1,058 research outputs found
Communication barriers inhibiting sex education in the home
Dissertation (Ph.D.)--University of Kansas, Speech and Drama, 1981.Past research has shown that adolescents gain the majority of their sex education from peers not parents. This study investigates the effect of four variables on the amount of sex education provided at home: (1) defensive communication climate, (2) sex of the parent, (3) degree of religiosity of the parents, and (4) degree of attitude similarity between parents and children about sexuality.
A descriptive questionnaire with Likert scales was administered to 194 undergraduates at the University of Kansas. Based on a factor analysis, Jack Gibb's 12 categories of supportive and defensive behaviors were collapsed into one communication climate score.
The results of t-tests and one-way analyses of variance showed that: (1) Peers not parents provide the majority of sex information (p < .001). (2) Mothers provide more sex information than fathers (p < .001). (3) During discussions of sexuality, the communication climate between adolescents and parents is more defensive than the climate between peers (p < .001). (4) The degree of religiosity of parents does not affect the amount of sex information conveyed or the degree of defensiveness in the communication climate during discussions of sexuality between parents and children. (5) Parents who share similar sexual values with their children also provided more sex information (p < .001). (6) Supportive communication climates between parents and children correlate with parents sharing more sex information with their children. (7) Males have a more supportive communication climate with their fathers than females during sex talks (p < .001). However, females have a more supportive communication climate when discussing sexuality with their same-sex friends than do males (p < .001).
Thus, while defensive communication climates may be a barrier to parent-child interactions about sexuality, shared sexual values enhance parent-child communication. Males gain little sex education from parents and have a defensive climate with same-sex peers. Suggestions are given for future research and for sex education seminars to combat these barriers
Image quality eigenfunctions for the human eye
This work presents a compact statistical model of the retinal image quality in a large population of human eyes following two objectives. The first was to develop a general modal representation of the optical transfer function (OTF) in terms of orthogonal functions and construct a basis composed of cross-correlations between pairs of complex Zernike polynomials. That basis was not orthogonal and highly redundant, requiring the application of singular value decomposition (SVD) to obtain an orthogonal basis with a significantly lower dimensionality. The first mode is the OTF of the perfect system, and hence the modal representation, is highly compact for well-corrected optical systems, and vice-versa. The second objective is to apply this modal representation to the OTFs of a large population of human eyes for a pupil diameter of 5 mm. This permits an initial strong data compression. Next, principal component analysis (PCA) is applied to obtain further data compression, leading to a compact statistical model of the initial population. In this model each OTF is approximated by the sum of the population mean plus a linear combination of orthogonal eigenfunctions (eigen-OTF) accounting for a selected percentage (90%) of the population variance. This type of models can be useful for Monte Carlo simulations among other application
On the correct formula for the lifetime broadened superconducting density of states
We argue that the well known Dynes formula [Dynes R C {\it et al.} 1978 {\it
Phys. Rev. Lett.} {\bf 41} 1509] for the superconducting quasiparticle density
of states, which tries to incorporate the lifetime broadening in an approximate
way, cannot be justified microscopically for conventional superconductors.
Instead, we propose a new simple formula in which the energy gap has a finite
imaginary part and the quasiparticle energy is real. We prove that
in the quasiparticle approximation 2 gives the quasiparticle decay
rate at the gap edge for conventional superconductors. This conclusion does not
depend on the nature of interactions that cause the quasiparticle decay. The
new formula is tested on the case of a strong coupling superconductor
PbBi and an excellent agreement with theoretical predictions is
obtained. While both the Dynes formula and the one proposed in this work give
good fits and fit parameters for PbBi, only the latter formula
can be justified microscopically.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Violation of Heisenberg's Measurement-Disturbance Relationship by Weak Measurements
While there is a rigorously proven relationship about uncertainties intrinsic
to any quantum system, often referred to as "Heisenberg's Uncertainty
Principle," Heisenberg originally formulated his ideas in terms of a
relationship between the precision of a measurement and the disturbance it must
create. Although this latter relationship is not rigorously proven, it is
commonly believed (and taught) as an aspect of the broader uncertainty
principle. Here, we experimentally observe a violation of Heisenberg's
"measurement-disturbance relationship", using weak measurements to characterize
a quantum system before and after it interacts with a measurement apparatus.
Our experiment implements a 2010 proposal of Lund and Wiseman to confirm a
revised measurement-disturbance relationship derived by Ozawa in 2003. Its
results have broad implications for the foundations of quantum mechanics and
for practical issues in quantum mechanics.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Patterns of transfusion burden in an unselected population of patients with myelodysplastic syndromes:A population-based study
BACKGROUND: Ineffective hematopoiesis in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) often results in transfusion dependence. The burden of frequent transfusions in the real-world MDS population is largely unknown.STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: An observational, retrospective, population-based study, using the HemoBase registry, was performed including all patients diagnosed with MDS between 2005 and 2017 in Friesland, a province in the Netherlands with approximately 650,000 inhabitants. Detailed clinical information was collected from the electronic health records. Transfusion burden was classified according to the International Working Group 2018 criteria: not transfusion dependent, low (LTB), or high transfusion burden (HTB). Univariate and multivariable regression analyses were performed.RESULTS: Of 292 patients, 136 (46.6%) had a HTB of ≥8 units/16 weeks and 17 (5.8%) had a LTB of 3-7 units/16 weeks. This was present in all types of MDS patients, but patients aged 75-84 years (odds ratio [OR] 4.02, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.84-8.82), high-risk MDS patients (OR 2.88, 95% CI: 1.08-7.68) and MDS-EB-2 patients (OR 7.07, 95% CI: 2.17-22.90) were particularly at risk for a HTB.DISCUSSION: This study provides a reliable estimate of the transfusion burden in real-world MDS patients, with almost half of the patients having a HTB. A HTB was observed in all MDS subtypes and both low- and high-risk MDS. Therefore, we conclude that the entire MDS population might benefit from novel agents that reduce the transfusion need and that might have beneficial effects on patient outcomes and healthcare utilization outcomes.</p
Stability of and change in substance use risk personality:Gender differences and smoking cigarettes among early adolescents
OBJECTIVE: Adolescents show a steadily increasing inclination toward health risk behaviors, including smoking cigarettes. There is ample evidence that personality traits are related to smoking behavior. However, less is known about the stability of and change in these personality traits during early adolescence and whether smoking behavior affects the developmental trajectories. Moreover, less is known about the influence of gender on the course of personality. METHOD: Longitudinal data of three waves were used from 1121 early adolescents. To measure personality, the Substance Use Risk Profile Scale was used. Individual growth curve models were conducted to measure the stability, mean-level change and individual differences in change for personality. RESULTS: Stability of personality was moderate for boys and ranged from moderate to high for girls. On average early adolescents became more impulsive and more sensation seeking over a period of 18 months. Furthermore, hopelessness for girls increased and the increase in sensation seeking was higher for girls than for boys. Third, smoking behavior was related to all personality traits, indicating that smoking adolescents are more anxious, hopeless, impulsive and sensation seeking than non-smoking adolescents. CONCLUSIONS: Our results are in line with the disruption hypothesis, i.e., during early adolescence there is a dip in personality maturity. There are clear differences between girls and boys in stability of and change in personality traits. Besides, although smoking behavior is related to personality, the change in personality is probably related to other variables
Cross-verification of independent quantum devices
Quantum computers are on the brink of surpassing the capabilities of even the
most powerful classical computers. This naturally raises the question of how
one can trust the results of a quantum computer when they cannot be compared to
classical simulation. Here we present a verification technique that exploits
the principles of measurement-based quantum computation to link quantum
circuits of different input size, depth, and structure. Our approach enables
consistency checks of quantum computations within a device, as well as between
independent devices. We showcase our protocol by applying it to five
state-of-the-art quantum processors, based on four distinct physical
architectures: nuclear magnetic resonance, superconducting circuits, trapped
ions, and photonics, with up to 6 qubits and 200 distinct circuits
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