4,475 research outputs found

    Discourses Of Prejudice In The professions: The Case Of Sign Languages

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    There is no evidence that learning a natural human language is cognitively harmful to children. To the contrary, multilingualism has been argued to be beneficial to all. Nevertheless, many professionals advise the parents of deaf children that their children should not learn a sign language during their early years, despite strong evidence across many research disciplines that sign languages are natural human languages. Their recommendations are based on a combination of misperceptions about (1) the difficulty of learning a sign language, (2) the effects of bilingualism, and particularly bimodalism, (3) the bona fide status of languages that lack a written form, (4) the effects of a sign language on acquiring literacy, (5) the ability of technologies to address the needs of deaf children and (6) the effects that use of a sign language will have on family cohesion. We expose these misperceptions as based in prejudice and urge institutions involved in educating professionals concerned with the healthcare, raising and educating of deaf children to include appropriate information about first language acquisition and the importance of a sign language for deaf children. We further urge such professionals to advise the parents of deaf children properly, which means to strongly advise the introduction of a sign language as soon as hearing loss is detected

    Association between diverticulosis and colonic neoplastic lesions in individuals with a positive faecal immunochemical test

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    Background The association between diverticulosis and colonic neoplastic lesions has been suggested, but data in literature are conflicting. This study aimed to investigate such a relationship in patients participating in a colorectal cancer screening program who underwent high-quality colonoscopy.Methods Data from consecutive individuals 50-75 years of age with a positive faecal immunological test were considered. Diverticulosis was categorised as present or absent. The prevalence of neoplastic lesions (adenoma, advanced adenoma, and cancer) between individuals with and those without diverticula was compared. A multivariate analysis was performed.Results Overall, data from 970 consecutive individuals were evaluated, and diverticulosis was detected in 354 (36.5%) cases. At least one adenoma was detected in 490 (50.5%) people, at least one advanced adenoma in 264 (27.2%), multiple adenoma in 71 (7.3%), whilst a cancer was diagnosed in 48 (4.9%) cases. At univariate analysis, the adenoma detection rate in patients with diverticula was significantly higher than in controls (55.9% vs 47.4%; p=0.011). At multivariate analysis, presence of diverticulosis was an independent risk factor for both adenoma detection rate (OR=1.58; 95% CI=1.14-2.18; p=0.006) and advanced adenoma (OR=1.57; 95% CI=1.10-2.24; p=0.013), but not for colorectal cancer.Conclusions In a colorectal screening setting, the adenoma detection rate was significantly higher in individuals with diverticulosis than in controls

    An Advanced Solution Based on Machine Learning for Remote EMDR Therapy

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    For this work, a preliminary study proposed virtual interfaces for remote psychotherapy and psychology practices. This study aimed to verify the efficacy of such approaches in obtaining results comparable to in-presence psychotherapy, when the therapist is physically present in the room. In particular, we implemented several joint machine-learning techniques for distance detection, camera calibration and eye tracking, assembled to create a full virtual environment for the execution of a psychological protocol for a self-induced mindfulness meditative state. Notably, such a protocol is also applicable for the desensitization phase of EMDR therapy. This preliminary study has proven that, compared to a simple control task, such as filling in a questionnaire, the application of the mindfulness protocol in a fully virtual setting greatly improves concentration and lowers stress for the subjects it has been tested on, therefore proving the efficacy of a remote approach when compared to an in-presence one. This opens up the possibility of deepening the study, to create a fully working interface which will be applicable in various on-field applications of psychotherapy where the presence of the therapist cannot be always guaranteed

    Reducing the psychological burden of isolated oncological patients by means of decision trees

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    This century has seen several outbreaks of epidemics caused by a common sub-family of coronaviruses such as the responsible for COVID-19 outbreak. The most ominous variants have developed a peculiar viral mechanisms that allows the virus to directly attack the pulmonary tissues often causing a set of dangerous symptoms. It made quite evident that we need a global response to prepare health systems for future epidemics. Unfortunately, during such kind of diseases’ outbreaks a large amount of time is required to the caregivers for sanitization and cleaning operations, therefore tampering with number and duration of visits to patients, especially in oncology wards. Such patients are then left alone for a long time, it follows that their perceived quality of service is greatly diminished, often determining ill-fated consequences also on the psychological side, with significant fallbacks on the recovery possibilities and speed. In this paper we explore an algorithmic approach to automatic communication interfaces that could enhance and enforce the perceived quality of care by the patients in in order to reduce predisposing factors that could potentially tamper with the patient’s ability to recover, also preventing the occurrence of precipitating factors that could lead a therapy to complete failure. The proposed interface could be used to connect the patients with a psychological support when it is most needed, and, moreover, to connect them with their physicians and families, and also to the outside world. In particular we aim to provide the psychological support that is actually excluded in pandemics such as the COVID-19 emergency, mainly in order to enforce the healthcare and sanification protocols, due to its potential unsafety related to the introduction of more personnel into the hospital

    A cloud-oriented architecture for the remote assessment and follow-up of hospitalized patients

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    During the last months the dramatic COVID-19 outbreak has exposed the fragility of our healthcare system, as well as the need for a smart remote follow-up system for the patients, in order to less the burden on the healthcare service and reduce the average hospitalization time. In this paper we proposed a solution designed to grant maximum flexibility by means of the allocation of resources on a cloud service for the remote follow-up of patients. Such resources can be used as a remote support for the caregiver both when planning or enforcing a therapeutic path. A major explanation behind follow-up regards the location and treatment of potentially adverse reactions after treatments. Physical side effects of the different modalities of treatment might be various and crippling after chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Moreover remote follow up can be a life-changing solution also on the economical side, due to the implication of therapeutic attendances for patients as far as missed work and travel costs that must likewise be comprehended in the overall economical burden. In an investigation of patients with testicular disease, Campbell et al. Finally such a solution could effectively improve the patient's adherence to the therapeutic plan. The ability to remotely follow follow-up is therefore a monetarily alluring choice as far as investment funds, also given the improved efficiencies, reduced cost and number of missed working days for the patient. Patients with a patient-held record may also take advantage of a more conscious and motivated interest over their own wellbeing, illness and treatment, with a direct impact on patient's adherence to the therapeutic plan

    High-performance functional renormalization group calculations for interacting fermions

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    We derive a novel computational scheme for functional Renormalization Group (fRG) calculations for interacting fermions on 2D lattices. The scheme is based on the exchange parametrization fRG for the two-fermion interaction, with additional insertions of truncated partitions of unity. These insertions decouple the fermionic propagators from the exchange propagators and lead to a separation of the underlying equations. We demonstrate that this separation is numerically advantageous and may pave the way for refined, large-scale computational investigations even in the case of complex multiband systems. Furthermore, on the basis of speedup data gained from our implementation, it is shown that this new variant facilitates efficient calculations on a large number of multi-core CPUs. We apply the scheme to the tt,t′t' Hubbard model on a square lattice to analyze the convergence of the results with the bond length of the truncation of the partition of unity. In most parameter areas, a fast convergence can be observed. Finally, we compare to previous results in order to relate our approach to other fRG studies.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figure

    Violence Against Women: A Not In My Backyard (NIMBY) Phenomenon

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    This study investigated the social and cultural representations that employees of the Municipality of Naples hold concerning violence against women. The aim of this research was to explore if and how they attribute blame for gender-based violence and their perception of the effectiveness of resolution strategies focused on either preventing or actively combating violence against women. Their results showed that when respondents attribute violence to sociocultural factors, they recognize the importance of implementing effective resolution strategies. Conversely, those who primarily place the blame for violence against women on male individual characteristics generally do not support and propose strategies to stop this kind of violence. Moreover, violence perpetrators not resulting in the work context or in the neighborhood of the respondents and implications of these data will be further discussed

    Resonant effects in a SQUID qubit subjected to non adiabatic changes

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    By quickly modifying the shape of the effective potential of a double SQUID flux qubit from a single-well to a double-well condition, we experimentally observe an anomalous behavior, namely an alternance of resonance peaks, in the probability to find the qubit in a given flux state. The occurrence of Landau-Zener transitions as well as resonant tunneling between degenerate levels in the two wells may be invoked to partially justify the experimental results. A quantum simulation of the time evolution of the system indeed suggests that the observed anomalous behavior can be imputable to quantum coherence effects. The interplay among all these mechanisms has a practical implication for quantum computing purposes, giving a direct measurement of the limits on the sweeping rates possible for a correct manipulation of the qubit state by means of fast flux pulses, avoiding transitions to non-computational states.Comment: 6 pages and 6 figures. The paper, as it is, has been accepted for publication on PRB on March 201

    Children witnessing domestic violence in the voice of health and social professionals dealing with contrasting gender violence

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    Witnessing domestic violence (WDV) is recognized by the Istanbul Convention as psychological abuse that has dramatic consequences on the psychophysical health of children. Therefore, professionals who form the support network for WDV victims play a very fundamental role. In order to draw up useful guidelines for services dealing with WDV, and to give children more awareness of supportive settings, this study analyzes WDV in the perception of health and welfare professionals to enhance their skills and strategies for contrasting gender violence. Sixteen Neapolitan specialists dealing with WDV children were interviewed. A theoretical intentional sampling was used. Narrative focused interviews were carried out, transcribed verbatim and analyzed through the grounded theory methodology, using the ATLAS.ti 8 software (Scientific Software Development GmbH, Berlin, Germany). We assigned 319 codes and grouped these into 10 categories and 4 macro-categories. The analysis of the texts led to the definition of the core category as “The Crystal Fortress”. It summarizes the image of the WDV children as described by the professionals working in contrasting domestic violence. In this structure the parental roles of protection and care (fortress) are suspended and everything is extremely rigid, fragile and always at risk of a catastrophe. It also symbolizes the difficult role of health professionals in dealing with such children and their families. For WDV children, protective factors guarantee solid development and supportive settings help them to learn proper emotional responsiveness and expressiveness and to develop their skills in talking with adults while avoiding negative consequences
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