3,456 research outputs found

    Pursuing Interpersonal Goals: Consequences for Interpersonal Conflict, Self-Relevant Affect, and Alcohol-Related Problems.

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    Three studies tested the effects of two interpersonal goals, self-image goals and compassionate goals, on hostility and conflict (Study 1), alcohol-related problems (Study 2), and self-relevant affect following goal progress and setbacks (Study 3). Self-image goals involve constructing and defending a positive self-image in the eyes of other people, whereas compassionate goals involve supporting others and contributing to something outside the self, thus reflecting two different motivational perspectives on the self. Using a longitudinal design (pretest assessments and 10 subsequent weekly surveys), Study 1 showed that chronic self-image goals, pursued by narcissistically entitled people, predict chronic relationship conflict and hostility. Chronic compassionate goals did not predict these same negative interpersonal outcomes. Study 2 showed that self-image goals, but not compassionate goals, are positively associated with alcohol-related problems. Subsequent cross-sectional path models showed that self-image goals relate to coping motives for drinking (drinking to reduce negative affect), but not enhancement motives (drinking to increase positive affect); coping motives then relate to heavy-episodic drinking, which in turn relate to alcohol-related problems. These results suggest a model of how self-image goals may translate into alcohol-related problems. Thus, given that self-image goals predict negative consequences and compassionate goals do not, Study 3 shifted focus to possible beneficial effects of compassionate goals. Specifically, and again using a longitudinal design (pretest assessments and 10 subsequent weekly surveys), Study 3 tested whether compassionate goals buffer negative emotional experience (i.e., shame) following goal setbacks in domains of contingent self-worth. Results showed that on weeks participants were high on compassionate goals relative to their own mean score, they were partially protected from experiencing shame. Taken together, these studies indicate that self-image goals to create desired self-images ultimately create interpersonal and intrapersonal problems; compassionate goals to support others do not create these same problems, and may instead offer some protection from consequences that arise from self-image concerns.Ph.D.PsychologyUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/77930/1/smoeller_1.pd

    Biased Social Perceptions of Knowledge: Implications for Negotiators' Rapport and Egocentrism

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    This study examines how people manage uncertain competitive social interactions. To achieve positive interaction outcomes, individuals may engage in a social perception process that leads them to believe they have obtained more information about others than these others gained about them. We investigate how asymmetric knowledge perceptions contribute to important aspects of negotiation, namely rapport building among strangers and egocentric beliefs about fairness of resource distribution. In Study 1, dyads completed measures of knowledge acquisition and partner evaluation after a rapport‐building exercise. Results showed that individuals believed they gained more information about their partner than vice versa; notably, the magnitude of this knowledge bias was associated with more positive partner evaluations. Study 2 showed that the magnitude of the knowledge bias predicted lower egocentrism in a commons dilemma task. Together, these results suggest knowledge asymmetries facilitate rapport among strangers and may have important implications for cooperation in competitive negotiation settings.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/111124/1/ncmr12047.pd

    Epileptogenic Tubers Are Associated with Increased Kurtosis of Susceptibility Values: A Combined Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping and Stereoelectroencephalography Pilot Study

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    BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Prior studies have found an association between calcification and the epileptogenicity of tubers in tuberous sclerosis complex. Quantitative susceptibility mapping is a novel tool sensitive to magnetic susceptibility alterations due to tissue calcification. We assessed the utility of quantitative susceptibility mapping in identifying putative epileptogenic tubers in tuberous sclerosis complex using stereoelectroencephalography data as ground truth. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We studied patients with tuberous sclerosis complex undergoing stereoelectroencephalography at a single center who had multiecho gradient-echo sequences available. Quantitative susceptibility mapping and R2* values were extracted for all tubers on the basis of manually drawn 3D ROIs using T1- and T2-FLAIR sequences. Characteristics of quantitative susceptibility mapping and R2* distributions from implanted tubers were compared using binary logistic generalized estimating equation models designed to identify ictal (involved in seizure onset) and interictal (persistent interictal epileptiform activity) tubers. These models were then applied to the unimplanted tubers to identify potential ictal and interictal tubers that were not sampled by stereoelectroencephalography. RESULTS: A total of 146 tubers were identified in 10 patients, 76 of which were sampled using stereoelectroencephalography. Increased kurtosis of the tuber quantitative susceptibility mapping values was associated with epileptogenicity (P = .04 for the ictal group and P = .005 for the interictal group) by the generalized estimating equation model. Both groups had poor sensitivity (35.0% and 44.1%, respectively) but high specificity (94.6% and 78.6%, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Our finding of increased kurtosis of quantitative susceptibility mapping values (heavy-tailed distribution) was highly specific, suggesting that it may be a useful biomarker to identify putative epileptogenic tubers in tuberous sclerosis complex. This finding motivates the investigation of underlying tuber mineralization and other properties driving kurtosis changes in quantitative susceptibility mapping values

    The coastal environment and human health : microbial indicators, pathogens, sentinels and reservoirs

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    Š 2008 Author et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Environmental Health 7 (2008): S3, doi:10.1186/1476-069X-7-S2-S3.Innovative research relating oceans and human health is advancing our understanding of disease-causing organisms in coastal ecosystems. Novel techniques are elucidating the loading, transport and fate of pathogens in coastal ecosystems, and identifying sources of contamination. This research is facilitating improved risk assessments for seafood consumers and those who use the oceans for recreation. A number of challenges still remain and define future directions of research and public policy. Sample processing and molecular detection techniques need to be advanced to allow rapid and specific identification of microbes of public health concern from complex environmental samples. Water quality standards need to be updated to more accurately reflect health risks and to provide managers with improved tools for decision-making. Greater discrimination of virulent versus harmless microbes is needed to identify environmental reservoirs of pathogens and factors leading to human infections. Investigations must include examination of microbial community dynamics that may be important from a human health perspective. Further research is needed to evaluate the ecology of non-enteric water-transmitted diseases. Sentinels should also be established and monitored, providing early warning of dangers to ecosystem health. Taken together, this effort will provide more reliable information about public health risks associated with beaches and seafood consumption, and how human activities can affect their exposure to disease-causing organisms from the oceans.The Oceans and Human Health Initiative research described within this paper is supported by the National Science Foundation, The National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Grant numbers are: NIEHS P50 ES012742 and NSF OCE- 043072 (RJG, LAA-Z, MFP), NSF OCE04-32479 and NIEHS P50 ES012740 (RSF), NSF OCE-0432368 and NIEHS P50 ES12736 (HMS-G), NIEHS P50 ES012762 and NSF OCE-0434087 (JSM)

    Becoming invisible: The ethics and politics of imperceptibility

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    This speculative essay examines ‘invisible’ social identities and the processes by which they are manifested and occasionally sought. Using various literary and academic sources, and loosely informed by an unlikely combination of Stoic philosophy and post-structuralist politics, we argue that invisibility is conventionally viewed as undesirable or ‘suffered’ by individuals or groups that are disadvantaged or marginalised within society. Whilst appreciating this possibility, we argue that social invisibility can also be the result of strategies carefully conceived and consciously pursued. We suggest that forms of social invisibility can be acquired by ethically informed personal action as well as by politically informed collective action. In this context, invisibility can be seen as a strategy of escaping from institutionalised and organisational judgements and which presents a challenge to common notions of voice and identity

    Orbital dynamics during an ultrafast insulator to metal transition

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    Phase transitions driven by ultrashort laser pulses have attracted interest both for understanding the fundamental physics of phase transitions and for potential new data storage or device applications. In many cases these transitions involve transient states that are different from those seen in equilibrium. To understand the microscopic properties of these states, it is useful to develop elementally selective probing techniques that operate in the time domain. Here we show fs-time-resolved measurements of V Ledge Resonant Inelastic X-Ray Scattering (RIXS) from the insulating phase of the Mott- Hubbard material V2O3 after ultrafast laser excitation. The probed orbital excitations within the d-shell of the V ion show a sub-ps time response, which evolve at later times to a state that appears electronically indistinguishable from the high-temperature metallic state. Our results demonstrate the potential for RIXS spectroscopy to study the ultrafast orbital dynamics in strongly correlated materials.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure

    Single hadron response measurement and calorimeter jet energy scale uncertainty with the ATLAS detector at the LHC

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    The uncertainty on the calorimeter energy response to jets of particles is derived for the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). First, the calorimeter response to single isolated charged hadrons is measured and compared to the Monte Carlo simulation using proton-proton collisions at centre-of-mass energies of sqrt(s) = 900 GeV and 7 TeV collected during 2009 and 2010. Then, using the decay of K_s and Lambda particles, the calorimeter response to specific types of particles (positively and negatively charged pions, protons, and anti-protons) is measured and compared to the Monte Carlo predictions. Finally, the jet energy scale uncertainty is determined by propagating the response uncertainty for single charged and neutral particles to jets. The response uncertainty is 2-5% for central isolated hadrons and 1-3% for the final calorimeter jet energy scale.Comment: 24 pages plus author list (36 pages total), 23 figures, 1 table, submitted to European Physical Journal

    Standalone vertex nding in the ATLAS muon spectrometer

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    A dedicated reconstruction algorithm to find decay vertices in the ATLAS muon spectrometer is presented. The algorithm searches the region just upstream of or inside the muon spectrometer volume for multi-particle vertices that originate from the decay of particles with long decay paths. The performance of the algorithm is evaluated using both a sample of simulated Higgs boson events, in which the Higgs boson decays to long-lived neutral particles that in turn decay to bbar b final states, and pp collision data at √s = 7 TeV collected with the ATLAS detector at the LHC during 2011
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