and real images. We also
show that the approaches presented in other papers and the mixture of kernels
are equivalent.Comment: 21 pages, revised version without section on evaluatio
Effectiveness of a Faith-placed Cardiovascular Health Promotion Intervention for Rural Adults
Introduction: Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of mortality in the US. Further, rural US adults experience disproportionately high CVD prevalence and mortality compared to non-rural. Cardiovascular risk-reduction interventions for rural adults have shown short-term effectiveness, but long-term maintenance of outcomes remains a challenge. Faith organizations offer promise as collaborative partners for translating evidence-based interventions to reduce CVD.
Methods: We adapted and implemented a collaborative, faith-placed, CVD risk-reduction intervention in rural Illinois. We used a quasi-experimental, pre-post design to compare changes in dietary and physical activity among participants. Intervention components included Heart Smart for Women (HSFW), an evidence-based program implemented weekly for 12 weeks followed by Heart Smart Maintenance (HSM), implemented monthly for two years. Participants engaged in HSFW only, HSM only, or both. We used regression and generalized estimating equations models to examine changes in outcomes after one year.
Results: Among participants who completed both baseline and one-year surveys (n = 131), HSFW+HSM participants had significantly higher vegetable consumption (p = .007) and combined fruit/vegetable consumption (p = .01) compared to the HSM-only group at one year. We found no differences in physical activity.
Conclusion: Improving and maintaining CVD-risk behaviors is a persistent challenge in rural populations. Advancing research to improve our understanding of effective translation of CVD risk-reduction interventions in rural populations is critical
Parental Abuse, Risky Behavior and Psychopathic Traits in Adolescents and Early Adults
This study examines the associations between parental abuse, risky behavior, and affective psychopathic traits. Ninety-one (49% males) rural adolescents and young adults (between the ages of fourteen and twenty-five) participated in an investigation of gene and environment interactions. The sample consisted of high school and undergraduate college students. These participants provided self-reports of parental abuse, risky behaviors, and psychopathic affective traits. Results suggested that psychopathic traits, especially a lack of remorse and parental abuse, independently account for some risky behavior.https://digitalcommons.mtech.edu/urp_aug_2013/1001/thumbnail.jp
Writing composition ability and spelling competence in deaf subjects: a psycholinguistic analysis of source of difficulties
We studied the compositional written skills and spelling competence of individuals with a severe hearing impairment, examining qualitative and quantitative characteristics of their texts, the psycholinguistic variables modulating their productions, and writing errors following a fine-grained analysis. Sixteen deaf young adults, educated in bilingual settings, were examined and compared to a group of control hearing subjects matched for gender, age, and education. Writing skills were examined through both written composition and written picture-naming tasks. Concerning compositional skills, deaf participants produced shorter and less informative texts, with fewer adjectives and subordinates, and were qualitatively worse with respect to texts produced by hearing controls. Words produced by deaf participants were those acquired earlier and facilitated by a higher lexical neighbourhood. Errors were mainly semantic, morphological, and syntactic errors, reflecting general linguistic weakness. Spelling errors were few, with phonologically nonplausible misspellings relative to controls, and with phonologically plausible ones being quite rare. In the picture-naming task, deaf people had a greater number of all types of errors with respect to their text, including semantic and morphological errors. Their spelling performance featured mainly phonologically nonplausible misspellings, while phonologically plausible ones were relatively few and comparable to controls. Overall, the writing of deaf adults reveal limitations in grammar and lexical-sematic linguistic competence. This was associated with spelling deficits characterized mainly by the poorer use of phonological sublexical spelling procedures. However, in an ecologic context, their spelling deficits appear not so important as has been claimed in the literature
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Social and learning strategies male community college students use to maximize learning from cooperative work experiences
Employers often lament that many American workers are not qualified for
present and future jobs due to changing skills requirements and deficiencies of
schools. In 1991, the Secretary of Labor's Commission on Achieving Necessary
Skills (SCANS) report recommended educators use work sites to help students achieve
foundation skills and workplace competencies. Through cooperative work experiences
(CWE), many community college professional/technical programs place
students in actual work situations as part of program requirements. These experiences
enable students to apply classroom learning while engaged in productive work related
to their specialties.
The purpose of this study was to identify and describe social and learning
strategies male community college students use to maximize learning from
cooperative work experiences. Three conditions influence these strategies.
1. Every work experience situation is unique. Numerous environmental and
personality variables affect the quality of the work experience.
2. Trainers are employees paid for the work they do. Productive work is their
first priority; training is secondary.
3. Work site trainers are knowledgeable and highly skilled but may not be trained
to teach.
Based on in-depth interviews with male students and trainers/supervisors, this
study found that (a) a candid and respectful relationship between student and trainer
must exist before a trainer will share fully his expertise and knowledge with the
student and students have primary responsibility for establishing and maintaining this
relationship, (b) the effort a trainer is willing to expend on training reflects his
perception of a student's eagerness to excel and willingness to work hard, and (c)
students have primary responsibility for managing their own learning during work
experiences.
Students use four primary learning strategies to maximize their learning during
a CWE: (a) applying cognitive apprenticeship processes, (b) solving problems, (c)
recognizing and pursuing incidental learning opportunities, and (d) practicing
technical skills.
Although the subjects of this study represent only a segment of professional/
technical programs, the findings may be useful for preparing other program students
for their work experiences
Sizing of a reversible magnetic heat pump for the automotive industry
[EN] This paper focuses on the design of an innovative air-conditioning system, namely a magnetocaloric air-conditioner for an electric minibus. An integrated design of the complete system is necessary, as the hot and cold side of the regenerator will work under dynamic conditions which depend on the instantaneous thermal load in the cabin.
In order to assist the design of the system, a dynamic model has been developed for the cabin, the hydraulic loops and heat exchangers, and the magnetocaloric unit. This paper presents (i) a description of the dynamic models, (ii) an analysis of the operating conditions of the magnetocaloric unit and (iii) a discussion on the design of the magnetocaloric air-conditioner. The results show that the electric minibus requests 1.60 kW of cooling power over a span of 37 K in cooling mode, and 3.39 kW of heating power over a span of 40 K.This work has been supported by the European Commission under the 7th European Community framework program as part of the ICE project "MagnetoCaloric Refrigeration for Efficient Electric Air-Conditioning", Grant Agreement no. 265434. B. Torregrosa-Jaime acknowledges the Spanish Science and Innovation Ministry (Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion) for receiving the Research Fellowship FPU ref. AP2010-2160.Torregrosa Jaime, B.; Corberán Salvador, JM.; Vasile, C.; Muller, C.; Risser, M.; Payá Herrero, J. (2014). Sizing of a reversible magnetic heat pump for the automotive industry. International Journal of Refrigeration. 37:156-164. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijrefrig.2013.06.018S1561643
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Theoretical determination of the nonlinear optical properties of inorganic polymers
Third order hyperpolarizabilities were calculated using the Huckel Hamiltonian and third order perturbation theory for a series of phosphonitrilic compounds, (X{sub 2}P-N){sub n}, as a function of bond length alternation, ligand substitution and backbone conformation. Phosphonitrilic compounds show hyperpolarizabilities comparable to those reported for organic species, and are modulated by ligand group electronegativity. In contrast to organic polyenes, the difference in {pi} orbital energy between phosphorus and nitrogen is critical to determining the onset of saturation and the magnitude of the hyperpolarizability. Conformation effects are smaller than those seen in polyenes. 15 refs., 5 figs
Discovery of the Cobalt Isotopes
Twenty-six cobalt isotopes have so far been observed; the discovery of these
isotopes is discussed. For each isotope a brief summary of the first refereed
publication, including the production and identification method, is presented.Comment: to be published in Atomic Data and Nuclear Data Table
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