5,982 research outputs found

    A Mixed Methods Study Investigating the Mediating Effects of Experiential Avoidance on the Relationship Between Alexithymia and Psychological Distress

    Get PDF
    Previous research has suggested that experiential avoidance mediates the relationship between alexithymia and psychological distress. However, commonly used measures of alexithymia and experiential avoidance have been questioned regarding their validity. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the mediating role of experiential avoidance on the relationship between alexithymia and psychological distress using a sequential explanatory methodology. First, previous quantitative findings were replicated using improved psychometric questionnaires on a sample of 211 adults residing in the UK, analysed using the bootstrap statistical method set to 5,000 samples at a 95% confidence interval. Results showed that experiential avoidance fully mediated the relationship between alexithymia and psychological distress. However, this relationship was not found for two facets of alexithymia: Difficulty Identifying Feelings (DIF) and Externally Oriented Thinking (EOT). The subsequent qualitative investigation explored how men with an externally oriented thinking style experience emotions and psychological distress. This was analysed using template analysis, a thematic codebook approach. Overall, the combined results suggested that life experiences can lead to an avoidance of contact with unwanted private experiences, and that this avoidance accounts for the relationship between alexithymia and psychological distress. Additionally, the results suggested two potential mechanisms through which EOT did not relate to elements of psychological distress. First, that EOT may be functioning as a protective factor against both positive and negative emotional affect. Second, that traditional patriarchal pressures may have caused a rejection of emotional content and a preference for avoidant coping leading to a lack of distress disclosure and underscoring on mood questionnaires. Important theoretical and clinical implications were discussed through the lens of Counselling Psychology, leading to a critical evaluation of common assumptions that may underlie modern therapeutic techniques and contribute to social injustice

    Zebra battery technologies for all electric smart car

    Get PDF
    This paper describes the operational behaviour and advantages of the high temperature, sodium nickel chloride (Zebra) battery, for use in all electric urban (city) vehicles. It is shown that an equivalent parallel electrical circuit can be employed to accurately simulate the electrochemical behaviour inherent in the most recent generation of Zebra cells. The experimental procedure is outlined and summary attributes of the investigation validated by both simulation studies, and experimentally, via measurements from a prototype battery module intended for use in an all electric smart ca

    Using adiabatic coupling techniques in atom-chip waveguide structures

    Full text link
    Adiabatic techniques are well known tools in multi-level electron systems to transfer population between different states with high fidelity. Recently it has been realised that these ideas can also be used in ultra-cold atom systems to achieve coherent manipulation of the atomic centre-of-mass states. Here we present an investigation into a realistic setup using three atomic waveguides created on top of an atom chip and show that such systems hold large potential for the observation of adiabatic phenomena in experiments.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Physica Scripta for the CEWQO2009 proceeding

    Sequencing-Based Analysis of the Bacterial and Fungal Composition of Kefir Grains and Milks from Multiple Sources

    Get PDF
    peer-reviewedKefir is a fermented milk-based beverage to which a number of health-promoting properties have been attributed. The microbes responsible for the fermentation of milk to produce kefir consist of a complex association of bacteria and yeasts, bound within a polysaccharide matrix, known as the kefir grain. The consistency of this microbial population, and that present in the resultant beverage, has been the subject of a number of previous, almost exclusively culture-based, studies which have indicated differences depending on geographical location and culture conditions. However, culture-based identification studies are limited by virtue of only detecting species with the ability to grow on the specific medium used and thus culture-independent, molecular-based techniques offer the potential for a more comprehensive analysis of such communities. Here we describe a detailed investigation of the microbial population, both bacterial and fungal, of kefir, using high-throughput sequencing to analyse 25 kefir milks and associated grains sourced from 8 geographically distinct regions. This is the first occasion that this technology has been employed to investigate the fungal component of these populations or to reveal the microbial composition of such an extensive number of kefir grains or milks. As a result several genera and species not previously identified in kefir were revealed. Our analysis shows that the bacterial populations in kefir are dominated by 2 phyla, the Firmicutes and the Proteobacteria. It was also established that the fungal populations of kefir were dominated by the genera Kazachstania, Kluyveromyces and Naumovozyma, but that a variable sub-dominant population also exists.The Alimentary Pharmabiotic Centre is a research centre funded by Science Foundation Ireland (SFI), through the Irish Government’s National Development Plan. The authors and their work were supported by SFI CSET grant APC CSET 2 grant 07/CE/B1368

    Hypersurfaces in weighted projective spaces over finite fields with applications to coding theory

    Full text link
    We consider the question of determining the maximum number of Fq\mathbb{F}_q-rational points that can lie on a hypersurface of a given degree in a weighted projective space over the finite field Fq\mathbb{F}_q, or in other words, the maximum number of zeros that a weighted homogeneous polynomial of a given degree can have in the corresponding weighted projective space over Fq\mathbb{F}_q. In the case of classical projective spaces, this question has been answered by J.-P. Serre. In the case of weighted projective spaces, we give some conjectures and partial results. Applications to coding theory are included and an appendix providing a brief compendium of results about weighted projective spaces is also included

    The dark haloes of early-type galaxies in low-density environments: XMM-Newton and Chandra observations of NGC 57, NGC 7796 and IC 1531

    Full text link
    We present analysis of Chandra and XMM-Newton observations of three early-type galaxies, NGC 57, NGC 7796 and IC 1531. All three are found in very low density environments, and appear to have no neighbours of comparable size. NGC 57 has a halo of kT~0.9 keV, solar metallicity gas, while NGC 7796 and IC 1531 both have ~0.55 keV, 0.5-0.6 Zsol haloes. IC 1531 has a relatively compact halo, and we consider it likely that gas has been removed from the system by the effects of AGN heating. For NGC 57 and NGC 7796 we estimate mass, entropy and cooling time profiles and find that NGC 57 has a fairly massive dark halo with a mass-to-light ratio of 44.7 (4.0,-8.5) Msol/Lsol (1 sigma uncertainties) at 4.75 Re. This is very similar to the mass-to-light ratio found for NGC 4555 and confirms that isolated ellipticals can possess sizable dark matter haloes. We find a significantly lower mass-to-light ratio for NGC 7796, 10.6 (+2.5,-2.3) Msol/Lsol at 5 Re, and discuss the possibility that NGC 7796 hosts a galactic wind, causing us to underestimate its mass.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
    • …
    corecore