1,185 research outputs found
Transmission and Reflection in the Stadium Billiard: Time-dependent asymmetric transport
We investigate the transmission and reflection survival probabilities for the
chaotic stadium billiard with two holes placed asymmetrically. Classically,
these distributions are shown to have algebraic or exponential decays depending
on the choice of injecting hole and exact expressions are given for the first
time and confirmed numerically. As there is no reported quantum theoretical or
experimental analogue we propose a model for experimental observation of the
asymmetric transport using semiconductor nano-structures and comment on the
relevant quantum time-scales.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Fostering Innovation Among Staff Members in a Multicampus Higher Education Institution
This study addresses low organizational readiness for change at a U.S. multicampus higher education institution formed by a merger in 2010 between a liberal arts college and a professional graduate school. A needs assessment conducted in the spring of 2019 employed Cameron and Quinnâs (2011) competing values framework of organizational cultures and found that staff members across the two campuses desired more flexibility and discretion in their work. Semi-structured interviews with senior administrators also identified a tension between staff membersâ desires and those of leadership: administrators felt that the institution would not become fully integrated until the graduate school was financially self-sustaining. To address this tension, an intervention program was delivered in the fall of 2020 to build innovation skills among staff members of the graduate campus. Using Ireland, Hitt, and Sirmonâs (2003) model of strategic entrepreneurship as a framework, the intervention sought to increase the entrepreneurial mindset of individuals to create long-term wealth for the institution. Eleven staff members participated in a twelve-week Innovation Mentors program. After learning about innovation principles, teams presented proposals to campus leadership addressing needs identified within the institution. A concurrent mixed methods design evaluated the process and outcomes of the intervention. Nine of the eleven initial participants successfully completed the program, and a comparison between pre- and post-program surveys indicated a statistically significant difference (p < .05) in participantsâ knowledge of innovation principles. Participants appreciated working with and learning from colleagues in different job roles and from different departments across campus. During and after the program, many staff member participants began applying the innovation principles in their work and sharing what they learned with departmental colleagues. However, despite perceived support from campus leadership and managers, some staff members struggled to find the time and space to apply the innovation principles in their jobs
'The world is full of big bad wolves': investigating the experimental therapeutic spaces of R.D. Laing and Aaron Esterson
In conjunction with the recent critical assessments of the life and work of R.D. Laing, this paper seeks to demonstrate what is revealed when Laingâs work on families and created spaces of mental health care are examined through a geographical lens. The paper begins with an exploration of Laingâs time at the Tavistock Clinic in London during the 1960s, and of the co-authored text with Aaron Esterson entitled, Sanity, Madness and the Family (1964). The study then seeks to demonstrate the importance Laing and his colleague placed on the time-space situatedness of patients and their worlds. Finally, an account is provided of Laingâs and Estersonâs spatial thinking in relation to their creation of both real and imagined spaces of therapeutic care
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Gut thinking: the gut microbiome and mental health beyond the head
Background: In recent decades, dominant models of mental illness have become increasingly focused on the head, with mental disorders being figured as brain disorders. However, research into the active role that the microbiome-gut-brain axis plays in affecting mood and behaviour may lead to the conclusion that mental health is more than an internalised problem of individual brains.
Objective: This article explores the implications of shifting understandings about mental health that have come about through research into links between the gut microbiome and mental health problems such as depression and anxiety. It aims to analyse the different ways that the lines between mind and body and mental and physical health are re-shaped by this research, which is starting to inform clinical and public understanding.
Design: As mental health has become a pressing issue of political and public concern it has become increasingly constructed in socio-cultural and personal terms beyond clinical spaces, requiring a conceptual response that exceeds biomedical inquiry. This article argues that an interdisciplinary critical medical humanities approach is well positioned to analyse the impact of microbiome-gut-brain research on conceptions of mind.
Results: The entanglement of mind and matter evinced by microbiome-gut-brain axis research potentially provides a different way to conceptualise the physical and social concomitants of mental distress.
Conclusion: Mental health is not narrowly located in the head but is assimilated by the physical body and intermingled with the natural world, requiring different methods of research to unfold the meanings and implications of gut thinking for conceptions of human selfhood
Effect of Varying Levels of Fatty Acids from Palm Oil on Feed Intake and Milk Production in Holstein Cows
To determine the optimum feeding level of fatty acids of palm oil (PALM; Energizer RP10; 86.6% palmitic acid) on milk production, lactating cows (n = 18) were randomly assigned to a treatment sequence in replicated 4 x 4 Latin squares. Animals were assigned to squares by parity (3 multiparous and 1 primiparous squares with primiparous in the incomplete square). The 4 diets were designed to provide 0, 500, 1,000, and 1,500 g of PALM per day. Cows were fed individually with feed intake measured daily. Each period lasted 16 d with milk production and composition determined the final 2 d. Milk production, milk composition and feed intake data were analyzed using the MIXED procedure of SAS. Milk yields were 30.9, 34.0, 34.2, and 34.2 kg/ d (SEM = 1.9) for the 0, 500, 1,000, and 1,500 g levels, respectively. Milk yield was increased by the addition of PALM; however, there were no differences among the levels of PALM. Milk fat percentage was also increased from 3.44% for 0 g to 3.95% (SEM = 0.17) across all levels of PALM but there were no differences among the PALM treatments. Dry matter intakes were 23.3, 26.4, 24.7, and 23.8 kg/d (SEM = 1.4) for the 0, 500, 1,000 and 1,500 g levels, respectively. The addition of PALM increased milk yield and milk fat percentage, and no adverse effects on dry matter intake were observed
Physical characteristics of kazan minor showers as determined by correlations with the arecibo UHF radar
In the northern hemisphere, the month of February is characterized by a lack of major meteor shower activity yet a number of weak minor showers are present as seen by the Kazan radar. Using the Feller transformation to obtain the distribution of true meteor velocities from the distribution of radial velocities enables the angle of incidence to be obtained for the single beam AO (Arecibo Observatory) data. Thus the loci of AO radiants become beam-centered circles on the sky and one can, with simple search routines, find where these circles intersect on radiants determined by other means. Including geocentric velocity as an additional search criterion, we have examined a set of February radiants obtained at Kazan for coincidence in position and velocity. Although some may be chance associations, only those events with probabilities of association > 0.5 have been kept. Roughly 90 of the Kazan showers have been verified in this way with mass, radius and density histograms derived from the AO results. By comparing these histograms with those of the background in which the minor showers are found, a qualitative scale of dynamical minor shower age can be formulated. Most of the showers are found outside the usual apex sporadic source areas where it is easiest to detect discrete showers with less confusion from the background. © 2007 Springer Science+Business Media B.V
Psychopolitics: Peter Sedgwickâs legacy for mental health movements
This paper re-considers the relevance of Peter Sedgwick's Psychopolitics (1982) for a politics of mental health. Psychopolitics offered an indictment of âanti-psychiatryâ the failure of which, Sedgwick argued, lay in its deconstruction of the category of âmental illnessâ, a gesture that resulted in a politics of nihilism. âThe radical who is only a radical nihilistâ, Sedgwick observed, âis for all practical purposes the most adamant of conservativesâ. Sedgwick argued, rather, that the concept of âmental illnessâ could be a truly critical concept if it was deployed âto make demands upon the health service facilities of the society in which we liveâ. The paper contextualizes Psychopolitics within the âcrisis tendenciesâ of its time, surveying the shifting welfare landscape of the subsequent 25 years alongside Sedgwick's continuing relevance. It considers the dilemma that the discourse of âmental illnessâ â Sedgwick's critical concept â has fallen out of favour with radical mental health movements yet remains paradigmatic within psychiatry itself. Finally, the paper endorses a contemporary perspective that, while necessarily updating Psychopolitics, remains nonetheless âSedgwickianâ
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