150 research outputs found

    A Comparison of High Causally and Low Causally Oriented Sixth Grade Children on Personality Variables Indicative of Mental Health

    Get PDF
    Two tests served as selection criteria for high and low causally oriented groups, the Social Causal Test and the Physical Causal Test. They were administered to 280 sixth graders. The Highs (N 90) were defined as those above the group mean on both tests, Lows (N 73) as those falling below both means. The 12 item Intolerance of Ambiguity Scale and the 24 item Children\u27s Antidemocratic Attitude Scale were administered to all subjects. The Highs showed significantly less antidemocratic attitude and less intolerance of ambiguity than the Lows . The differences remained significant if subjects were matched on IQ scores

    Small effective population sizes in two planktonic freshwater copepod species (Eudiaptomus) with apparently large census sizes

    Get PDF
    In small planktonic organisms, large census sizes (Nc) suggest large effective population sizes (Ne), but reliable estimates are rare. Here, we present Ne/Nc ratios for two freshwater copepod species (Eudiaptomus sp.) using temporal samples of multilocus microsatellite genotypes and a pseudo-likelihood approach. Ne/Nc ratios were very small in both Eudiaptomus species (10−7–10−8). Although we hypothesized that the species producing resting eggs (E. graciloides) had a larger Ne than the other (E. gracilis), estimates were not statistically different (E. graciloides: Ne = 672.7, CI: 276–1949; E. gracilis: Ne = 1027.4, CI: 449–2495), suggesting that the propagule bank of E. graciloides had no detectable influence on Ne

    Puberty in the Bronze Age: First application of a puberty estimation method to a prehistoric population

    Full text link
    This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Doe, Danielle M., et al. "Puberty in the Bronze Age: First application of a puberty estimation method to a prehistoric population". International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 29.6 (2019): 1091-1099, which has been published in final form at https://doi.org/10.1002/oa.2822. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Use of Self-Archived VersionsPuberty and adolescence represent a significant period of physical growth and maturation and a critical life stage in which children transition into adults within their societies. Numerous studies have observed a secular trend and have determined that puberty is now occurring earlier than in the past. This investigation represents the first application of a methodology for assessing the pubertal status of osteological remains to a prehistoric skeletal sample. Six Bronze Age adolescent skeletons from the Cerro de La Encantada archaeological site (Ciudad Real, Spain) were analysed. Prepubescence was observed at age 9 and the transition phase of the pubertal growth spurt at 15 years of age. These results were similar to those obtained from medieval, Industrial Revolution, and modern populations, both within and outside of the Iberian Peninsula. The similarity in the development of the Bronze Age adolescents to that of other past and contemporary populations suggests that the pubertal process has remained essentially unchanged across millennia until recent times. However, other interpretations, including the influence of a subpar developmental environment and potential methodological artefacts, are possible. Nevertheless, studies of this type provide important information about a crucial transitory period in human developmentThe Laboratorio de Poblaciones del Pasado (LAPP) has been supported by Projects HAR2016‐78036‐P, HAR2016‐74846‐P, HAR2017‐82755‐P, and HAR2017‐83004‐P (Spanish Government) and a grant (Ref. 38360) from the Leakey Foundatio

    The adolescent brain and age-related behavioral manifestations

    Full text link

    Theories of adolecence

    No full text
    New Yorkx, 294 p.; 20 c

    Theories of adolescence

    No full text
    IX+201hlm.;20c
    corecore