6,921 research outputs found
The Next 50 Years: Considering Gender as a Context for Understanding Young Children’s Peer Relationships
The study of children’s peer relationships has been well represented within the pages of Merrill-Palmer Quarterly. Particularly over the last decade, the pace of publishing studies on peer relationships has increased. Despite this upswing in interest in peer relationships, significant gaps remain. In this article, we focus on a particularly overlooked and significant area of peer relationships, namely, the role of sex-segregated peer interactions and how these relate to development in early childhood. We review why this topic is important for researchers to consider and highlight promising directions for research that we hope will appear in future volumes of Merrill-Palmer Quarterly
Stakeholder’s experiences of living and caring in technology-rich supported living environments for tenants living with dementia
From Springer Nature via Jisc Publications RouterHistory: received 2021-12-22, registration 2023-01-12, accepted 2023-01-12, pub-electronic 2023-02-01, online 2023-02-01, collection 2023-12Publication status: PublishedAcknowledgements: Acknowledgements: We would like to acknowledge the wider research team that worked within the TESA-DRI Project. We are grateful to our peer-researchers for their time and commitment to the TESA-DRI project. The project was funded by the Health and Social Care Research and Development Division Public Health Agency and Atlantic Philanthropies (COM/4955/14).Background: Technology innovation provides an opportunity to support the rising number of people living with dementia globally. The present study examines experiences of people who have dementia and live in technology enriched supported care models. Additionally, it explores caregiver’s attitudes towards technology use with the housing scheme. Methods: A qualitative research design was adopted, and eight housing schemes consented to take part in the study. A technology audit was undertaken in addition to participant interviews and caregiver survey. Seven peer researchers conducted semi-structured interviews with 22 people living with dementia. Interviews were analysed using thematic analysis. Informal and formal caregivers were invited to complete a survey to capture their attitudes towards technology use. A total of 20 informal and 31 formal caregiver surveys were returned. All surveys were input into Survey Monkey and downloaded into excel for analysis. Closed questions were analysed using descriptive statistics and open-ended questions were organised into themes and described descriptively. Results: The technology audit identified that technologies were in place from as early as 2002. Technology heterogeneity of, both passive and active devices, was found within the housing schemes. Technologies such as wearable devices were reportedly used according to need, and mobile phone use was widely adopted. The themes that developed out of the tenant interviews were: Attitudes and Engagement with Technology; Technology Enhancing Tenants Sense of Security; Seeking Support and Digital Literacy; and Technology Enabled Connection. A lack of awareness about living alongside technology was a major finding. Technologies enabled a sense of reassurance and facilitated connections with the wider community. The interaction with technology presented challenges, for example, remembering passwords, access to Wi-Fi and the identification of its use in an emergency. The caregiver survey reported a range of facilitators and barriers for the use of technology within care. Both types of caregivers held relatively similar views around the benefits of technology, however their views on issues such as privacy and consent varied. Safety was considered more important than right to privacy by family caregivers. Conclusions: The present study provides new insight into stakeholder’s experiences of living, working and caregiving alongside technology in supported living environments. As the generation of people living with dementia become more tech savvy, harnessing everyday technologies to support care could enable holistic care and support the transition through the care continuum. Advance care planning and technology assessments are at the very core of future technology provision. It is evident that a paternalistic attitudes towards technology use could impact the multitude of benefits technology can play in both health and leisure for people living with dementia and their caregivers.pubpu
Spin Dynamics of the Magnetoresistive Pyrochlore Tl_2Mn_2O_7
Neutron scattering has been used to study the magnetic order and spin
dynamics of the colossal magnetoresistive pyrochlore Tl_2Mn_2O_7. On cooling
from the paramagnetic state, magnetic correlations develop and appear to
diverge at T_C (123 K). In the ferromagnetic phase well defined spin waves are
observed, with a gapless ( meV) dispersion relation E=Dq^{2} as
expected for an ideal isotropic ferromagnet. As T approaches T_C from low T,
the spin waves renormalize, but no significant central diffusive component to
the fluctuation spectrum is observed in stark contrast to the
La(Ca,Ba,Sr)MnO system. These results argue strongly that the
mechanism responsible for the magnetoresistive effect has a different origin in
these two classes of materials.Comment: 4 pages (RevTex), 4 figures (encapsulated postscript), to be
published in Phys. Rev. Let
Particle acceleration and transport in the tail and at the front side of the magnetosphere, task 1 and 2
The work under this grant involved studies of: (1) the acceleration and heating of ions in the course of magnetospheric substorms and the spatial distributions of the ion populations in the magnetotail; and (2) the comparison in in-situ acceleration at the bow shock and the leakage of energetic particles from the magnetosphere as source of energetic ions upstream of the Earth's bow shock
Discovering and Recovering the Nineteenth-Century Journals of Martha E. McMillan in an American Women Writer’s Course: A Collaborative Digital Recovery Project
The following essay tells a story about an undergraduate American Women Writer\u27s course, the University archives, a nineteenth-century journal, and a Digital Recovery project. The essay explains that the story of undergraduates and their work to discover and to recover a primary text within the context of a single course could not have happened without collaboration. Because our story is a story of collaboration, I cannot tell it alone. I am Michelle Wood, an Associate Professor of English who teaches American Literature. During spring semester 2015, I collaborated with Lynn Brock, the Dean of Library Sciences, to create an archival recovery project for a course entitled American Women Writers. Together we will tell our story
Discovering and Recovering the Nineteenth-Century Journals of Martha E. McMillan in an American Women Writer’s Course: A Collaborative Digital Recovery Project
The following essay tells a story about an undergraduate American Women Writer\u27s course, the University archives, a nineteenth-century journal, and a Digital Recovery project. The essay explains that the story of undergraduates and their work to discover and to recover a primary text within the context of a single course could not have happened without collaboration. Because our story is a story of collaboration, I cannot tell it alone. I am Michelle Wood, an Associate Professor of English who teaches American Literature. During spring semester 2015, I collaborated with Lynn Brock, the Dean of Library Sciences, to create an archival recovery project for a course entitled American Women Writers. Together we will tell our story
Mejoramiento de los procesos en el quirófano mediante la aplicación de la metodologÃa Lean de Toyota
ResumenEl sector de la atención en salud está necesitando un cambio fundamental a fin de mejorar significativamente los resultados y limitar al mismo tiempo los costos. Los métodos Lean desarrollados inicialmente en la industria manufacturera han demostrado mejorar realmente la calidad, la productividad y la seguridad, a la vez que permiten utilizar menos recursos en la gestión de la salud. Estas herramientas, prácticas gerenciales y filosofÃas se han adaptado con éxito en los servicios de cirugÃa del SC. Pueden transformar el sistema y la cultura mediante el compromiso del personal de asistencia para el desarrollo de un servicio que mejora continuamente y permite obtener mejores resultados clÃnicos duraderos.AbstractHealthcare is in need of fundamental change if we are going to make significant improvements in outcomes while limiting costs. Lean methods, initially developed in the manufacturing industry, have been shown to deliver real improvements in quality, productivity, and safety while using fewer resources in healthcare service settings. These tools, management practices and philosophies have been successfully adapted in operative services at SC. They can transform your system and culture through engagement of frontline staff into a continuously improving service with real and sustainable enhancements in clinical outcomes
The prototypical organic-oxide interface: intra-molecular resolution of sexiphenyl on InO(111)
The performance of an organic-semiconductor device is critically determined
by the geometric alignment, orientation, and ordering of the organic molecules.
While an organic multilayer eventually adopts the crystal structure of the
organic material, the alignment and configuration at the interface with the
substrate/electrode material is essential for charge injection into the organic
layer. This work focuses on the prototypical organic semiconductor
para-sexiphenyl (6P) adsorbed on InO(111), the thermodynamically most
stable surface of the material that the most common transparent conducting
oxide, indium tin oxide (ITO) is based on. The onset of nucleation and
formation of the first monolayer are followed with atomically-resolved scanning
tunneling microscopy (STM) and non-contact atomic force microscopy (nc-AFM).
Annealing to 200C provides sufficient thermal energy for the molecules
to orient themselves along the high-symmetry directions of the surface, leading
to a single adsorption site. The AFM data suggests a twisted adsorption
geometry. With increasing coverage, the 6P molecules first form a loose network
with poor long-range order. Eventually the molecules re-orient and form an
ordered monolayer. This first monolayer has a densely packed, well-ordered
(21) structure with one 6P per InO(111) substrate unit cell,
i.e., a molecular density of 5.6410 cm
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