247 research outputs found
Le Soi au pluriel
Eric Rohde propose dans cette contribution une réflexion portant sur l’intersubjectivité, entendue comme le lieu du commun dans la communauté et comme accès à l’autre, puisque la rencontre entre les membres de la communauté se produit dans le monde. La thèse henryenne est ici aussi présentée en contraste avec les thèses de Heidegger et de Husserl, pour montrer que la compréhension de l’autre ego à partir de l’ego engage aussitôt la nécessité de recourir « à l’un ou à l’autre des motifs – analogie, extériorité, représentation – qui trahissent, à ses yeux, le défaut congénital de la tradition phénoménologique qui distingue l’apparaître et l’apparaissant ». Mais l’intérêt majeur de cette analyse est qu’elle transporte la thématique vers la question du temps, pour penser la mise à jour de la phénoménalisation propre à la communauté, avec la critique de l’intentionnalité que l’on sait et selon les modalités spécifiques au soi et à la communauté
Moderators of two Indicated Cognitive-Behavioral Depression Prevention Approaches for Adolescents in a School-Based Effectiveness Trial
Objective: Our aim was to identify moderators of the effects of a cognitive behavioral group-based
prevention program (CB group) and CB bibliotherapy, relative to an educational brochure control condition
and to one another, in a school-based effectiveness randomized controlled prevention trial.
Method: 378 adolescents (M age ¼ 15.5, 68% female) with elevated depressive symptoms were randomized
in one of three conditions and were assessed at pretest, posttest, and 6-month follow-up. We
tested the moderating effect of three individual (baseline depressive symptoms, negative attributional
style, substance use), three environmental (negative life events, parental support, peer support), and two
sociodemographic (sex, age) characteristics.
Results: Baseline depressive symptoms interacted with condition and time. Decomposition indicated
that elevated baseline depressive symptoms amplified the effect of CB bibliotherapy at posttest (but not
6-month follow-up) relative to the control condition, but did not modify the effect of CB group relative to
the control condition or relative to bibliotherapy. Specifically, CB bibliotherapy resulted in lower posttest
depressive symptoms than the control condition in individuals with elevated, but not average or low
baseline symptoms. We found no interaction effect for other putative moderators.
Conclusions: Our findings suggest that bibliotherapy is effective only in participants who have elevated
depressive symptoms at baseline. The fact that no study variable moderated the effects of CB group,
which had a significant main effect in reducing depressive symptoms relative to the control condition,
suggests that this indicated prevention intervention is effective for a wide range of adolescents
Group-Based Symptom Trajectories in Indicated Prevention of Adolescent Depression
Background: Adolescent depression prevention research has focused on mean
intervention outcomes, but has not considered heterogeneity in symptom course.
Here, we empirically identify subgroups with distinct trajectories of depressive
symptom change among adolescents enrolled in two indicated depression preven-
tion trials and examine how cognitive-behavioral (CB) interventions and baseline
predictors relate to trajectory membership.
Methods: Six hundred thirty-one
participants were assigned to one of three conditions: CB group intervention, CB
bibliotherapy, and brochure control. We used group-based trajectory modeling
to identify trajectories of depressive symptoms from pretest to 2-year follow-up.
We examined associations between class membership and conditions using chi-
square tests and baseline predictors using multinomial regressions.
Results: We
identified four trajectories in the full sample. Qualitatively similar trajectories
were found in each condition separately. Two trajectories of positive symptom
course (low-declining, high-declining) had declining symptoms and were dis-
tinguished by baseline symptom severity. Two trajectories of negative course
(high-persistent, resurging), respectively, showed no decline in symptoms or de-
cline followed by symptom reappearance. Participants in the brochure control
condition were significantly more likely to populate the high-persistent trajectory
relative to either CB condition and were significantly less likely to populate the
low-declining trajectory relative to CB group. Several baseline factors predicted
trajectory classes, but gender was the most informative prognostic factor, with
males having increased odds of membership in a high-persistent trajectory rel-
ative to other trajectories.
Conclusions: Findings suggest that CB preventive
interventions do not alter the nature of trajectories, but reduce the risk that
adolescents follow a trajectory of chronically elevated symptoms
Molecular phenotyping of the pal1 and pal2 mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana reveals far-reaching consequences on phenylpropanoid, amino acid, and carbohydrate metabolism
The first enzyme of the phenylpropanoid pathway, Phe ammonia-lyase (PAL), is encoded by four genes in Arabidopsis thaliana. Whereas PAL function is well established in various plants, an insight into the functional significance of individual gene family members is lacking. We show that in the absence of clear phenotypic alterations in the Arabidopsis pall and pal2 single mutants and with limited phenotypic alterations in the pall pal2 double mutant, significant modifications occur in the transcriptome and metabolome of the pal mutants. The disruption of PAL led to transcriptomic adaptation of components of the phenylpropanoid biosynthesis, carbohydrate metabolism, and amino acid metabolism, revealing complex interactions at the level of gene expression between these pathways. Corresponding biochemical changes included a decrease in the three major flavonol glycosides, glycosylated vanillic acid, scopolin, and two novel feruloyl malates coupled to coniferyl alcohol. Moreover, Phe overaccumulated in the double mutant, and the levels of many other amino acids were significantly imbalanced. The lignin content was significantly reduced, and the syringyl/guaiacyl ratio of lignin monomers had increased. Together, from the molecular phenotype, common and specific functions of PAL1 and PAL2 are delineated, and PAL1 is qualified as being more important for the generation of phenylpropanoids
Negative Life Events and Substance Use Moderate Cognitive Behavioral Adolescent Depression Prevention Intervention
Abstract. Investigate factors that amplify or mitigate the effects of an indicated cognitive behavioral (CB) depression prevention program for adolescents with elevated depressive symptoms. Using data from a randomized trial (Registration No. NCT00183417; n ¼ 173) in which adolescents (M age ¼ 15.5, SD ¼ 1.2) were assigned to a brief cognitive behavioral prevention program or an educational brochure control condition, we tested whether elevated motivation to reduce depression and initial depressive symptom severity amplified intervention effects and whether negative life events, social support deficits, and substance use attenuated intervention effects. Hierarchical linear modeling (HLM) indicated differential intervention effects for two of the five examined variables: negative life events and substance use. For adolescents at low and medium levels of substance use or negative life events, the CB intervention produced declines in depressive symptoms relative to controls. However, at high levels of substance use or negative life events, the CB intervention did not significantly reduce depressive symptoms in comparison to controls. Results imply that high-risk adolescents with either high rates of major life stress or initial substance use may require specialized depression prevention efforts
Evaluating models for partially clustered designs.
Partially clustered designs, where clustering occurs in some conditions and not others, are common in psychology, particularly in prevention and intervention trials. This paper reports results from a simulation comparing five approaches for analyzing partially clustered data, including Type I errors, parameter bias, efficiency, and power. Results indicate that multilevel models adapted for partially clustered data are relatively unbiased and efficient and consistently maintain the nominal Type I error rate when using appropriate degrees of freedom. To attain sufficient power in partially clustered designs, researchers should attend primarily to the number of clusters in the study. An illustration is provided using data from a partially clustered eating disorder prevention trial
Medical students\u27 knowledge of HPV, HPV vaccine, and HPV-associated head and neck cancer
On the basis of their training, medical students are considered the best case scenario among university students in knowledge of the human papillomavirus (HPV). We evaluated differences in knowledge of HPV, HPV vaccine, and head and neck cancer (HNC) among medical students. A previously validated questionnaire was completed by 247 medical students at a Midwestern university. Outcomes of interest were knowledge score for HPV and HPV vaccine, and HNC, derived from combining questionnaire items to form HPV knowledge and HNC scores, and analyzed using multivariate linear regression. Mean scores for HPV knowledge were 19.4 out of 26, and 7.2 out of 12 for HNC knowledge. In the final multivariate linear regression model, sex, race, and year of study were independently associated with HPV and HPV vaccine knowledge. Males had significantly lower HPV vaccine knowledge than females (β = -1.53; 95% CI: -2.53, -0.52), as did nonwhite students (β = -1.05; 95% CI: -2.07, -0.03). There was a gradient in HPV vaccine knowledge based on the year of study, highest among fourth year students (β = 6.75; 95% CI: 5.17, 8.33). Results were similar for factors associated with HNC knowledge, except for sex. HNC knowledge similarly increased based on year of study, highest for fourth year students (β = 2.50; 95% CI: 1.72, 3.29). Among medical students, gaps remain in knowledge of HPV, HPV vaccine, and HPV-linked HNC. Male medical students have significantly lower knowledge of HPV. This highlights the need to increase medical student knowledge of HPV and HPV-linked HNC
A pilot randomized trial of a cognitive reappraisal obesity prevention program
Evaluate a selective obesity prevention program promoting use of cognitive reappraisals to reduce reward region response and increase inhibitory region response to high-fat/high-sugar foods and reduce intake of fat and sugar to prevent blunted reward region response to intake of such foods
Genomic analysis reveals key aspects of prokaryotic symbiosis in the phototrophic consortium "<em>Chlorochromatium aggregatum</em>"
BACKGROUND: ‘Chlorochromatium aggregatum’ is a phototrophic consortium, a symbiosis that may represent the highest degree of mutual interdependence between two unrelated bacteria not associated with a eukaryotic host. ‘Chlorochromatium aggregatum’ is a motile, barrel-shaped aggregate formed from a single cell of ‘Candidatus Symbiobacter mobilis”, a polarly flagellated, non-pigmented, heterotrophic bacterium, which is surrounded by approximately 15 epibiont cells of Chlorobium chlorochromatii, a non-motile photolithoautotrophic green sulfur bacterium. RESULTS: We analyzed the complete genome sequences of both organisms to understand the basis for this symbiosis. Chl. chlorochromatii has acquired relatively few symbiosis-specific genes; most acquired genes are predicted to modify the cell wall or function in cell-cell adhesion. In striking contrast, ‘Ca. S. mobilis’ appears to have undergone massive gene loss, is probably no longer capable of independent growth, and thus may only reproduce when consortia divide. A detailed model for the energetic and metabolic bases of the dependency of ‘Ca. S. mobilis’ on Chl. chlorochromatii is described. CONCLUSIONS: Genomic analyses suggest that three types of interactions lead to a highly sophisticated relationship between these two organisms. Firstly, extensive metabolic exchange, involving carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur sources as well as vitamins, occurs from the epibiont to the central bacterium. Secondly, ‘Ca. S. mobilis’ can sense and move towards light and sulfide, resources that only directly benefit the epibiont. Thirdly, electron cycling mechanisms, particularly those mediated by quinones and potentially involving shared protonmotive force, could provide an important basis for energy exchange in this and other symbiotic relationships
3D Game World in OpenGL
Tato práce se zabývá studiem moderních technik v počítačové grafice; návrhem a vytvořením aplikace, jež může sloužit jako jádro budoucímu hernímu enginu. V práci jsou vyzdviženy techniky tvorby rozsáhlých terénů, pokročilých stínů, generování fyzikálně založené oblohy a vykreslování velkého množství objektů. Závěrem je provedeno výkonnostní testování těchto modulů.Focus of this master's thesis is a study of modern techniques in computer graphics and designing and developing custom application based on which could be developed new game engine. In this thesis are highlighted techniques for creating large terrains, advanced shadows, physically based sky rendering and drawing large set of objects. Finally, performance testing of these modules is performed.
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