69 research outputs found

    Honor and The Code of Silence

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    This work is about law enforcement and the code of silence some officers that take part in it. There are three reasons behind officers following this code is due to the influence of the police academy, their fellow police officers, and the police union. Then going over how honor influences these officers becoming a part of the code of silence as well. The code of silence is a problem in the United States that is leading to officers getting away with crimes

    Using a Token System to Increase Compliance and Avoid Satiation during Reinforcer Preference Assessments

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    Preference assessments are commonly administered to identify potential reinforcers for use in behavioral interventions. This study examined the effectiveness of a token intervention for increasing compliance during paired-stimulus preference assessments. Three male preschool children with hypothesized tangible-motivated problem behavior participated. For Experiment 1, an ABAB reversal design was used to evaluate the effects of tokens on students’ compliance and problem behaviors. Experiment 2 used a concurrent-operants design to compare children’s choice of concurrent VI-15s schedules of token delivery and exchange at the end of each session versus immediate access to a highly-preferred item. Results demonstrated that two of the three children exhibited an increase in compliance with item surrendering during the token intervention phases compared to baseline. Only one participant demonstrated a preference for tokens over access to their highest preferred item. Implications of the study on the increase in compliance using generalized conditioned reinforcers are discussed

    Why I Read

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    I have left behind the world of reality many times by way of another’s writing. Yet, more memorable for me is not that which I have left behind and temporarily lost, but that which I have found and kept amidst the pages of the precious books I have read: Pieces of myself I had forgotten and pieces of myself I would like to change and grow. Janna Sallade is a Senior Health Sciences major at JMU. She will be attending Vanderbilt Nurse Practitioner school in the fall. She is a member of JMU\u27s premier female a capella group, Notoriety. She also enjoys reading, traveling, green things, Africa, playing the piano, and distance running. She is so thankful for her wonderful family and friends who never cease to delight and entertain her. She reports that what is most important (and definitely most exciting) about her life is that it has been forever changed because of her savior, Jesus Christ

    Group-guidance Practices in Selected Iowa Secondary Schools

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    Tracking environmental change using low-cost instruments during the winter-spring transition season

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    Author Posting. © University of California Press, 2022. This article is posted here by permission of University of California Press for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Burakowski, E., Sallade, S., Contosta, A., Sanders-DeMott, R., & Grogan, D. Tracking environmental change using low-cost instruments during the winter-spring transition season. American Biology Teacher, 84(4), (2022): 219–222, https://doi.org/10.1525/abt.2022.84.4.219.The winter-spring shoulder season, or vernal window, is a key period for ecosystem carbon, water, and energy cycling. Sometimes referred to as mud season, in temperate forests, this transitional season opens with the melting of snowpack in seasonally snow-covered forests and closes when the canopy fills out. Sunlight pours onto the forest floor, soils thaw and warm, and there is an uptick in soil respiration. Scientists hypothesize that this window of ecological opportunity will lengthen in the future; these changes could have implications across all levels of the ecosystem, including the availability of food and water in human systems. Yet, there remains a dearth of observations that track both winter and spring indicators at the same location. Here, we present an inquiry-based, low-cost approach for elementary to high school classrooms to track environmental changes in the winter-spring shoulder season. Engagement in hypothesis generation and the use of claim, evidence, and reasoning practices are coupled with field measurement protocols, which provides teachers and students an authentic research experience that allows for a place-based understanding of local ecosystems and their connection to climate change.This study was supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF-MSB #1802726 and NSF-1920908) and the United States Forest Service CitSci Fund (#18-CS-11242307-044)

    Critical variables of solder paste stencil printing for micro-BGA and fine-pitch QFP

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    Stencil printing continues to be the dominant method of solder deposition in high-volume surface-mount assembly. Control of the amount of solder paste deposited is critical in the case of fine-pitch and ultrafine-pitch surface-mount assembly. The process is still not well understood as indicated by the fact that industry reports 52-71% surface-mount technology (SMT) defects are related to the solder paste stencil printing process. The purpose of this paper is to identify the critical variables that influence the volume, area, and height of solder paste deposited. An experiment was conducted to investigate the effects of relevant process parameters on the amount of solder paste deposited for ball grid arrays (BGAs) and quad flat packages (QFPs) of five different pitches ranging from 0.76 mm (30 mil) to 0.3 mm (12 mil). The effects of aperture size, aperture shape, board finish, stencil thickness, solder type, and print speed were examined. The deposited solder paste was measured by an inline fully automatic laser-based three-dimensional (3-D) triangulation solder paste inspection system. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) shows that aperture size and stencil thickness are the two most critical variables. A linear relationship between transfer ratio (defined as the ratio of the deposited paste volume to the stencil aperture volume) and area ratio (defined as the ratio of the area of the aperture opening to the area of the aperture wall) is proposed. The analysis indicates that the selection of a proper stencil thickness is the key to controlling the amount of solder paste deposited, and that the selection of maximum stencil thickness should be based on the area ratio. The experimental results are shown to be consistent with a theoretical model, which are also described

    Blood pressure vs altitude in hypertensive and non-hypertensive himalayan trekkers

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    Introduction: Determine blood pressure (BP) response to changes in altitude in Himalayan trekkers with and without hypertension (HTN). Methods: BP was measured in Lukla (2800m), Namche (3400m), and either Pheriche or Dingboche (4400m) on ascent and descent. Hypertensive subjects were defined by self-reported diagnosis of HTN. Results: Trekkers had HTN (H, n=60) or no HTN (NH, n=604). Of those with HTN, 50 (83%) took one or more BP medications including ACEIs/ARBs (n=35, 48%), Ca++ channel blockers (n=15, 22%), beta-blockers (n=9, 13%), thiazide diuretics (n=7, 10%), and others (n=5, 7%). At 2800m, systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP) were greater in the H group than in the NH group [mean SBP= 151mmHg (95% CI 145.4-155.7) vs 127mmHg (95% CI 125.5 128.0); mean DBP=88mmHg (95% CI 85.1-91.7) vs 80mmHg (95% CI 79.3-80.8)] and remained higher at both 3400m [mean SBP=150mmHg (95% CI 143.7-156.9) vs 127mmHg (95% CI 125.8-128.5); mean DBP=88mmHg (95% CI 84.3-90.8) vs 82mmHg (95% CI 80.7-82.5)] and 4400m [mean SBP=144mmHg (95% CI 136.7-151.7) vs 128mmHg (95% CI 126.4-129.5); mean DBP=87mmHg (95% CI 83.2-91.7) vs 82mmHg (95% CI 81.3-83.2)]. Between 2800m and 3400m, BP increased in 37% of trekkers, decreased in 25%, and did not change in 38%; from 3400m to 4400m, BP increased in 35% of trekkers, decreased in 26%, and did not change in 40%. Prevalence of severe hypertension (BP\u3e180/120mmHg) was similar across altitudes but higher in the H group (9%; 10%; 8% vs 0.7%; 0.6%, 0.3%) at 2800m, 3400m, and 4400m, respectively. No subjects reported symptoms of hypertensive emergency (chest pain, stroke, etc.). Conclusion: Blood pressure response to altitude is variable. High prevalence of severe hypertension in hypertensive trekkers warrants further study regarding BP control at high altitude
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