4,140 research outputs found
Utilizing the Cognitive Orientation to Occupational Performance Approach For Improved Performance and Executive Functioning
The Outreach Program (TOP) in the Kent School District assists young adults in their transition from high school to adulthood. The research team and Dr. Abbott, an occupational therapist at TOP, sought to address whether better outcomes when teaching instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs) to adolescents with intellectual disabilities occur when addressing underlying performance skills and client factors through the Cognitive Orientation to Occupational Performance (CO-OP) approach or when addressing them through traditional occupational therapy practices. There is strong evidence to support CO-OP as an effective strategy to improve performance and moderate evidence indicating that it improves executive functioning and cognitive flexibility for a variety of diagnoses. We recommend CO-OP be integrated into traditional therapy practices and that additional research is conducted to explore group implementation and include more diagnoses.
Student researchers developed and presented an inservice presentation on the use and implementation of CO-OP in the school setting. An opportunity to receive Competency Assessment Units for NBCOT certification renewal through participation in a study group was provided during the inservice presentation to occupational therapists in Kent School District. Outcomes of this presentation were monitored through a survey to gain an understanding of whether the occupational therapists present would consider implementing CO-OP in their everyday practice. The findings suggest that the majority of people who attended the inservice presentation were interested in seeking more information regarding CO-OP without participating in the NBCOT study group. Additional research in the form of a scoping review is recommended in order to investigate what approaches best support developing autonomy and independent problem-solving in adolescents with intellectual disabilities
XMM-EPIC observation of MCG-6-30-15: Direct evidence for the extraction of energy from aspinning black hole?
We present XMM-Newton European Photon Imaging Camera (EPIC) observations of
the bright Seyfert 1 galaxy MCG-6-30-15, focusing on the broad Fe K
line at ~6keV and the associated reflection continuum, which is believed to
originate from the inner accretion disk. We find these reflection features to
be extremely broad and red-shifted, indicating its origin from the very most
central regions of the accretion disk. It seems likely that we have caught this
source in the ``deep minimum'' state first observed by Iwasawa et al. (1996).
The implied central concentration of X-ray illumination is difficult to
understand in any pure accretion disk model. We suggest that we are witnessing
the extraction and dissipation of rotational energy from a spinning black hole
by magnetic fields connecting the black hole or plunging region to the disk.Comment: 6 pages and one postscript figure. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
letter
The Mariner 5 flight path and its determination from tracking data
Mariner 5 flight path and its determination from tracking dat
Spatial Attention Modulates Center-Surround Interactions in Macaque Visual Area V4
SummaryIn natural viewing, a visual stimulus that is the target of attention is generally surrounded by many irrelevant distracters. Stimuli falling in the receptive field surround can influence the neuronal response evoked by a stimulus appearing within the classical receptive field. Such modulation by task-irrelevant distracters may degrade the target-related neuronal signal. We therefore examined whether directing attention to a target stimulus can reduce the influence of task-irrelevant distracters on neuronal response. We find that in area V4 attention to a stimulus within a neuron's receptive field filters out a large fraction of the suppression induced by distracters appearing in the surround. When attention is instead directed to the surround stimulus, suppression is increased, thereby filtering out part of the neuronal response to the irrelevant distracter positioned within the receptive field. These findings demonstrate that attention modulates the neural mechanisms that give rise to center-surround interactions
A variational method for approximate solutions to laminar flow problems
Thesis (Sc. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Mechanical Engineering, 1961.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 115-117).by John Mitchell Reynolds, III.Sc.D
Iron fluorescence from within the innermost stable orbit of black hole accretion disks
The fluorescent iron Ka line is a powerful observational probe of the inner
regions of black holes accretion disks. Previous studies have assumed that only
material outside the radius of marginal stability can contribute to the
observed line emission. Here, we show that fluorescence by material inside the
radius of marginal stability, which is in the process of spiralling towards the
event horizon, can have a observable influence on the iron line profile and
equivalent width. For concreteness, we consider the case of a geometrically
thin accretion disk, around a Schwarzschild black hole, in which fluorescence
is excited by an X-ray source placed at some height above the disk and on the
axis of the disk. Fully relativistic line profiles are presented for various
source heights and efficiencies. It is found that the extra line flux generally
emerges in the extreme red wing of the iron line, due to the large
gravitational redshift experienced by photons from the region within the radius
of marginal stability. We apply our models to the variable iron line seen in
the ASCA spectrum of the Seyfert nucleus MCG-6-30-15. It is found that the
change in the line profile, equivalent width, and continuum normalization, can
be well explained as being due to a change in the height of the source above
the disk. We discuss the implications of these results for distinguishing
rapidly-rotating black holes from slowly rotating holes using iron line
diagnostics.Comment: 20 pages, LaTeX. Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal.
Figures 3 to 7 replaced with corrected versions (previous figures affected by
calculational error). Some changes in the best fitting parameter
Existential Types for Relaxed Noninterference
Information-flow security type systems ensure confidentiality by enforcing
noninterference: a program cannot leak private data to public channels.
However, in practice, programs need to selectively declassify information about
private data. Several approaches have provided a notion of relaxed
noninterference supporting selective and expressive declassification while
retaining a formal security property. The labels-as-functions approach provides
relaxed noninterference by means of declassification policies expressed as
functions. The labels-as-types approach expresses declassification policies
using type abstraction and faceted types, a pair of types representing the
secret and public facets of values. The original proposal of labels-as-types is
formulated in an object-oriented setting where type abstraction is realized by
subtyping. The object-oriented approach however suffers from limitations due to
its receiver-centric paradigm.
In this work, we consider an alternative approach to labels-as-types,
applicable in non-object-oriented languages, which allows us to express
advanced declassification policies, such as extrinsic policies, based on a
different form of type abstraction: existential types. An existential type
exposes abstract types and operations on these; we leverage this abstraction
mechanism to express secrets that can be declassified using the provided
operations. We formalize the approach in a core functional calculus with
existential types, define existential relaxed noninterference, and prove that
well-typed programs satisfy this form of type-based relaxed noninterference
The Role of Energy Quality in Shaping Long-Term Energy Intensity in Europe
On the European aggregate level there is an inverted-U curve for long-term energy intensity. In the 19th century aggregate European energy intensity rose, followed by a declining trend during the 20th century. This article discusses the possible explanations for the declining trend during the 20th century and explores the role of energy quality as expressed in energy prices. For the first time a complete set of national energy retail prices covering two centuries has been constructed and used for Britain, while the energy price data previously available for Sweden until 2000 has been updated to 2009. This allows us to explore the role of energy quality in shaping long-term energy intensity. We find no relation between energy quality and energy intensity in the 19th century, while energy quality may have stimulated the declining energy intensity in Europe over the 20th century, but is not the sole or even main reason for the decline. Rather, increased economic efficiency in the use of energy services seems to have been the main driver for the decline after 1970, presumably driven by the information and communication technology
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