38,438 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Occupation, mental illness and medium security: A study of occupational engagement in two forensic regional secure units
Research investigating occupational experience among people with mental
illness has highlighted their difficulties in selecting, organising, valuing, enjoying
and competently performing occupations. Although occupational therapy
literature consistently identifies environmental factors as key in facilitating
successful and valued engagement, few authors have studied the implications
of detention in secure mental health settings for this population.
This study investigated the occupational experiences of five people with
schizophrenia in two forensic regional secure units. Quantitative and qualitative
methodologies were used, with semi-structured interviews adding depth and
subjectivity to Occupational Questionnaire (Smith et al 1986) responses. The
quantitative data were analysed using non-parametric analysis, with content
analysis applied to the qualitative data.
Time-use was characterised predominantly by engagement in passive
leisure and rest occupations. This reflects the findings of both inpatient and
community-based studies elsewhere and suggests that mental illness is a common
factor influencing time-use. The participants chose occupations based on
expectations of enjoyment and success, and associations with independence
and normality. Significant correlations were found between perceived competence,
value and enjoyment (p<0.01), and the participants were more likely to enjoy
self-chosen occupations (p<0.05).
Forensic occupational therapists must use evidence to optimise resources
and deliver interventions that facilitate choice and autonomy and reflect
individual needs. Further research with larger samples and longitudinal
methodologies will facilitate generalisation and establish temporal perspective
Effects of Crust Ingestion on Mixer Pump Performance in Tank
In August 1999, a workshop was held at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory to discuss the effects of crust ingestion on mixer pump performance in Hanford Waste Tank 241-SY-101. The main purpose of the workshop was to evaluate the potential for crust ingestion to degrade mixing and/or damage the mixer pump. The need for a previously determined 12-inch separation between the top of the mixer pump inlet and the crust base was evaluated. Participants included a representative from the pump manufacturer, an internationally known expert in centrifugal pump theory, Hanford scientists and engineers, and operational specialists representing relevant fields of expertise.
The workshop focused on developing an understanding of the pump design, addressing the physics of entrainment of solids and gases into the pump, and assessing the effects of solids and gases on pump performance. The major conclusions are summarized as follows:
* Entrainment of a moderate amount of solids or gas from the crust should not damage the pump or reduce its lifetime, though mixing effectiveness will be somewhat reduced.
* Air binding should not damage the pump. Vibration due to ingestion of gas, solids, and objects potentially could cause radial loads that might reduce the lifetime of bearings and seals. However, significant damage would require extreme conditions not associated with the small bubbles, fine solids, and chunks of relatively weak material typical of the crust.
* The inlet duct extension opening, 235 inches from the tank bottom, should be considered the pump inlet, not the small gap at 262 inches.
* A suction vortex exists at the inlet of all pumps. The characteristics of the inlet suction vortex in the mixer pump are very hard to predict, but its effects likely extend upward several feet. Because of this, the current 12-inch limit should be replaced with criteria based on actual monitored pump performance. The most obvious criterion (in addition to current operational constraints) is to monitor discharge pressure and cease pump operation if it falls below a predetermined amount.
* There are no critically necessary tests to prove pump operability or performance before initiating the transfer and back-dilution sequence
I-O Psychology in Aotearoa, New Zealand: A world away?
Industrial-organizational psychology has had a fairly long history in this country, dating back to around the 1920s (Jamieson & Paterson, 1993). To a large extent the field developed initially within universities, although the focus of I-O psychologistsâ activities in this country has always been very applied. Inclusion of I-O psychology in university curricula originally started at the University of Canterbury (in the south island) and then Massey University (in the north island); now two other universities (University of Auckland and University of Waikato, both in the north island) also provide training programs in the field. There are about a dozen academics in psychology departments who would consider themselves to be I-O psychologists, and a small handful in management or HRM departments. Clearly the number of academics specializing in this field is very small. Although this poses challenges for the development of I-O psychology in Aotearoa New Zealand, at the same time it helps communication among us
Nitric acid-organic mixtures surveyed for use in separation by anion exchange methods
Column elution-spectrographic analysis technique compares certain solvents directly to the methanol system, using inert rare earths instead of actinides. Distribution ratios for americium between 90 percent solvent, 10 percent 5 M nitric acid and Dowex 1 nitrate form resin for a large group of organics miscible in water was determined
Global search algorithm for optimal control
Random-search algorithm employs local and global properties to solve two-point boundary value problem in Pontryagin maximum principle for either fixed or variable end-time problems. Mixed boundary value problem is transformed to an initial value problem. Mapping between initial and terminal values utilizes hybrid computer
Multivariate Diophantine equations with many solutions
We show that for each n-tuple of positive rational integers (a_1,..,a_n)
there are sets of primes S of arbitrarily large cardinality s such that the
solutions of the equation a_1x_1+...+a_nx_n=1 with the x_i all S-units are not
contained in fewer than exp((4+o(1))s^{1/2}(log s)^{-1/2}) proper linear
subspaces of C^n. This generalizes a result of Erdos, Stewart and Tijdeman for
m=2 [Compositio 36 (1988), 37-56].
Furthermore we prove that for any algebraic number field K of degree n, any
integer m with 1<=m<n, and any sufficiently large s there are integers
b_0,...,b_m in a number field which are linearly independent over the
rationals, and prime numbers p_1,...,p_s, such that the norm polynomial
equation |N_{K/Q}(b_0+b_1x_1+...+b_mx_m)|=p_1^{z_1}...p_s^{z_s} has at least
exp{(1+o(1)){n/m}s^{m/n}(log s)^{-1+m/n}) solutions in integers
x_1,..,x_m,z_1,..,z_s. This generalizes a result of Moree and Stewart [Indag.
Math. 1 (1990), 465-472].
Our main tool, also established in this paper, is an effective lower bound
for the number of ideals in a number field K of norm <=X composed of prime
ideals which lie outside a given finite set of prime ideals T and which have
norm <=Y. This generalizes a result of Canfield, Erdos and Pomerance [J. Number
Th. 17 (1983), 1-28], and of Moree and Stewart (see above).Comment: 29 page
A Reconciliation between the Consumer Price Index and the Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index
The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) prepares the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U), and the Bureau of Economic Analysis prepares the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) chain-type price index. Both indexes measure the prices paid by consumers for goods and services. Because the two indexes are based on different underlying concepts, they are constructed differently, and tend to behave differently over time. From the first quarter of 2002 through the second quarter of 2007, the CPI-U increased 0.4 percentage point per year faster than the PCE price index. This paper details and quantifies the differences in growth rates between the CPI-U and the PCE price index; it provides a quarterly reconciliation of growth rates for the 2002:Q1- 2007:Q2 time period. There are several factors that explain the differences in growth rates between the CPI and the PCE price index. First, the indexes are based on difference index-number formulas. The CPI-U is based on a Laspeyres index; the PCE price index is based on a Fisher-Ideal index. Second, the relative weights assigned to the detailed item prices in each index are different because they are based on different data sources. The weights used in the CPIU are based on a household survey, while the weights used in the PCE price index are based on business surveys. Third, there are scope differences between the two indexesâ that is, there are items in the CPI-U that are out-of-scope of the PCE price index, and there are items in the PCE price index that are out-of-scope of the CPI-U. And finally, there are differences in the seasonal-adjustment routines and in the detailed price indexes used to construct the two indexes. Over the 2002:Q1-2007:Q2 time period, this analysis finds that almost half of the 0.4 percentage point difference in growth rates between the CPI-U and the PCE price index was explained by differences in index-number formulas. After adjusting for formula differences, differences in relative weightsâprimarily ârent of shelterââmore than accounted for the remaining difference in growth rates. Net scope differences, in contrast, partly offset the effect of relative weight differences.
The extended Mathews stability graph: Quantifying case history requirements and site-specific effects
Heat Capacity Measurements in Pulsed Magnetic Fields
The new NHMFL 60T quasi-continuous magnet produces a flat-top field for a
period of 100 ms at 60 Tesla, and for longer time at lower fields, e.g. 0.5 sec
at 35 Tesla. We have developed for the first time the capability to measure
heat capacity at very high magnetic fields in the NHMFL 60 T quasi-continuous
magnet at LANL, using a probe built out of various plastic materials. The field
plateau allows us to utilize a heat-pulse method to obtain heat capacity data.
Proof-of-principle heat capacity experiments were performed on a variety of
correlated electron systems. Both magnet performance characteristics and
physical properties of various materials studied hold out a promise of wide
application of this new tool.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, World Scientific Pub. Co., to be publishe
- âŠ