591 research outputs found
A randomized controlled pilot trial of classroom-based mindfulness meditation compared to an active control condition in sixth-grade children
The current study is a pilot trial to examine the effects of a nonelective, classroom-based, teacher-implemented, mindfulness meditation intervention on standard clinical measures of mental health and affect in middle school children. A total of 101 healthy sixth-grade students (55 boys, 46 girls) were randomized to either an Asian history course with daily mindfulness meditation practice (intervention group) or an African history course with a matched experiential activity (active control group). Self-reported measures included the Youth Self Report (YSR), a modified Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, and the Cognitive and Affective Mindfulness Measure âRevised. Both groups decreased significantly on clinical syndrome subscales and affect but did not differ in the extent of their improvements. Meditators were significantly less likely to develop suicidal ideation or thoughts of self-harm than controls. These results suggest that mindfulness training may yield both unique and non-specific benefits that are shared by other novel activities
Gender Differences in Response to a School-Based Mindfulness Training Intervention for Early Adolescents
Mindfulness training has been used to improve emotional wellbeing in early adolescents. However, little is known about treatment outcome moderators, or individual differences that may differentially impact responses to treatment. The current study focused on gender as a potential moderator for affective outcomes in response to school-based mindfulness training. Sixth grade students (NâŻ=âŻ100) were randomly assigned to either the six weeks of mindfulness meditation or the active control group as part of a history class curriculum. Participants in the mindfulness meditation group completed short mindfulness meditation sessions four to five times per week, in addition to didactic instruction (Asian history). The control group received matched experiential activity in addition to didactic instruction (African history) from the same teacher with no meditation component. Self-reported measures of emotional wellbeing/affect, mindfulness, and self-compassion were obtained at pre and post intervention. Meditators reported greater improvement in emotional wellbeing compared to those in the control group. Importantly, gender differences were detected, such that female meditators reported greater increases in positive affect compared to females in the control group, whereas male meditators and control males displayed equivalent gains. Uniquely among females but not males, increases in self-reported self-compassion were associated with improvements in affect. These findings support the efficacy of school-based mindfulness interventions, and interventions tailored to accommodate distinct developmental needs of female and male adolescents
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A floristic survey of Yucca Mountain and vicinity, Nye County, Nevada
A survey of the vascular flora of Yucca Mountain and vicinity, Nye County, Nevada, was conducted from March to June 1994. An annotated checklist of recorded taxa was compiled. Voucher plant specimens were collected and accessioned into the Herbarium at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Collection data accompanying these specimens were entered into that herbarium`s electronic data base. Combined results from this survey and the works of other investigators reveal the presence of a total of 325 specific and intraspecific taxa within the area, these allocated to 162 genera and 53 families. Owing to drought conditions prevalent throughout the area, the annual floristic component was largely absent during the period of study, and it is likely much under-represented in the tabulation of results. No taxon currently listed as threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act was encountered during this study. Several candidate species for listing under this Act were present, and distributional data for these were recorded. No change in the status of these candidate species is recommended as the result of this survey
Reduced tillage, but not organic matter input, increased nematode diversity and food web stability in European longâterm field experiments
Soil nematode communities and food web indices can inform about the complexity, nutrient flows and decomposition pathways of soil food webs, reflecting soil quality. Relative abundance of nematode feeding and lifeâhistory groups are used for calculating food web indices, i.e., maturity index (MI), enrichment index (EI), structure index (SI) and channel index (CI). Molecular methods to study nematode communities potentially offer advantages compared to traditional methods in terms of resolution, throughput, cost and time. In spite of such advantages, molecular data have not often been adopted so far to assess the effects of soil management on nematode communities and to calculate these food web indices. Here, we used highâthroughput amplicon sequencing to investigate the effects of tillage (conventional vs. reduced) and organic matter addition (low vs. high) on nematode communities and food web indices in 10 European longâterm field experiments and we assessed the relationship between nematode communities and soil parameters. We found that nematode communities were more strongly affected by tillage than by organic matter addition. Compared to conventional tillage, reduced tillage increased nematode diversity (23% higher Shannon diversity index), nematode community stability (12% higher MI), structure (24% higher SI), and the fungal decomposition channel (59% higher CI), and also the number of herbivorous nematodes (70% higher). Total and labile organic carbon, available K and microbial parameters explained nematode community structure. Our findings show that nematode communities are sensitive indicators of soil quality and that molecular profiling of nematode communities has the potential to reveal the effects of soil management on soil quality
Sequestration of Martian CO2 by mineral carbonation
Carbonation is the water-mediated replacement of silicate minerals, such as olivine, by carbonate, and is commonplace in the Earthâs crust. This reaction can remove significant quantities of CO2 from the atmosphere and store it over geological timescales. Here we present the first direct evidence for CO2 sequestration and storage on Mars by mineral carbonation. Electron beam imaging and analysis show that olivine and a plagioclase feldspar-rich mesostasis in the Lafayette meteorite have been replaced by carbonate. The susceptibility of olivine to replacement was enhanced by the presence of smectite veins along which CO2-rich fluids gained access to grain interiors. Lafayette was partially carbonated during the Amazonian, when liquid water was available intermittently and atmospheric CO2 concentrations were close to their present-day values. Earlier in Marsâ history, when the planet had a much thicker atmosphere and an active hydrosphere, carbonation is likely to have been an effective mechanism for sequestration of CO2
-Parity Violation in Flavor Changing Neutral Current Processes and Top Quark Decays
We show that supersymmetric -parity breaking () interactions
always result in Flavor Changing Neutral Current (FCNC) processes. Within a
single coupling scheme, these processes can be avoided in either the charge
or the charge quark sector, but not both. These processes are
used to place constraints on \Rp couplings. The constraints on the first and
the second generations are better than those existing in the literature. The
\Rp interactions may result in new top quark decays. Some of these violate
electron-muon universality or produce a surplus of quark events in
decays. Results from the CDF experiment are used to bound these \Rp
couplings.Comment: LaTeX, 20 pages, spelling corrected from origina
Gaugino Condensation in M-theory on S^1/Z_2
In the low energy limit of for M-theory on S^1/Z_2, we calculate the gaugino
condensate potential in four dimensions using the background solutions due to
Horava. We show that this potential is free of delta-function singularities and
has the same form as the potential in the weakly coupled heterotic string. A
general flux quantization rule for the three-form field of M-theory on S^1/Z_2
is given and checked in certain limiting cases. This rule is used to fix the
free parameter in the potential originating from a zero mode of the form field.
Finally, we calculate soft supersymmetry breaking terms. We find that
corrections to the Kahler potential and the gauge kinetic function, which can
be large in the strongly coupled region, contribute significantly to certain
soft terms. In particular, for supersymmetry breaking in the T-modulus
direction, the small values of gaugino masses and trilinear couplings that
occur in the weakly coupled, large radius regime are enhanced to order m_3/2 in
M-theory. The scalar soft masses remain small even, in the strong coupling
M-theory limit.Comment: 20 pages, LATE
The band structure of BeTe - a combined experimental and theoretical study
Using angle-resolved synchrotron-radiation photoemission spectroscopy we have
determined the dispersion of the valence bands of BeTe(100) along ,
i.e. the [100] direction. The measurements are analyzed with the aid of a
first-principles calculation of the BeTe bulk band structure as well as of the
photoemission peaks as given by the momentum conserving bulk transitions.
Taking the calculated unoccupied bands as final states of the photoemission
process, we obtain an excellent agreement between experimental and calculated
spectra and a clear interpretation of almost all measured bands. In contrast,
the free electron approximation for the final states fails to describe the BeTe
bulk band structure along properly.Comment: 21 pages plus 4 figure
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Climate impacts associated with reduced diet diversity in children across nineteen countries
It is widely anticipated that climate change will negatively affect both food security and diet diversity. Diet diversity is especially critical for children as it correlates with macro and micronutrient intake important for child development. Despite these anticipated links, little empirical evidence has demonstrated a relationship between diet diversity and climate change, especially across large datasets spanning multiple global regions. Here we use survey data from 19 countries and more than 107,000 children, coupled with 30 years of precipitation and temperature data, to explore the relationship of climate to child diet diversity while controlling for other agroecological, geographic, and socioeconomic factors. We find that higher long-term temperatures are associated with decreases in overall child diet diversity, while higher rainfall in the previous year, compared to the long-term average, is associated with greater diet diversity. Examining six regions individually, we find that five have significant reductions in diet diversity associated with higher temperatures while three have significant increases in diet diversity associated with higher precipitation. In some regions, the statistical effect of climate on diet diversity is comparable to or greater than other common development efforts including those focused on education, improved water and toilets, and poverty reduction. These results suggest that warming temperatures and increasing rainfall variability could have profound short- and long-term impacts on child diet diversity, potentially undermining widespread development interventions aimed at improving food security
Renormalization Group Induced Neutrino Mass in Supersymmetry without R-parity
We study supersymmetric models without R parity and with universal soft
supersymmetry breaking terms. We show that as a result of the renormalization
group flow of the parameters, a misalignment between the directions in field
space of the down-type Higgs vacuum expectation value and of the
term is always generated. This misalignment induces a mixing between the
neutrinos and the neutralinos, resulting in one massive neutrino. By means of a
simple approximate analytical expression, we study the dependence on the
different parameters that contribute to the misalignment and to . In
large part of the parameter space this effect dominates over the standard
one-loop contributions to ; we estimate 1 MeV \lsim m_\nu \lsim 1 GeV.
Laboratory, cosmological and astrophysical constraints imply m_\nu \lsim 100
eV. To be phenomenologically viable, these models must be supplemented with
some additional mechanism to ensure approximate alignment and to suppress
.Comment: 21 pages, LaTex. Few points clarified, results unchanged. Final
version to appear on Physical Review
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