189 research outputs found
The effect of word analysis on spelling ability; an evaluation of an experimental study on the effect of word analysis in spelling ability,
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston Universit
The embodied becoming of autism and childhood: a storytelling methodology
In this article I explore a methodology of storytelling as a means of bringing together research around autism and childhood in a new way, as a site of the embodied becoming of autism and childhood. Through reflection on an ethnographic story of embodiment, the body is explored as a site of knowledge production that contests its dominantly storied subjectivation as a âdisorderedâ child. Storytelling is used to experiment with a line of flight from the autistic-child-research assemblage into new spaces of potential and possibility where the becomings of bodies within the collision of autism and childhood can be celebrated
Using Interactive Nutrition Modules to Increase Critical Thinking Skills in College Courses
Objective: To understand how the addition of an evidence-based framework to an online nutrition module influences college studentsâ critical thinking decision making (CT-DM).
Design: Students were individually randomized into an intervention group or a control group. The nutrition modules focused on 2 topics related to different types of eating behavior. Students completed a CT-DM activity to generate a score.
Participants: College students, between 18 and 24 years old, recruited from introductory nutrition and agriculture science courses at 2 universities.
Intervention: Intervention and control received 2 nutrition modules. The intervention added a CT-DM framework that framed the topic as a problem, incorporated activities, and provided scaffolding.
Main Outcome Measures: CT-DM was scored using a validated rubric to assess the use of critical thinking skills when making a food-related decision. Green eating and critical thinking disposition were measured.
Analysis: Hierarchical linear regression and t tests were used to assess outcomes.
Results: A total of 431 students participated (interventionâŻ=âŻ203; controlâŻ=âŻ228). After controlling for university, the intervention group scored significantly higher on CT-DM (18.1 ± 7.6) compared with the control (15.4 ± 8.4); F (3,428)âŻ=âŻ14.58, P \u3c .001.
Conclusions and Implications: The results show that an evidence-based framework using nutrition topics encourages CT-DM skills. Future higher-education nutrition interventions should use frameworks to enhance student learning
Mammography Services Quality Assurance: Baseline Standards for Latin America and the Caribbean
Fil: Barr, Helen. No especifĂca;Fil: Blanco, Susana Alicia Ana. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas; Argentina. Ministerio de Salud. Instituto Nacional del CĂĄncer; ArgentinaFil: Butler, Priscilla. No especifĂca;Fil: da Paz, MarĂa Angela. No especifĂca;Fil: Fleitas, Ileana. No especifĂca;Fil: Craig, George. No especifĂca;Fil: Jimenez, Pablo. No especifĂca;Fil: Luciani, Silvana. No especifĂca;Fil: Manrique, Javier. No especifĂca;Fil: Mazal, Jonathan. No especifĂca;Fil: Medlen, Kayiba. No especifĂca;Fil: MIller, Colie. No especifĂca;Fil: Mora, Patricia. No especifĂca;Fil: Valdez Moreno, Martha Elena. No especifĂca;Fil: Mosodeen, Murrie. No especifĂca;Fil: Mysler, Gustavo. No especifĂca;Fil: Nuche-Berenguer, Bernardo. No especifĂca;Fil: Pastel, Mary. No especifĂca;Fil: Pinochet, Miguel. No especifĂca;Fil: Sisney, Gale. No especifĂca;Fil: Ruiz Trejo, Cesar. No especifĂca;Fil: Saraiya, Mona. No especifĂca;Fil: Solis, Esteban. No especifĂca;Fil: Swann, Phillip. No especifĂca
Report of the 2021 U.S. Community Study on the Future of Particle Physics (Snowmass 2021) Summary Chapter
The 2021-22 High-Energy Physics Community Planning Exercise (a.k.a.
``Snowmass 2021'') was organized by the Division of Particles and Fields of the
American Physical Society. Snowmass 2021 was a scientific study that provided
an opportunity for the entire U.S. particle physics community, along with its
international partners, to identify the most important scientific questions in
High Energy Physics for the following decade, with an eye to the decade after
that, and the experiments, facilities, infrastructure, and R&D needed to pursue
them. This Snowmass summary report synthesizes the lessons learned and the main
conclusions of the Community Planning Exercise as a whole and presents a
community-informed synopsis of U.S. particle physics at the beginning of 2023.
This document, along with the Snowmass reports from the various subfields, will
provide input to the 2023 Particle Physics Project Prioritization Panel (P5)
subpanel of the U.S. High-Energy Physics Advisory Panel (HEPAP), and will help
to guide and inform the activity of the U.S. particle physics community during
the next decade and beyond.Comment: 75 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables. This is the first chapter and summary
of the full report of the Snowmass 2021 Workshop. This version fixes an
important omission from Table 2, adds two references that were not available
at the time of the original version, fixes a minor few typos, and adds a
small amount of material to section 1.1.
GarantĂa de calidad de los servicios de mamografĂa: Normas bĂĄsicas para AmĂ©rica Latina y el Caribe
Fil: Barr, Helen. No especifĂca;Fil: Blanco, Susana Alicia Ana. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas; Argentina. Ministerio de Salud. Instituto Nacional del CĂĄncer; ArgentinaFil: AlbarracĂn, Virginia Helena. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas; ArgentinaFil: Priscilla, Butler. No especifĂca;Fil: da Paz, MarĂa Angela. No especifĂca;Fil: Fleitas, Ileana. No especifĂca;Fil: JimĂ©nez, Pablo. No especifĂca;Fil: Luciani, Silvana. No especifĂca;Fil: Manrique, Javier. No especifĂca;Fil: Mazal, Jonathan. No especifĂca;Fil: Medlen, Kayiba. No especifĂca;Fil: Miller, Collie. No especifĂca;Fil: Mora, Patricia. No especifĂca;Fil: Valdez Moreno, Martha Elena. No especifĂca;Fil: Mosodeen, Murrie. No especifĂca;Fil: Mysler, Gustavo. No especifĂca;Fil: Nusche Berenguer, Bernardo. No especifĂca;Fil: Pastel, Mary. No especifĂca;Fil: Pinochet, Miguel. No especifĂca;Fil: Ruiz Trejo, Cesar. No especifĂca;Fil: Sisney, Gale. No especifĂca;Fil: Saraiya, Mona. No especifĂca;Fil: Solis, Esteban. No especifĂca;Fil: Swann, Phillip. No especifĂca
Subdivisions of the Auditory Midbrain (N. Mesencephalicus Lateralis, pars dorsalis) in Zebra Finches Using Calcium-Binding Protein Immunocytochemistry
The midbrain nucleus mesencephalicus lateralis pars dorsalis (MLd) is thought to be the avian homologue of the central nucleus of the mammalian inferior colliculus. As such, it is a major relay in the ascending auditory pathway of all birds and in songbirds mediates the auditory feedback necessary for the learning and maintenance of song. To clarify the organization of MLd, we applied three calcium binding protein antibodies to tissue sections from the brains of adult male and female zebra finches. The staining patterns resulting from the application of parvalbumin, calbindin and calretinin antibodies differed from each other and in different parts of the nucleus. Parvalbumin-like immunoreactivity was distributed throughout the whole nucleus, as defined by the totality of the terminations of brainstem auditory afferents; in other words parvalbumin-like immunoreactivity defines the boundaries of MLd. Staining patterns of parvalbumin, calbindin and calretinin defined two regions of MLd: inner (MLd.I) and outer (MLd.O). MLd.O largely surrounds MLd.I and is distinct from the surrounding intercollicular nucleus. Unlike the case in some non-songbirds, however, the two MLd regions do not correspond to the terminal zones of the projections of the brainstem auditory nuclei angularis and laminaris, which have been found to overlap substantially throughout the nucleus in zebra finches
Health, education, and social care provision after diagnosis of childhood visual disability
Aim: To investigate the health, education, and social care provision for children newly diagnosed with visual disability.Method: This was a national prospective study, the British Childhood Visual Impairment and Blindness Study 2 (BCVIS2), ascertaining new diagnoses of visual impairment or severe visual impairment and blindness (SVIBL), or equivalent vi-sion. Data collection was performed by managing clinicians up to 1-year follow-up, and included health and developmental needs, and health, education, and social care provision.Results: BCVIS2 identified 784 children newly diagnosed with visual impairment/SVIBL (313 with visual impairment, 471 with SVIBL). Most children had associated systemic disorders (559 [71%], 167 [54%] with visual impairment, and 392 [84%] with SVIBL). Care from multidisciplinary teams was provided for 549 children (70%). Two-thirds (515) had not received an Education, Health, and Care Plan (EHCP). Fewer children with visual impairment had seen a specialist teacher (SVIBL 35%, visual impairment 28%, Ï2p < 0.001), or had an EHCP (11% vs 7%, Ï2p < 0 . 01).Interpretation: Families need additional support from managing clinicians to access recommended complex interventions such as the use of multidisciplinary teams and educational support. This need is pressing, as the population of children with visual impairment/SVIBL is expected to grow in size and complexity.This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited
Search for dark matter produced in association with bottom or top quarks in âs = 13 TeV pp collisions with the ATLAS detector
A search for weakly interacting massive particle dark matter produced in association with bottom or top quarks is presented. Final states containing third-generation quarks and miss- ing transverse momentum are considered. The analysis uses 36.1 fbâ1 of protonâproton collision data recorded by the ATLAS experiment at âs = 13 TeV in 2015 and 2016. No significant excess of events above the estimated backgrounds is observed. The results are in- terpreted in the framework of simplified models of spin-0 dark-matter mediators. For colour- neutral spin-0 mediators produced in association with top quarks and decaying into a pair of dark-matter particles, mediator masses below 50 GeV are excluded assuming a dark-matter candidate mass of 1 GeV and unitary couplings. For scalar and pseudoscalar mediators produced in association with bottom quarks, the search sets limits on the production cross- section of 300 times the predicted rate for mediators with masses between 10 and 50 GeV and assuming a dark-matter mass of 1 GeV and unitary coupling. Constraints on colour- charged scalar simplified models are also presented. Assuming a dark-matter particle mass of 35 GeV, mediator particles with mass below 1.1 TeV are excluded for couplings yielding a dark-matter relic density consistent with measurements
Is the deciduous/permanent molar enamel thickness ratio a taxon-specific indicator in extant and extinct hominids?
In Primates, enamel thickness variation stems from an evolutionary interplay between functional/adaptive constraints (ecology) and the strict control mechanisms of the morphogenetic program. Most studies on primate enamel thickness have primarily considered the permanent teeth, while the extent of covariation in tooth enamel thickness distribution between deciduous and permanent counterparts remains poorly investigated. In this test study on nine extant and fossil hominids we investigated the degree of covariation in enamel proportions between 25 pairs of mandibular dm2 and M1 by a so-called âlateral enamel thickness diphyodontic indexâ. The results did not provide an unambiguous picture, but rather suggest complex patterns likely resulting from the influence of many interactive factors. Future research should test the congruence of the âdiphyodontic signalâ between the anterior and the postcanine dentition, as well as between enamel and the enamel-dentine junction topography
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