2,511 research outputs found

    Terapia de solución de problemas

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    Estimates of the prevalence of psychological difficulties, such as depression, anxiety, and poor quality of life, are high among individuals diagnosed with cancer. Problem-solving therapy (PST), a cognitive and behavioral intervention, is one major approach that has been applied and evaluated as a means of positively impacting on such problems. PST trains individuals in a series of skills that helps them cope more effectively with life stressors, such as those associated with cancer and its treatment. This paper provides a brief overview of the research supporting its efficacy, as well as clinical guidelines.Las estimaciones de la prevalencia de los problemas psicológicos, tales como la depresión, la ansiedad y la mala calidad de vida, son altas entre las personas diagnosticadas con cáncer. La terapia de solución de problemas (PST), una intervención cognitivo-conductual, es uno de los enfoques principales que se ha aplicado y valorado como un medio de impactar positivamente en este tipo de problemas. La PST capacita a las personas en una serie de habilidades que les ayuda a afrontar con mayor eficacia a los estresores vitales, tales como los relacionados con el cáncer y su tratamiento. Este artículo ofrece una breve descripción de la investigación que apoya su eficacia, así como los protocolos clínicos

    The intercultural virtual dancing subject: a choreographic investigation of spatio structures In Japanese-Western cultural practice

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    A thesis submitted to the University of Bedfordshire in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Philosophy (Research Institute for Media, Arts and Performance)The aim of this practice-led research is to question and examine the notion of a dancing body in two and three-dimensional spaces within the context of intercultural performance. The research will draw upon comparative analyses of Japanese and Western cultural tenets, and on how these inform specific examples of dance making. The overarching goal is to test choreographically and then theorize an intercultural meeting point in relation to space and time, which highlights exchanges and tension between Japanese and Western in modern day dance making. It is hoped that such test and theorization will stimulate, in turn, advancements in the creation of a unique form of Japanese-Western dance performance. As reported above, this research is practice-based, and develops from questioning a number of issues relating to conflicted discourses which inform current notions of dance and technology. Firstly, it explores the presentation and identity of a dancing body in two dimensions, questioning whether the creative process of choreographic experiences of three dimensions can be negotiated and presented in two dimensions - so that ‘actual’ and ‘virtual’ spaces can be blurred. Said questioning, will both move from and rely on an intercultural perspective in negotiating the spatial interplay between the live performance and screen, to then formulate the mentioned intercultural meeting point within the dance works, where two distinctive cultures can co-exist and share their own values and characteristics without any hierarchical placing. Secondly, the research questions and challenges the applicability of Western theories and practices to Japanese culture. Being based on a process of active dialogue between theory and practical experimentation, and being written by a citizen of Japan who lives in Western Europe, this research constantly reflects on how the non-Western author needs to negotiate Western cultural forms and practices with her embodied cultural preference as a dance artist. Consequently, this work suggests a potentially different approach by formulating a model of a virtual dancing body that both resides within and goes beyond boundaries of existing intercultural performance theory

    Structure of Instantaneous Reynolds Stress over a Permeable Open-channel with Suction or Injection

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    In the present study, we investigate experimentally the structure of the instantaneous Reynolds stress in open-channel flow over a permeable bed with suction or injection. Then, the fluctuating signals obtained from the X-type hot-films are conditionally analyzed in order to examine the effect of suction or injection on the turbulence production mechanism or the bursting phenomenon. We can then obtain the following results. The absolute magnitudes of the turbulence intensities and the Reynolds stress near the wall increase with an enlargement of the injection, while they decrease with an enlargement of the suction. However, the fraction of time occupied by each bursting event and the contributions of its event to the Reynolds stress against any hole size are almost the same, irrespective of suction or injection. The promotion of turbulence by injection or its suppression by suction may be caused by similar variations of three parameters of the bursting intensity, the bursting period and the bursting duration time. To sum up, the internal structure of the turbulence or the bursting mechanism is not essentially influenced by suction or injection, as long as the flow is still turbulent

    Turbulence Measurements in Compound Open Channels

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    An investigation on a three-dimensional ( 3 -D) turbulent structure including turbulence-driven secondary currents in compound open-channel flows is a very important topic in hydraulic and river engineerings, as well as in fluid mechanics. In this study, accurate measurements in fully-developed compound open-channel flows were conducted by making use of a filder-optic laser Doppler anemometer (FLDA). Secondary velocities could be measured very accurately with the present 3-D measurement system. The characteristics peculiar to compound open channel flows are recognized in a junction region between the main channel and the flood plain, whereas the characteristics in rectangular open channel flows are observed in a region near the side wall of the main channel. Strong inclined secondary currents, which are associated with a pair of longitudinal vortices, are generated in a junction region between the main channel and the flood plain. The primary mean velocity filed is directly influenced by these secondary currents. Turbulence intensisies and the Reynolds stresses are also reveald in detail. Moreover, the effects of channel gemetry and bed roughness on turbulent structures are examined

    Bursting Phenomenon near the Wall in Open-channel Flows and its Simple Mathematical Model

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    In this paper we propose a new evaluation method for the bursting period, on the basis of the phenomenological consideration that the number of the occurrences of interaction-like motions should be removed from those of the ejection or the sweep events in the sorted Reynolds-stress fluctuating signals. Then, it is confirmed by this method that the mean bursting period in open-channel flows may be universally expressed by outer rather than inner parameters, and that its probability distribution becomes log-normal, irrespective of the Reynolds and the Froude numbers, as well as the wall roughness. Next, in order to explain even quantitatively the bursting process or the turbulent structure in the wall region, we propose a simple mathematical model on the basis of the Einstein-Li model and also the knowledge of the bursting-period characteristics obtained above. Though the present model is inherently quasi-two-dimensional and quasi-linear, this model can describe fairly well some distributions of mean-velocity, turbulence intensities and Reynolds stress. In particular, it can satisfactorily explain a sequence of the bursting process

    Flow resistance law in open-channel flows with rigid and flexible vegetation

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    River hydrodynamicsBed roughness and flow resistanc

    Numerical Calculation of Turbulent Open-Channel Flows in Consideration of Free-Surface Effect

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    Numerical calculation techniques of turbulent shear flows are classified into two categories : one is the k-ε turbulence model, and the other is the large eddy simulation (LES). The standard k-ε model has been established at present to predict a turbulent structure in jets, boundary layers and closed channel flows, while LES is being developed to predict a coherent eddy structure in simpler channel flows. The standard k-ε model cannot be, however, easily applied to open channel surface flows, because the turbulence near the free surface is more depressed than the closed channel flows. In the present study, a new modified k-ε model is proposed to predict reasonably a turbulent structure in open channel flows with both the low and high Reynolds numbers. The numerical calculations indicate a good agreement with the experimental data which were obtained by making use of hot-film and Laser Doppler anemometers

    Turbulent Structure in Steep Open-Channel Flows

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    Velocity measurement with a fiber-optic laser-Doppler anemometer were conducted in steep open-channel flows over smooth and incompletely rough beds. The channel slopes were changed between 1/500 and 1/25 by steps, and as a result, the Froude number changed from 0.5 to 3. The law of the wall and the distributions of turbulence intensity were examined in more detail. The von Kármán constant κ in the log law was verified to be unversally equal to 0.41. On the other hand, the integral constant A in the log law coincided with the usual value of 5.29 in subcritical flows, whereas it decreased with an increase of the bed slope in supercritical flows. This decrease of A was explained by a decrease of the damping factor B in the van Driest's mixing-length formula. The decrease of B was well correlated with an increase of the friction velocity and the roughness. The streamwise turbulence intensity became smaller in the near-wall region than the semi-empirical universal formula, as the friction velocity became larger

    The effect of coherent waving motion on turbulence structure in flexible vegetated open channel flows

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    River hydrodynamicsOverbank flows and vegetatio
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