257 research outputs found

    The Phenomenology of Court-Ordered Treatment: From the Perspective of Methamphetamine Dependent Adults

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    This phenomenological study was designed to explore with a sample of methamphetamine dependent adults their perceptions of the process involved in their experiences of court-ordered treatment. The motivation for this study derives from the researcher\u27s wish to unearth ways to better understand and support the needs of adults suffering from addiction. A significant amount of research has already been conducted in regards to the treatment of methamphetamine addiction from the standpoint of quantitative measurements of treatment outcomes, but limited information is presently available from the perspective of the suffers. The stringent selection of the sample was composed of six individuals with prior histories of being court-ordered to drug treatment for methamphetamine use. The participants were drawn from Narcotics and Alcohol Anonymous groups in the Snohomish and King County regions of Washington State. The collection of data was primarily through the means of structured interviews that offered space for the individuals\u27 perspectives to emerge. A brief survey was utilized as a supportive method to collect demographic information of the participants. This study gathered the statements of the participants and focused on the emergent themes that were collectively expressed among the participants\u27 experiences. This research revealed the positive and negative impressions felt towards the court system and treatment processes. The findings showed that the court system experience was an incentive to enter and remain in treatment and was considered a positive once the participants accepted the obligations of the court system. The negative perceptions of the court system were due to issues related to practical concerns and perceptions of the court system as intimidating and punitive. Positive aspects of the treatment were experienced as learning skills to make positive life changes, acquiring new perceptions, learning from others and gaining a sense of community, and having positive life experiences. Negative aspects of treatment were experienced as challenges working with others (staff, counselors, and patients), lack of useful treatment interventions, and insufficient structure. Considering the various factors affect not only the treatment of individuals suffering from addiction, the recommendations address the specific needs reported by the individuals in the present study. The electronic version of this dissertation is at OhioLink ETD Center,www.ohiolink.ed

    Encoding and storage components of verbal working memory as revealed by a factorial design, an FMRI study

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    In this fMRI study, the contributions of frontal and posterior brain regions to verbal working memory were investigated. A two-factor design with low and high memory load (2 and 5 letters) and short and long delay (4 and 12 secs.) as factors were used. Based on reports in the literature, we expect activity in the following frontal and parietal brain regions of interest (ROIs): Brodmann areas (BA) 6, 9, 46, 44, 45, 7 and 40. The analysis of collected flvM data involved image processing and statistical analysis methods including realignment, spatial normalization, spatial smoothing, temporal filtering, intensity normalization, statistical tests, and thresholding of results. The design allowed for testing the interaction and main effects of the two factors. The interaction terms revealed involvement in the caudate and BA 6, 9, and 7. The main effects revealed activity in BA 6, 9, 32, 40, 44, cerebellum, thalamus, and caudate. The results of this study support the literature and offer more insight into previous findings

    Characterization of mismatch between behavioral stimuli and FRMI data using the Kalman filter

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    The advance of blood oxygen level dependent function magnetic resonance imaging, (BOLD fMRI), allows researchers to non-invasively investigate the functioning human brain. The BOLD fMRI response to brief stimuli is called the hemodynamic response function (HRF), which can vary across brain regions and across subjects. Models of the HRF are used to increase sensitivity of statistical maps; however, they often don\u27t account for spatial and temporal variance. Physiological effects, such as learning, fatigue or habituation, introduce mismatch between statistical models and the data. Methods that use minimal a priori information and track time varying signals are able to show the processing of information over time and thereby elucidate such effects. The method of Kalman filtering was employed to characterize mismatches occurring between statistical models and BOLD data. The Kalman filter operates on data point by point. This contrasts regression techniques, that use blocks of data to find a single estimate. Functional MRI data was collected from ten subjects at Columbia University while they engaged in three visual experiments and four olfactory experiments. The Kalman filter was used to distinguish between the fMRI response to a 2 second and a 12 second visual stimulus. The results from this analysis showed the extracted responses from the two stimuli significantly differed. The same analysis was also used to distinguish between primary and secondary olfactory cortices. These brain regions have shown differential temporal responses to odorants. The extracted responses were not significantly different. Extracted responses from one stimulus (visual or olfactory) were used to test if this subject specific information would predict the next experimental session, better than standard a priori models of the data. The results of this analysis showed this not to be the case. The extracted response over time to the odorant stimuli were tractable with the Kalman filter, and shown to decay as predicted from the literature. This temporal change was hypothesized to decrease predictability from one session to the next, causing the null result. To alleviate this, models were tested for their predictability across hemisphere, within session. The results showed that inclusion of subject specific information improved this fit over other a priori models. The implications of this analysis are the ability to extract temporally varying fMRI responses over an experiment without knowledge of the expected response to a stimuli. Results of such analyzes offer a look into how the brain responds and processes stimuli over the course of an experiment. This contrasts method that offer summary, or average, results from an experiment

    The Phenomenology of Court-Ordered Treatment: From the Perspective of Methamphetamine Dependent Adults

    Get PDF
    This phenomenological study was designed to explore with a sample of methamphetamine dependent adults their perceptions of the process involved in their experiences of court-ordered treatment. The motivation for this study derives from the researcher\u27s wish to unearth ways to better understand and support the needs of adults suffering from addiction. A significant amount of research has already been conducted in regards to the treatment of methamphetamine addiction from the standpoint of quantitative measurements of treatment outcomes, but limited information is presently available from the perspective of the suffers. The stringent selection of the sample was composed of six individuals with prior histories of being court-ordered to drug treatment for methamphetamine use. The participants were drawn from Narcotics and Alcohol Anonymous groups in the Snohomish and King County regions of Washington State. The collection of data was primarily through the means of structured interviews that offered space for the individuals\u27 perspectives to emerge. A brief survey was utilized as a supportive method to collect demographic information of the participants. This study gathered the statements of the participants and focused on the emergent themes that were collectively expressed among the participants\u27 experiences. This research revealed the positive and negative impressions felt towards the court system and treatment processes. The findings showed that the court system experience was an incentive to enter and remain in treatment and was considered a positive once the participants accepted the obligations of the court system. The negative perceptions of the court system were due to issues related to practical concerns and perceptions of the court system as intimidating and punitive. Positive aspects of the treatment were experienced as learning skills to make positive life changes, acquiring new perceptions, learning from others and gaining a sense of community, and having positive life experiences. Negative aspects of treatment were experienced as challenges working with others (staff, counselors, and patients), lack of useful treatment interventions, and insufficient structure. Considering the various factors affect not only the treatment of individuals suffering from addiction, the recommendations address the specific needs reported by the individuals in the present study. The electronic version of this dissertation is at OhioLink ETD Center,www.ohiolink.ed

    Exploring the Neural Basis of Cognitive Reserve in Aging

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    The concept of reserve arose from the mismatch between the extent of brain changes or pathology and the clinical manifestations of these brain changes. The cognitive reserve hypothesis posits that individual differences in the flexibility and adaptability of brain networks underlying cognitive function may allow some people to cope better with brain changes than others. Although there is ample epidemiologic evidence for cognitive reserve, the neural substrate of reserve is still a topic of ongoing research. Here we review some representative studies from our group that exemplify possibilities for the neural substrate of reserve including neural reserve, neural compensation, and generalized cognitive reserve networks. We also present a schematic overview of our ongoing research in this area. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Imaging Brain Aging and Neurodegenerative disease

    The Role of Lifetime Exposures across Cognitive Domains in Barbados Using Data From the SABE Study

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    This study characterized the effects of aging on individual cognitive domains and how sex, job type, and years of education alter the age effect on older adults from Barbados. This was an analysis of the cross-sectional data collected as part of the SABE Study (Health, Well-being and Ageing) in 2006. The loss of a single point in each of the individual cognitive domains assessed using the mini-mental state exam served as dependent variables. Independent variables included age, sex, years of education, job type, and the interactions with age in a series of logistic regression analyses. The study aimed to identify which factors altered the effect of age on cognitive performance and which directly affected performance. Results demonstrated that the effect of age differed across the cognitive domains. In addition, sex, education, and job type all differentially affected cognitive performance in an additive, formative manner. The most consistent finding was that high years of education coupled with employment requiring mostly mental effort was the best combination for maintaining high levels of cognitive performance in late life. The results demonstrate that adverse age effects on cognitive performance may be minimized or delayed through modifiable lifetime exposures in the people of Barbados
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