213 research outputs found

    Comparison of Diagnostic Profiles of Deaf and Hearing Children with a Diagnosis of Autism.

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    There is limited research comparing the presentation of autism in deaf and hearing children and young people. These comparisons are important to facilitate accurate diagnosis, as rates of misdiagnosis and delay in diagnosis amongst deaf children and young people are high. The aim of this study was to compare diagnostic assessment profiles of a UK cohort of autistic deaf and hearing children and young people. The Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised-Deaf adaptation was completed with the parents of 106 children and young people (deaf children = 65; hearing children = 41). The majority of items explored showed no significant differences between deaf and hearing children and young people. Differences were found in peer relationships, where autistic deaf participants were less likely to respond to the approaches of other children or play imaginatively with peers. These findings need to be taken into consideration by clinicians in the assessment process

    Weak Hyperon Decays: Quark Sea and SU(3) Symmetry Breaking

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    An explanation of the difference in the values of the apparent f/df/d ratios for the S- and P- wave amplitudes of nonleptonic hyperon decays is proposed. The argument is formulated in the framework of the standard pole model with (56,0+)(56,0^{+}) ground-state and (70,1)(70,1^{-}) excited baryons as intermediate states for the P- and S- waves respectively. Under the assumption that the dominant part of the deviation of (f/d)Pwave(f/d)_{P-wave} from 1-1 is due to large quark sea effects, SU(3)SU(3) symmetry breaking in energy denominators is shown to lead to a prediction for (f/d)Swave(f/d)_{S-wave} which is in excellent agreement with experiment. This corroborates our previous unitarity calculations which indicated that the matrix elements of the parity conserving weak Hamiltonian between the ground-state baryons are characterized by f0/d01.6f_{0}/d_{0} \approx -1.6 or more. A brief discussion of the problem of the relative size of S- and P- wave amplitudes is given. Finally, implications for weak radiative hyperon decays are also discussed.Comment: 26 pages, LATEX, 1647/PH IFJ Krako

    Prevention of intention invention in the affect misattribution procedure

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    The affect misattribution procedure (AMP) is one of the most promising indirect measures, showing high reliability and large effect sizes. However, the AMP has recently been criticized for being susceptible to explicit influences, in that priming effects tend to be larger and more reliable among participants who report that they intentionally responded to the primes instead of the targets. Consistent with interpretations of these effects in terms of retrospective confabulation, two experiments obtained reliable priming effects when (a) participants lacked meta-cognitive knowledge about their responses to the primes and (b) participants’ attention was directed away from response-eliciting features of the primes. Under either of these conditions, priming effects were unrelated to self-reported intentionality, although self-reported intentionality was positively related to priming effects under control conditions. The findings highlight the contribution of meta-cognitive inferences to retrospective self-reports of intentionality and suggest an effective procedure to rule out explicit influences in the AMP

    Aspects of a0-f0 mixing in the reaction pn->da0

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    Some aspects of a0-f0 mixing effects in the reaction pnda00{\vec p} n\to da^0_0 with perpendicular polarized proton beam are discussed. An angular--asymmetry parameter AA is defined to study those effects. It is shown that, for energies close to the production threshold, the angular--asymmetry parameter A(θ,ϕ)A(\theta, \phi) is proportional to the a0-f0 mixing amplitude for arbitrary polar and azimuthal angles θ\theta and ϕ\phi of the outgoing a0a_0 meson. This statement is also valid for arbitrary energies, but then only at polar angles θ=00\theta=0^0 and θ=900\theta=90^0. The mass dependence of the differential cross section dσ/dmπ0ηd\sigma/dm_{\pi^0\eta} in the reaction pndπ0ηpn\to d\pi^0\eta in the presence of \mix mixing is also discussed.Comment: 17 pages, 3 Figure

    Being in front is good—but where is in front? Preferences for spatial referencing affect evaluation

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    Speakers of English frequently associate location in space with valence, as in moving up and down the “social ladder.” If such an association also holds for the sagittal axis, an object “in front of” another object would be evaluated more positively than the one “behind.” Yet how people conceptualize relative locations depends on which frame of reference (FoR) they adopt—and hence on cross‐linguistically diverging preferences. What is conceptualized as “in front” in one variant of the relative FoR (e.g., translation) is “behind” under another variant (reflection), and vice versa. Do such diverging conceptualizations of an object's location also lead to diverging evaluations? In two studies employing an implicit association test, we demonstrate, first, that speakers of German, Chinese, and Japanese indeed evaluate the object “in front of” another object more positively than the one “behind.” Second, and crucially, the reversal of which object is conceptualized as “in front” involves a corresponding reversal of valence, suggesting an impact of linguistically imparted FoR preferences on evaluative processes.publishedVersio

    Autism Spectrum Social Stories In Schools Trial 2 (ASSSIST2) : study protocol for a randomised controlled trial analysing clinical and cost-effectiveness of Social Stories™ in primary schools

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    BACKGROUND: Interventions designed to support children with a diagnosis of Autism Spectrum Conditions (ASC) can be time consuming, needing involvement of outside experts. Social Stories™ are a highly personalised intervention aiming to give children with ASC social information or describing an otherwise difficult situation or skill. This can be delivered daily by staff in education settings. Studies examining Social Story™ use have yielded mostly positive results but have largely been single case studies with a lack of randomised controlled trials (RCTs). Despite this numerous schools are utilising Social Stories™, and a fully powered RCT is timely. METHODS: A multi-site pragmatic cluster RCT comparing care as usual with Social Stories™ and care as usual. This study will recruit 278 participants (aged 4-11) with a clinical diagnosis of ASC, currently attending primary school in the North of England. Approximately 278 school based staff will be recruited to provide school based information about participating children with approximately 140 recruited to deliver the intervention. The study will be cluster randomised by school. Potential participants will be screened for eligibility prior to giving informed consent. Follow up data will be collected at 6 weeks and 6 months post randomisation and will assess changes in participants' social responsiveness, goal based outcomes, social and emotional health. The primary outcome measure is the Social Responsiveness Scale Second Edition (SRS-2) completed by school based staff at 6 months. Approvals have been obtained from the University of York's Research Governance Committee, Research Ethics Committee and the Health Research Authority. Study results will be submitted for publication in peer-reviewed journals and disseminated to participating families, educational staff, local authority representatives, community groups and Patient and Participant Involvement representatives. Suggestions will be made to NICE about treatment evidence dependent on findings. DISCUSSION: This study addresses a much used but currently under researched intervention and results will inform school based support for primary school children with a diagnosis of ASC. TRIAL REGISTRATION: The trial is registered on the ISRCTN registry (registration number: ISRCTN11634810). The trial was retrospectively registered on 23rd April 2019

    Assessing children’s implicit attitudes using the Affect Misattribution Procedure

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    In the current research we examined whether the Affect Misattribution Procedure (AMP; Payne et al., 2005) could be successfully adapted as an implicit measure of children’s attitudes. We tested this possibility in three studies with 5 to 10 year old children. In Study 1 we found evidence that children misattribute affect elicited by attitudinally positive (e.g., cute animals) and negative (e.g., aggressive animals) primes to neutral stimuli (inkblots). In Study 2, we found that, as expected, children’s responses following flower and insect primes were moderated by gender. Girls (but not boys) were more likely to judge inkblots as pleasant when they followed flower primes. Children in Study 3 showed predicted affect misattribution following happy as compared to sad face primes. In addition, children’s responses on this child-friendly AMP predicted their self-reported empathy; the greater children’s spontaneous misattribution of affect following happy and sad primes, the more children reported feeling the joy and pain of others. These studies provide evidence that the AMP can be adapted as an implicit measure of children’s attitudes and the results of Study 3 offer novel insight into individual differences in children’s affective responses to the emotional expressions of other

    Preliminary results from E756 on the Ξ− and Ω− magnetic moments

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    We have used the spin precession technique to measure the Ξ− and Ω− magnetic moments. The preliminary results are μ(Ξ−)=−0.64±0.02 nuclear magnetons and μ(Ω−)=−2.0±0.2 nuclear magnetons where the error for both measurements is statistical. The polarization of Ξ−’s produced at 2.5 mr by 800 GeV protons on a Be target was 11% while the polarization of Ω−’s was consistent with zero. Polarized Ξ−’s and Ω−’s were produced using spin transfer from a polarized neutral hyperon beam. The Ω− polarization at 325 GeV/c was 6.5%.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/87375/2/374_1.pd

    PERMEABILITY TO RESIDUAL WATER SATURATION IN OIL SATURATED PLUGS

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    ABSTRACT A series of laboratory experiments have been conducted to determine the permeability of brine close to irreducible water saturations with varying rock types, capillary pressures, saturations and permeabilities. X-ray tomography (CT) was used in one experiment as a quality assurance measure, visualizing the distribution of the flow of S wi phase in the sample. Water-saturated plugs attached to a water-wet ceramic membrane were drained by oil to S wi . Oil was then substituted by water at the inlet keeping both the water-and the oilsaturations in the plug constant. This was done in order to allow for water to flow through the plug and the membrane. A subsurface analogue to this laboratory experiment is a hydrocarbon-filled reservoir that is leaking water through a cap rock or a fault -keeping the hydrocarbons in place. The CT scan images showed that, although the overall flow rate was very low, the injected water moved quickly through the S wi -phase. Only a small fraction of the S wi volume contributed to this flow. The CT experiment also revealed some experimental artefacts such as spontaneous imbibition and gravity effects, which warrants further investigation. The result of the experiments verified that water could flow through different core plugs with varying S wi -phase permeability without forcing the oil through the membrane or changing the water saturation. The residual water permeability was dependent on the water saturation (S wi ) and the core plug permeability. Lowering the absolute permeability does not give a similar reduction in water permeability at S wi . The water permeability at S wi ranged from 0.02 µD to 1 µD. The absolute permeability for the different plugs ranged from approximately

    Partial-wave analysis of the eta pi+ pi- system produced in the reaction pi-p --> eta pi+ pi- n at 18 GeV/c

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    A partial-wave analysis of 9082 eta pi+ pi- n events produced in the reaction pi- p --> eta pi+ pi- n at 18.3 GeV/c has been carried out using data from experiment 852 at Brookhaven National Laboratory. The data are dominated by J^{PC} = 0^{-+} partial waves consistent with observation of the eta(1295) and the eta(1440). The mass and width of the eta(1295) were determined to be 1282 +- 5 MeV and 66 +- 13 Mev respectively while the eta(1440) was observed with a mass of 1404 +- 6 MeV and width of 80 +- 21 MeV. Other partial waves of importance include the 1++ and the 1+- waves. Results of the partial wave analysis are combined with results of other experiments to estimate f1(1285) branching fractions. These values are considerably different from current values determined without the aid of amplitude analyses.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figure
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