549 research outputs found
"It was then that I thought 'whaat? This is not my Dadâ: the implications of the âstill the same personâ narrative for children and young people who have a parent with dementia
This research used auto/biographical interviews to explore the experiences of 19, 8 to 31 year olds who had a parent with dementia. Thematic analysis revealed challenges occasioned by the master narrative that people with dementia are âstillâ the same person they were prior to the onset of their condition. While this notion is â rightly â at the heart of person-centered care in dementia services, the âstillâ discourse conflicts with the experiences of young people. Their accounts suggest that the construction of their parent as the same person is not helpful and that, furthermore, expectations that they will behave and feel towards that parent as they did before are a source of distress in what is already a challenging situation. This paper highlights the need to equip young people with support that acknowledges that their parent may well be drastically different to the Mum or Dad they previously âknew
The effect of electro-hydrodynamic shockwaves on the quality of striploin and brisket beef muscles during long-term storage
Shockwaves generate instantaneous high pressures, which could affect meat shelf-life or quality. This study assessed microbiological counts, pH, drip, cook and moisture loss and texture of striploin (longissimus lumborum) and brisket (pectoralis profundus) treated with electrical shockwave (25 kV, 8 pulses) and subsequently stored (â0.5 °C) for 0, 4, 8, 12, 16 and 20 weeks. Shockwave did not affect total viable counts (p>0.05), with all samples considered microbiologically acceptable (0.05). Shockwave Ă storage time increased moisture losses in striploin (p<0.01) and brisket (p<0.01) at week 0 but this decreased over subsequent storage weeks. Shockwave technology did not affect meat shelf-life and has potential for beef tenderisation
Conductivity of graphene: How to distinguish between samples with short and long range scatterers
Applying a quasiclassical equation to carriers in graphene we found a way how
to distinguish between samples with the domination of short and long range
scatterers from the conductivity measurements. The model proposed explains
recent transport experiments with chemically doped as well as suspended
graphene.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, some references have been corrected and revise
Superconductivity coexisting with phase-separated static magnetic order in (Ba,K)FeAs, (Sr,Na)FeAs and CaFeAs
The recent discovery and subsequent developments of FeAs-based
superconductors have presented novel challenges and opportunities in the quest
for superconducting mechanisms in correlated-electron systems. Central issues
of ongoing studies include interplay between superconductivity and magnetism as
well as the nature of the pairing symmetry reflected in the superconducting
energy gap. In the cuprate and RE(O,F)FeAs (RE = rare earth) systems, the
superconducting phase appears without being accompanied by static magnetic
order, except for narrow phase-separated regions at the border of phase
boundaries. By muon spin relaxation measurements on single crystal specimens,
here we show that superconductivity in the AFeAs (A = Ca,Ba,Sr)
systems, in both the cases of composition and pressure tunings, coexists with a
strong static magnetic order in a partial volume fraction. The superfluid
response from the remaining paramagnetic volume fraction of
(BaK)FeAs exhibits a nearly linear variation in T
at low temperatures, suggesting an anisotropic energy gap with line nodes
and/or multi-gap effects.Comment: 14 pages 7 figures (4 for main text and 3 for on-line supplementary
documents
Methodological approaches to determining the marine radiocarbon reservoir effect
The marine radiocarbon reservoir effect is an offset in 14C age between contemporaneous organisms from the terrestrial environment and organisms that derive their carbon from the marine environment. Quantification of this effect is of crucial importance for correct calibration of the <sup>14</sup>C ages of marine-influenced samples to the calendrical timescale. This is fundamental to the construction of archaeological and palaeoenvironmental chronologies when such samples are employed in <sup>14</sup>C analysis. Quantitative measurements of temporal variations in regional marine reservoir ages also have the potential to be used as a measure of process changes within Earth surface systems, due to their link with climatic and oceanic changes. The various approaches to quantification of the marine radiocarbon reservoir effect are assessed, focusing particularly on the North Atlantic Ocean. Currently, the global average marine reservoir age of surface waters, R(t), is c. 400 radiocarbon years; however, regional values deviate from this as a function of climate and oceanic circulation systems. These local deviations from R(t) are expressed as +R values. Hence, polar waters exhibit greater reservoir ages (δR = c. +400 to +800 <sup>14</sup>C y) than equatorial waters (δR = c. 0 <sup>14</sup>C y). Observed temporal variations in δR appear to reflect climatic and oceanographic changes. We assess three approaches to quantification of marine reservoir effects using known age samples (from museum collections), tephra isochrones (present onshore/offshore) and paired marine/terrestrial samples (from the same context in, for example, archaeological sites). The strengths and limitations of these approaches are evaluated using examples from the North Atlantic region. It is proposed that, with a suitable protocol, accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) measurements on paired, short-lived, single entity marine and terrestrial samples from archaeological deposits is the most promising approach to constraining changes over at least the last 5 ky BP
Am I just not good enough? The creation, development and questioning of a high performance coaching identity
While the career experiences and trajectories of various sports workers have received increased scholarly attention, those of professional coaches have, in comparison, received scant consideration. This paper focuses on the career experiences of Maeve (a pseudonym), a high performance coach, and the critical incidents related to the creation, development, and, ultimately, questioning of her professional identity. Data were collected through a series of narrative-biographical interviews and were subject to a process of iterative data analysis. The results indicated that her significant investment into her coaching self, combined with the vagaries and uncertain nature of work in high performance coaching, led her to experience a biographical disruption that interrupted the narrative coherence of her coaching life. The findings add further credence to recent critiques of only understanding and representing coaching careers in a linear and chronically staged fashion
Guidelines of the American Society of Mammalogists for the use of wild mammals in research
Guidelines for use of wild mammal species are updated from the American Society of Mammalogists (ASM) 2007 publication. These revised guidelines cover current professional techniques and regulations involving mammals used in research and teaching. They incorporate additional resources, summaries of procedures, and reporting requirements not contained in earlier publications. Included are details on marking, housing, trapping, and collecting mammals. It is recommended that institutional animal care and use committees (IACUCs), regulatory agencies, and investigators use these guidelines as a resource for protocols involving wild mammals. These guidelines were prepared and approved by the ASM, working with experienced professional veterinarians and IACUCs, whose collective expertise provides a broad and comprehensive understanding of the biology of nondomesticated mammals in their natural environments. The most current version of these guidelines and any subsequent modifications are available at the ASM Animal Care and Use Committee page of the ASM Web site (http://mammalsociety.org/committees/index.asp).American Society of Mammalogist
Can sexual selection drive female life histories? A comparative study on Galliform birds
Sexual selection is an important driver of many of the most spectacular morphological traits that we find in the animal kingdom (for example see Andersson, 1994). As such, sexual selection is most often emphasized as
Dislocations in graphene
We study the stability and evolution of various elastic defects in a flat
graphene sheet and the electronic properties of the most stable configurations.
Two types of dislocations are found to be stable: "glide" dislocations
consisting of heptagon-pentagon pairs, and "shuffle" dislocations, an octagon
with a dangling bond. Unlike the most studied case of carbon nanotubes, Stone
Wales defects are unstable in the planar graphene sheet. Similar defects in
which one of the pentagon-heptagon pairs is displaced vertically with respect
to the other one are found to be dynamically stable. Shuffle dislocations will
give rise to local magnetic moments that can provide an alternative route to
magnetism in graphene
"From âWhat the hell is going on?â to the âMushy middle groundâ to âgetting used to a new normalâ: Young peopleâs biographical narratives around navigating parental dementia"
The number of young people who have a parent with dementia is rising as a result of improvements in diagnosis of young onset variants and demographic shifts. There has, however, been very little research focusing on this group. Accounts elicited as part of the Perceptions and Experiences of Young People With a Parent With Dementia described the period, usually some years, leading up to a diagnosis of a dementia and then the progress of the condition post diagnosis. These narratives were characterised by confusion, uncertainty, trauma and distress as the young people struggled to make sense of the significant and often extreme, behavioural and attitudinal changes that were symptoms of the illness. This paper describes and discusses how the young people experienced and navigated the temporal messiness and consequent biographical disruption arising from parental dementia
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