92 research outputs found

    Reclaiming the humanity in personality Disorder.

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    This paper provides a commentary upon the nursing care of individuals diagnosed with personality disorder and associated education courses. The discussion focuses upon recent policy trends in the UK as a point of departure. This policy discourse is critical of mainstream mental health services in previously operating to exclude such individuals. One of the consequences has been a recent growth in interest in relevant training courses, many of which devote significant attention to staff attitudes regarding this client group. Various previous researchers and commentators have remarked upon the implications for practice of a perceived negative attitude among care staff. We reflect upon our own anecdotal experience of developing and delivering new university-based courses for practitioners working in the field of personality disorder to offer a particular critique of the UK context, in which this policy, training, and practice is framed. Social constructionist theories are drawn on to offer insights into public and practitioner discourse and the possible effects on therapeutic relationships. The available discourse constructs individuals with a diagnosis of personality disorder as essentially different from other people. We argue that staff training and practice development initiatives are likely to be more successful if such discourse is challenged, and attempts are made in therapeutic encounters to recognize shared characteristics and positive attributes as much as perceived difference and negative attributes. We refer to this as a re-engagement with common humanity. Despite the singular national context, the discursive themes explored are not necessarily restricted to the UK

    Modeling, Evaluation, and Scale on Artificial Pedestrians: A Literature Review

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    Modeling pedestrian dynamics and their implementation in a computer are challenging and important issues in the knowledge areas of transportation and computer simulation. The aim of this article is to provide a bibliographic outlook so that the reader may have quick access to the most relevant works related to this problem. We have used three main axes to organize the article's contents: pedestrian models, validation techniques, and multiscale approaches. The backbone of this work is the classification of existing pedestrian models; we have organized the works in the literature under five categories, according to the techniques used for implementing the operational level in each pedestrian model. Then the main existing validation methods, oriented to evaluate the behavioral quality of the simulation systems, are reviewed. Furthermore, we review the key issues that arise when facing multiscale pedestrian modeling, where we first focus on the behavioral scale (combinations of micro and macro pedestrian models) and second on the scale size (from individuals to crowds). The article begins by introducing the main characteristics of walking dynamics and its analysis tools and concludes with a discussion about the contributions that different knowledge fields can make in the near future to this exciting area

    Commissioning of the BRIKEN detector for the measurement of very exotic β-delayed neutron emitters

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    A new detection system has been installed at the RIKEN Nishina Center (Japan) to investigate decay properties of very neutron-rich nuclei. The setup consists of three main parts: a moderated neutron counter, a detection system sensitive to the implantation and decay of radioactive ions, and γ-ray detectors. We describe here the setup, the commissioning experiment and some selected results demonstrating its performance for the measurement of half-lives and β-delayed neutron emission probabilities. The methodology followed in the analysis of the data is described in detail. Particular emphasis is placed on the correction of the accidental neutron background

    Commissioning of the BRIKEN detector for the measurement of very exotic β-delayed neutron emitters

    Get PDF
    A new detection system has been installed at the RIKEN Nishina Center (Japan) to investigate decay properties of very neutron-rich nuclei. The setup consists of three main parts: a moderated neutron counter, a detection system sensitive to the implantation and decay of radioactive ions, and gamma-ray detectors. We describe here the setup, the commissioning experiment and some selected results demonstrating its performance for the measurement of half-lives and beta-delayed neutron emission probabilities. The methodology followed in the analysis of the data is described in detail. Particular emphasis is placed on the correction of the accidental neutron background

    ß-delayed neutron emission of r-process nuclei at the N=82 shell closure

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    Theoretical models of ß-delayed neutron emission are used as crucial inputs in r-process calculations. Benchmarking the predictions of these models is a challenge due to a lack of currently available experimental data. In this work the ß-delayed neutron emission probabilities of 33 nuclides in the important mass regions south and south-west of 132Sn are presented, 16 for the first time. The measurements were performed at RIKEN using the Advanced Implantation Detector Array (AIDA) and the BRIKEN neutron detector array. The values presented constrain the predictions of theoretical models in the region, affecting the final abundance distribution of the second r-process peak at .Peer ReviewedArticle signat per 58 autors/es J. Liu, S. Bae, N.T. Brewer, C.G. Bruno, R. Caballero-Folch, P.J. Coleman-Smith, I. Dillmann, C. Domingo-Pardo, A. Fijalkowska, N. Fukuda, S. Go, C.J. Griffin, R. Grzywacz, J. Ha, L. J. Harkness-Brennan, T. Isobe, D. Kahl, L.H. Khiem, G.G. Kiss, A. Korgul, S. Kubono, M. Labiche, I. Lazarus, P. Morrall, M.R. Mumpower, N. Nepal, R.D. Page, M. Piersa , V.F.E. Pucknell , B.C. Rasco, B. Rubio, K.P. Rykaczewski , H. Sakurai , Y. Shimizu , D.W. Stracener, T. Sumikama , H. Suzuki, J.L. Tain , H. Takeda, A. Tarifeño-Saldivia, A. Tolosa-Delgado , M. Wolinska-Cichocka , R. YokoyamaPostprint (author's final draft

    Synthesis, Structures, and Optical Properties of Ruthenium(II) Complexes of the Tris(1-pyrazolyl)methane Ligand

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    Four new complex salts [Ru^(II)Cl(Tpm)(L^A)_2][PF_6]_n [Tpm = tris(1-pyrazolyl)methane; n = 1, L^A = pyridine (py) 1 or ethyl isonicotinate (EIN) 2; n = 3, L^A = N-methyl-4,4′-bipyridinium (MeQ^+) 3 or N-phenyl-4,4′-bipyridinium (PhQ^+) 4] have been prepared and characterized. Electronic absorption spectra show intense d → π^* metal-to-ligand charge-transfer (MLCT) absorption bands, while cyclic voltammetry reveals a reversible Ru^(III/II) wave, accompanied by quasireversible or irreversible L^A-based reductions for all except 1. Single crystal X-ray structures have been obtained for 1•Me_2CO, 2, and 3•Me_2CO. For 2–4, molecular first hyperpolarizabilities β have been measured in acetonitrile solutions via the hyper-Rayleigh scattering (HRS) technique at 800 nm. Stark (electroabsorption) spectroscopic studies on the MLCT bands in frozen butyronitrile allow the indirect estimation of static first hyperpolarizabilities β_0. The various physical data obtained for 3 and 4 are compared with those reported previously for related cis-{Ru^(II)(NH_3)_4}^(2+) species [Coe, B. J. et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2005, 127, 4845]. TD-DFT calculations on the complexes in 1–4 confirm that their lowest energy absorption bands are primarily Ru^(II) → L^A MLCT in character, while Ru^(II) → Tpm MLCT transitions are predicted at higher energies. DFT agrees with the Stark, but not the HRS measurements, in showing that β_0 increases with the electron-accepting strength of L^A. The 2D nature of the chromophores is evidenced by dominant β_(xxy) tensor components
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