57 research outputs found
âItâs just absolutely everywhereâ: understanding LGBTQ experiences of queerbaiting
Queer media plays a significant role in the education and validation of emerging LGBTQ individuals. Although the volume of such media has increased, there are still ways in which it is misrepresentative. One such example is the practice of queerbaiting, which has been defined as media appearing but failing to provide allegiance to issues of queer visibility. Utilising phenomenological inquiry through application of semi-structured interviews, five university undergraduates who self-identified as LGBTQ described their experiences, thoughts, and feelings of queerbaiting. Consistent with prior research, participants felt that queerbaiting was an exploitative practice, which may have implications on identity development and acceptance. Opinions differed on what constitutes queerbaiting and the intentions of those who contribute to queerbaiting practice, suggesting that queerbaiting is a multi-dimensional phenomenon best understood as an umbrella term for diverse practices. From this we developed a new taxonomy of queerbaiting with three major forms: consumer queerbaiting; cultural queerbaiting; and social queerbaiting. Recognition of these three forms of queerbaiting may improve understanding of queerbaiting and its effects in future research and the diverse settings in which queerbaiting occurs
Technologies and Methods Used at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) to Serve Solar Irradiance Data
The Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) at the University of Colorado in Boulder, USA operates the Solar Radiation and Climate Experiment (SORCE) NASA mission, as well as several other NASA spacecraft and instruments. Dozens of Solar Irradiance data sets are produced, managed, and disseminated to the science community. Data are made freely available to the scientific immediately after they are produced using a variety of data access interfaces, including the LASP Interactive Solar Irradiance Datacenter (LISIRD), which provides centralized access to a variety of solar irradiance data sets using both interactive and scriptable/programmatic methods. This poster highlights the key technological elements used for the NASA SORCE mission ground system to produce, manage, and disseminate data to the scientific community and facilitate long-term data stewardship. The poster presentation will convey designs, technological elements, practices and procedures, and software management processes used for SORCE and their relationship to data quality and data management standards, interoperability, NASA data policy, and community expectations
Modification of pharmacokinetic and abuse-related effects of cocaine by human-derived cocaine hydrolase in monkeys
Although substantial research effort has focused on developing pharmacological treatments for
cocaine abuse, no effective medications have been developed. Recent studies show that enzymes
that metabolize cocaine in the periphery, forestalling its entry into the brain, can prevent cocaine
toxicity and its behavioral effects in rodents. Here we report on effects of one such enzyme (Albu-
CocH) on the pharmacokinetic and behavioral effects of cocaine in squirrel monkeys. Albu-CocH
was developed from successive mutations of human butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) and has 1000-
fold greater catalytic activity against cocaine than naturally occurring BChE. Pharmacokinetic
studies showed that Albu-CocH (5 mg/kg) had a half-life of 56.6 hours in squirrel monkeys. In
these studies, plasma levels of cocaine following i.v. 1 mg/kg cocaine were reduced two hours
after administration of Albu-CocH, whereas plasma levels of the cocaine metabolite ecgonine
methyl ester were increased. These effects were still evident 72 hrs following Albu-CocH
administration. In behavioral experiments in monkeys, pretreatment with 5 mg/kg Albu-CocH
dramatically decreased self-administration of a reinforcing dose of i.v. cocaine (30 ÎŒg/kg/
injection) for over 24 hours. Pretreatment with 5 mg/kg Albu-CocH also attenuated the
reinstatement of extinguished cocaine self-administration by an i.v. priming injection of cocaine
(0.1 or 0.3 mg/kg) and, in separate studies, attenuated the discriminative stimulus effects of
cocaine. The ability of Albu-CocH to attenuate the abuse-related effects of cocaine in squirrel monkeys indicates that further investigation of BChE mutants as potential treatment for cocaine
abuse and toxicity is warranted.This research was supported in part by the Intramural Research Program of the NIH, National Institute on Drug
Abuse
1990: Abilene Christian College Bible Lectures - Full Text
LUKE: A GOSPEL FOR THE WORLD
Being the Abilene Christian University Annual Bible Lectures 1990
Published by ACU PRESS
1634 Campus Court Abilene, Texas 7960
Prospectus, February 22, 1984
MILLER SAYS TAX ABATEMENT NOT EQUITABLE FOR OTHER COUNTIES: REQUEST FOR TAX ABATEMENT DENIED BY PARKLAND BOARD; News Digest; Mayor Markland concered about area landfill issue; Meet the Prospectus Staff; PC Happenings: Professor to speak at Parkland, Testing for self knowledge, Computer workshop offered at Parkland, EMT workshop at Parkland; Which is better juvenile and pointless; Letter; Sonja Williams--views on Nicaragua; Yaxley scholarship; In the Library-- PS section; \u27I was only gone a minute\u27; Contraceptives--become aware of your choices; Internships produce anxieties; Did You Know...; Archaeology trip a success; Alabama shines at Assembly Hall; Creative Corner...Especially for you!!: Fleeting Moments, Untitled, Reflections and contemplations, Down, down, down, The Talkers , My Grandfather, Windows From the Soul, Realities, Banging heads on the floor with you...; Moore of the same; \u27Alabama\u27 succeeds at local concert; \u27I Write Your Name\u27 Carroll album released; Hitchcock\u27s classic revisited in the film \u27Vertigo\u27; Classifieds; More than tickets...; I.M.; Movie Magazine in next issue; Men\u27s Basketball season 20-11; Men\u27s track team places third; Parkland to host basket ball tournament; Women\u27s track team 2nd in region; Fitness Center to openhttps://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_1984/1030/thumbnail.jp
Tic disorders and the premonitory urge
The aims of this study were to examine a non-English (Hebrew) version of a scale that measures the premonitory urge in children suffering from tic disorder, as well as examine the correlations of the urge with demographic and clinical aspects of Tourette Syndrome. Forty children and adolescents, suffering from tics participated in this study. They were assessed with the Premonitory Urge for Tics Scale (PUTS); the Yale Global Tic Severity Scale (YGTSS); the Childhood Version of the Yale Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (CYBOCS); the ADHD Rating Scale IV (Conners) Scale; the Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders (SCARED); and the Child Depression Inventory (CDI). The mean PUTS score was 20.15 (SD = 5.89). For the entire sample the PUTS was found to be internally consistent at a = 0.79. Youths older than 10 years had higher consistency (a = 0.83) than youths younger than 10 (a = 0.69). Premonitory urge was not correlated with tic severity in the entire sample. In youths older than 10, as opposed to youths younger than 10, premonitory urge did correlate with obsessions, compulsions and depression, but not with anxiety or with ADHD. The premonitory urge can be measured reliably and the PUTS is a useful instrument for measuring this important phenomena. Premonitory urges seems to be related to obsessions, compulsions, and depression in older children and this may have implications for the developmental psychopatholgy of these symptoms
PenQuest Volume 1, Number 2
Table of Contents for this Volume:
Untitled by Julie Ambrose
Night by Judith Gallo
Untitled by Judy Gozdur
the shamans by Charles Riddles
Untitled by Jerry Connell
Untitled by Laura Woods
Untitled by LEMA
Wicked Bird by Laura Jo Last
Untitled by Rick Dentos
Untitled by Jeni Moody
Untitled by Bettie W. Kwibs
Untitled by Joann Stagg
The Protector Stood by Laura Jo Last
Visions of Salome by Charles Riddles
Untitled by Thomas Tutten
Kennesaw Line by Don Ova-Dunaway
Stone Blood by Mary Ellen C. Wofford
Untitled by Roger Whitt Jr.
Untitled by C. Wingate
Untitled by Doug Dorey
Untitled by Karen Blumberg
Untitled by Beverly Oviatt
Untitled by Virginia Shrader
The Crapulous Credo of Charles C. by Charles Riddles
the brave and the true by David Reed
Untitled by Charles Gutierrez
Canoe Creek by Patricia Kraft
Untitled by Linda Bobinger
The Man in the Iron Lung by Patricia Kraft
Untitled by Roger Whitt, Jr.
Childish Things by Kathleen Gay
Untitled by Joseph Avanzini
The Lover by Mary S. Aken
Untitled by Ann Harrington
And He Taketh Away by David Reed
Untitled by Mary Graham
Untitled by Melody A. Cummons
Untitled by Karen Blumberg
To The Poets by Judith Gallo
Untitled by Ann Harringto
Attention in neglect and extinction: Assessing the degree of correspondence between visual and auditory impairments using matched tasks
Claims have been made for associated degrees of impairment on both visual and auditory performance in unilateral neglect and extinction. Since this evidence is primarily based on different tests in each modality, it is difficult to properly quantify the degree of association between performance in vision and audition. The current study compares visual and auditory extinction and temporal order judgments (TOJs) in two cases with clinical visual neglect. Stimuli in both modalities were precisely matched in their temporal and spatial parameters. The results reveal a mixed pattern of association between different auditory tests and their visual counterparts. This suggests that associations between visual and auditory neglect can occur but these are neither obligatory nor pervasive. Instead, our data support models of spatial impairment in neglect and extinction that acknowledge differences in the contribution of spatial information to performance in each modality in responses to changing task demands
The James Webb Space Telescope Mission
Twenty-six years ago a small committee report, building on earlier studies,
expounded a compelling and poetic vision for the future of astronomy, calling
for an infrared-optimized space telescope with an aperture of at least .
With the support of their governments in the US, Europe, and Canada, 20,000
people realized that vision as the James Webb Space Telescope. A
generation of astronomers will celebrate their accomplishments for the life of
the mission, potentially as long as 20 years, and beyond. This report and the
scientific discoveries that follow are extended thank-you notes to the 20,000
team members. The telescope is working perfectly, with much better image
quality than expected. In this and accompanying papers, we give a brief
history, describe the observatory, outline its objectives and current observing
program, and discuss the inventions and people who made it possible. We cite
detailed reports on the design and the measured performance on orbit.Comment: Accepted by PASP for the special issue on The James Webb Space
Telescope Overview, 29 pages, 4 figure
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