7,186 research outputs found
Disentangling the stigma of HIV/AIDS from the stigmas of drugs use, commercial sex and commercial blood donation – A factorial survey of medical students in China
Background: HIV/AIDS related stigma interferes with the provision of appropriate care and
support for people living with HIV/AIDS. Currently, programs to address the stigma approach it as
if it occurs in isolation, separate from the co-stigmas related to the various modes of disease
transmission including injection drug use (IDU) and commercial sex (CS). In order to develop
better programs to address HIV/AIDS related stigma, the inter-relationship (or 'layering') between
HIV/AIDS stigma and the co-stigmas needs to be better understood. This paper describes an
experimental study for disentangling the layering of HIV/AIDS related stigmas.
Methods: The study used a factorial survey design. 352 medical students from Guangzhou were
presented with four random vignettes each describing a hypothetical male. The vignettes were
identical except for the presence of a disease diagnosis (AIDS, leukaemia, or no disease) and a cocharacteristic
(IDU, CS, commercial blood donation (CBD), blood transfusion or no cocharacteristic).
After reading each vignette, participants completed a measure of social distance that
assessed the level of stigmatising attitudes.
Results: Bivariate and multivariable analyses revealed statistically significant levels of stigma associated with AIDS, IDU, CS and CBD. The layering of stigma was explored using a recently
developed technique. Strong interactions between the stigmas of AIDS and the co-characteristics
were also found. AIDS was significantly less stigmatising than IDU or CS. Critically, the stigma of
AIDS in combination with either the stigmas of IDU or CS was significantly less than the stigma of
IDU alone or CS alone.
Conclusion: The findings pose several surprising challenges to conventional beliefs about HIV/
AIDS related stigma and stigma interventions that have focused exclusively on the disease stigma.
Contrary to the belief that having a co-stigma would add to the intensity of stigma attached to
people with HIV/AIDS, the findings indicate the presence of an illness might have a moderating
effect on the stigma of certain co-characteristics like IDU. The strong interdependence between
the stigmas of HIV/AIDS and the co-stigmas of IDU and CS suggest that reducing the co-stigmas
should be an integral part of HIV/AIDS stigma intervention within this context
Constructing PCA baseline algorithms to reevaluate ICA-based face-recognition performance
2006-2007 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishe
Non-locality preserving projection and its application to palmprint recognition
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Median LDA : a robust feature extraction method for face recognition
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Is ICA significantly better than PCA for face recognition?
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Globally maximizing, locally minimizing : unsupervised discriminant projection with applications to face and palm biometrics
2006-2007 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishe
Two-dimensional PCA : a new approach to appearance-based face representation and recognition
2003-2004 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishe
Unsupervised discriminant projection analysis for feature extraction
Author name used in this publication: David ZhangBiometrics Centre, Department of ComputingRefereed conference paper2006-2007 > Academic research: refereed > Refereed conference paperVersion of RecordPublishe
KPCA Plus LDA : a complete kernel Fisher discriminant framework for feature extraction and recognition
2004-2005 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishe
BDPCA plus LDA : a novel fast feature extraction technique for face recognition
2005-2006 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishe
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