268 research outputs found
Water utilization, evapotranspiration and soil moisture monitoring in the south east region of south Australia
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Parent perceived barriers and facilitators of children's adventurous play in Britain: a framework analysis
This is the final version. Available on open access from BMC via the DOI in this recordAvailability of data and materials:
The data obtained and analysed in the current study are available via the following link:
https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-8793-1.BACKGROUND: From a public health perspective there is growing interest in children's play, including play involving risk and adventure, in relation to children's physical and mental health. Regarding mental health, it is theorised that adventurous play, where children experience thrilling, exciting emotions, offers important learning opportunities that prepare children for dealing with uncertainty and help prevent anxiety. Despite these benefits, adventurous play has decreased substantially within a generation. Parents have a key role in facilitating or limiting children's opportunities for adventurous play, but research identifying the barriers and facilitators parents perceive in relation to adventurous play is scarce. The present study therefore examined the barriers to and facilitators of adventurous play as perceived by parents of school-aged children in Britain. METHODS: This study analysed data from a subsample of parents in Britain (n = 377) who participated in the nationally representative British Children's Play Survey. Parents responded to two open-ended questions pertaining to the barriers to and facilitators of children's adventurous play. Responses were analysed using a qualitative Framework Analysis, an approach suitable for managing large datasets with specific research questions. RESULTS: Four framework categories were identified: Social Environment; Physical Environment; Risk of Injury; Child Factors. Social Environment included barriers and facilitators related to parents, family and peers, as well as community and society. Dominant themes within the Social Environment related to perceptions about the certainty of child safety, such as supervision and the safety of society. Beliefs about the benefits of adventurous play for development and well-being were also important in the Social Environment. Physical Environment factors focused on safety and practical issues. Risk of Injury captured concerns about children being injured during play. Child Factors included child attributes, such as play preference, developmental ability and trait-like characteristics. CONCLUSIONS: Improved understanding of what influences parent perceptions of adventurous play can inform public health interventions designed to improve children's opportunities for and engagement in adventurous play, with a view to promote children's physical and mental health.Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)UKR
Direct Reprogramming of Cardiac Fibroblasts to Repair the Injured Heart
Coronary heart disease is a leading cause of mortality and morbidity. Those that survive acute myocardial infarction are at significant risk of subsequent heart failure due to fibrotic remodelling of the infarcted myocardium. By applying knowledge from the study of embryonic cardiovascular development, modern medicine offers hope for treatment of this condition through regeneration of the myocardium by direct reprogramming of fibrotic scar tissue. Here, we will review mechanisms of cell fate specification leading to the generation of cardiovascular cell types in the embryo and use this as a framework in which to understand direct reprogramming. Driving expression of a network of transcription factors, micro RNA or small molecule epigenetic modifiers can reverse epigenetic silencing, reverting differentiated cells to a state of induced pluripotency. The pluripotent state can be bypassed by direct reprogramming in which one differentiated cell type can be transdifferentiated into another. Transdifferentiating cardiac fibroblasts to cardiomyocytes requires a network of transcription factors similar to that observed in embryonic multipotent cardiac progenitors. There is some flexibility in the composition of this network. These studies raise the possibility that the failing heart could one day be regenerated by directly reprogramming cardiac fibroblasts within post-infarct scar tissue
Planning engagement with web resources to improve diet quality and break up sedentary time for home-working employees: a mixed methods study.
As home working becomes more common, employers may struggle to provide health promotion interventions that can successfully bridge the gap between employees' intentions to engage in healthier behaviors and actual action. Based on past evidence that action planning can successfully encourage the adoption of healthier behaviors, this mixed-methods study of a web-based self-help intervention incorporated a randomized planning trial that included quantitative measures of engagement and follow-up qualitative interviews with a subsample of participants. Participants either (a) selected a movement plan for incorporating a series of 2-min exercise videos into their work week to break up sedentary time and a balanced meal plan with recipe cards for a week's lunches and dinners or (b) received access to these resources without a plan. Selecting a movement plan was more effective at increasing engagement with the web resources compared to the no-plan condition. In the follow-up interviews, participants indicated that the plan helped to remind participants to engage with the resources and made it simpler for them to follow the guidance for exercises and meals. Ease of use and being able to fit exercises and meals around work tasks were key factors that facilitated uptake of the resources, while lack of time and worries about how colleagues would perceive them taking breaks to use the resources were barriers to uptake. Participants' self-efficacy was associated with general resource use but not plan adherence. Overall, including plans with online self-help resources could enhance their uptake. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved)
Recommended from our members
Understanding representations of uncertainty, an eye-tracking study – Part 1: The effect of anchoring
Geoscience communicators must think carefully about how
uncertainty is represented and how users may interpret these
representations. Doing so will help communicate risk more effectively, which
can elicit appropriate responses. Communication of uncertainty is not just a
geosciences problem; recently, communication of uncertainty has come to the
forefront over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, but the lessons learned
from communication during the pandemic can be adopted across geosciences as
well. To test interpretations of environmental forecasts with uncertainty,
a decision task survey was administered to 65 participants who saw different
hypothetical forecast representations common to presentations of
environmental data and forecasts: deterministic, spaghetti plot with and
without a median line, fan plot with and without a median line, and box plot
with and without a median line. While participants completed the survey,
their eye movements were monitored with eye-tracking software. Participants'
eye movements were anchored to the median line, not focusing on possible
extreme values to the same extent as when no median line was present.
Additionally, participants largely correctly interpreted extreme values from
the spaghetti and fan plots, but misinterpreted extreme values from the box
plot, perhaps because participants spent little time fixating on the key.
These results suggest that anchoring lines, such as median lines, should
only be used where users should be guided to particular values and where
extreme values are not as important in data interpretation. Additionally,
fan or spaghetti plots should be considered instead of box plots to reduce
misinterpretation of extreme values. Further study on the role of expertise
and the change in eye movements across the graph area and key is explored in more detail in the companion paper to this study (Williams et al., 2023; hereafter Part 2).</p
Recommended from our members
Understanding representations of uncertainty, an eye-tracking study – Part 2: The effect of expertise
As the ability to make predictions regarding uncertainty information
representing natural hazards increases, an important question for those
designing and communicating hazard forecasts is how visualizations of
uncertainty influence understanding amongst the intended, potentially
varied, target audiences. End-users have a wide range of differing expertise
and backgrounds, possibly influencing the decision-making process they
undertake for a given forecast presentation. Our previous, Part 1 study
(Mulder et al., 2023) examined how the presentation of uncertainty
information influenced end-user decision making. Here, we shift the focus to
examine the decisions and reactions of participants with differing areas of expertise
(meteorology, psychology, and graphic-communication students) when presented
with varied hypothetical forecast representations (boxplot, fan plot, or
spaghetti plot with and without median lines) using the same eye-tracking
methods and experiments. Participants made decisions about a fictional
scenario involving the choices between ships of different sizes in the face
of varying ice thickness forecasts. Eye movements to the graph area and key
and how they changed over time (early, intermediate, and later viewing
periods) were examined. More fixations (maintained gaze on one location)
and more fixation time were spent on the graph and key during early and
intermediate periods of viewing, particularly for boxplots and fan plots.
The inclusion of median lines led to less fixations being made on all graph
types during early and intermediate viewing periods. No difference in eye
movement behaviour was found due to expertise; however, those with greater
expertise were more accurate in their decisions, particularly during more
difficult scenarios. Where scientific producers seek to draw users to the
central estimate, an anchoring line can significantly reduce cognitive load,
leading both experts and non-experts to make more rational decisions. When
asking users to consider extreme scenarios or uncertainty, different prior
expertise can lead to significantly different cognitive loads for processing
information, with an impact on one's ability to make appropriate decisions.</p
Recommended from our members
The programming of sequences of saccades
Saccadic eye movements move the high-resolution fovea to point at regions of interest. Saccades can only be generated serially (i.e., one at a time). However, what remains unclear is the extent to which saccades are programmed in parallel (i.e., a series of such moments can be planned together) and how far ahead such planning occurs. In the current experiment, we investigate this issue with a saccade contingent preview paradigm. Participants were asked to execute saccadic eye movements in response to seven small circles presented on a screen. The extent to which participants were given prior information about target locations was varied on a trial-by-trial basis: participants were aware of the location of the next target only, the next three, five, or all seven targets. The addition of new targets to the display was made during the saccade to the next target in the sequence. The overall time taken to complete the sequence was decreased as more targets were available up to all seven targets. This was a result of a reduction in the number of saccades being executed and a reduction in their saccade latencies. Surprisingly, these results suggest that, when faced with a demand to saccade to a large number of target locations, saccade preparation about all target locations is carried out in paralle
Attribution of divergent northern vegetation growth responses to lengthening non-frozen seasons using satellite optical-NIR and microwave remote sensing
The non-frozen (NF) season duration strongly influences the northern carbon cycle where frozen (FR) temperatures are a major constraint to biological processes. The landscape freeze-thaw (FT) signal from satellite microwave remote sensing provides a surrogate measure of FR temperature constraints to ecosystem productivity, trace gas exchange, and surface water mobility. We analysed a new global satellite data record of daily landscape FT dynamics derived from temporal classification of overlapping SMMR and SSM/I 37 GHz frequency brightness temperatures (Tb). The FT record was used to quantify regional patterns, annual variability, and trends in the NF season over northern (≥45°N) vegetated land areas. The ecological significance of these changes was evaluated against satellite normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) anomalies, estimated moisture and temperature constraints to productivity determined from meteorological reanalysis, and atmospheric CO2 records. The FT record shows a lengthening (2.4 days decade-1; p < 0.005) mean annual NF season trend (1979-2010) for the high northern latitudes that is 26% larger than the Northern Hemisphere trend. The NDVI summer growth response to these changes is spatially complex and coincides with local dominance of cold temperature or moisture constraints to productivity. Longer NF seasons are predominantly enhancing productivity in cold temperature-constrained areas, whereas these effects are reduced or reversed in more moisture-constrained areas. Longer NF seasons also increase the atmospheric CO2 seasonal amplitude by enhancing both regional carbon uptake and emissions. We find that cold temperature constraints to northern growing seasons are relaxing, whereas potential benefits for productivity and carbon sink activity are becoming more dependent on the terrestrial water balance and supply of plant-available moisture needed to meet additional water use demands under a warming climate. © 2014 Taylor & Francis
- …