1,809 research outputs found
Parent-Therapist Alliance, Technology Use, and Treatment Outcomes in Behavioral Parent Training: A Preliminary Investigation
Although technology-enhanced services are posited to promote therapeutic alliance, a critical
element of treatment engagement, relatively little research has examined this hypothesis, particularly with treatments targeting child mental health. As such, this study preliminarily examined the link between parent-therapist alliance and a range of treatment outcomes between the standard treatment for early onset disruptive behavior disorders, Behavioral Parent Training (BPT), and a technology-enhanced version. Findings revealed small to moderate effects of alliance on outcomes for both groups; however, differences in patterns of alliance and technology use within the technology-enhanced group suggest implications for better understanding the impact of technology on the therapeutic process, the deployment of existing technology-enhanced services, and the development of future technology-enhanced services.Doctor of Philosoph
Socioeconomic Status, Parenting, and Externalizing Problems in African American Single Mother Homes: A Person-Oriented Approach
African American youth, particularly those from single mother homes, are overrepresented in statistics on externalizing problems. Parenting has been identified as a central context in which to understand youth externalizing problems; however, research on African American families has primarily relied on parenting constructs and norms developed with middle income, intact, European American families. The current study demonstrated that 1) a person-oriented approach elucidates variability in parenting practices ,within African American single mother families; 2) patterns in the data suggest that SES predicts variability in parenting style; and 3) parenting style and income were related to youth externalizing behavior, and that the relationship between Permissive and Disengaged parenting and youth externalizing problems depended on maternal income level. Findings have implications for understanding the specific maternal parenting and socioeconomic contexts in which externalizing problems are most likely to occur within this at-risk, yet relatively underserved group.Master of Art
Trifocal Relative Pose from Lines at Points and its Efficient Solution
We present a new minimal problem for relative pose estimation mixing point
features with lines incident at points observed in three views and its
efficient homotopy continuation solver. We demonstrate the generality of the
approach by analyzing and solving an additional problem with mixed point and
line correspondences in three views. The minimal problems include
correspondences of (i) three points and one line and (ii) three points and two
lines through two of the points which is reported and analyzed here for the
first time. These are difficult to solve, as they have 216 and - as shown here
- 312 solutions, but cover important practical situations when line and point
features appear together, e.g., in urban scenes or when observing curves. We
demonstrate that even such difficult problems can be solved robustly using a
suitable homotopy continuation technique and we provide an implementation
optimized for minimal problems that can be integrated into engineering
applications. Our simulated and real experiments demonstrate our solvers in the
camera geometry computation task in structure from motion. We show that new
solvers allow for reconstructing challenging scenes where the standard two-view
initialization of structure from motion fails.Comment: This material is based upon work supported by the National Science
Foundation under Grant No. DMS-1439786 while most authors were in residence
at Brown University's Institute for Computational and Experimental Research
in Mathematics -- ICERM, in Providence, R
Serials Standard Work: the Next Frontier
Serials, one of the more complicated areas of library technical endeavors, has lacked the benefit of standards for a long time. Even now, with standards beginning to be available, the majority of institutions are not working within standard serials formats. A survey to determine the use of serials standards in libraries was conducted in 1988 by the American Library Association, Resources and Technical Services Division, Serials Section, Committee to Study Serials Standards. In the spring of 1988 a survey was sent to a group encompassing the Association of Research Libraries members, CONSER participants, United States Newspaper Program participants, Microform Project libraries, and some vendors and librarians who attended the Committee meetings on a regular basis.
The survey questionnaire assessed the current level of seials standards awareness of librarians and vendors. Topics included the type of serials systems used, standards relevant to serials control and union listing and whether or not they are implemented, types and levels of training staff received in the application of standards, benefits of the standards, and areas where standards are most needed
Socioeconomic status, parenting, and externalizing problems in african american single-mother homes: A person-oriented approach.
African American youth, particularly those from single-mother homes, are overrepresented in statistics on externalizing problems. The family is a central context in which to understand externalizing problems; however, reliance on variable-oriented approaches to the study of parenting, which originate from work with intact, middle-income, European American families, may obscure important information regarding variability in parenting styles among African American single mothers, and in turn, variability in youth outcomes as well. The current study demonstrated that within African American single-mother families: (a) a person-, rather than variable-, oriented approach to measuring parenting style may further elucidate variability; (b) socioeconomic status may provide 1 context within which to understanding variability in parenting style; and (c) 1 marker of socioeconomic status, income, and parenting style may each explain variability in youth externalizing problems; however, the interaction between income and parenting style was not significant. Findings have potential implications for better understanding the specific contexts in which externalizing problems may be most likely to occur within this at-risk and underserved group
Caregiver Use of the Core Components of Technology-Enhanced Helping the Noncompliant Child: A Case Series Analysis of Low-Income Families
Children from low-income families are more likely to develop early-onset disruptive behavior disorders (DBDs) compared to their higher income counterparts. Low-income families of children with early-onset DBDs, however, are less likely to engage in the standard-of-care treatment, behavioral parent training (BPT), than families from other sociodemographic groups. Preliminary between-group findings suggested technology-enhanced BPT was associated with increased engagement and boosted treatment outcomes for low-income families relative to standard BPT. The current study used a case series design to take this research a step further by examining whether there was variability in use of, and reactions to, the smartphone enhancements within technology-enhanced BPT and the extent to which this variability paralleled treatment outcome. Findings provide a window into the uptake and use of technology-enhanced service delivery methods among low-income families, with implications for the broader field of childrenās mental health
Setting research priorities for management and treatment of hyperhidrosis: the results of the James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership
Ā© 2022 The Authors. Clinical and Experimental Dermatology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Association of Dermatologists. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Summary: Background: Hyperhidrosis is a common skin condition characterized by excessive sweating, which can negatively impact on quality of life. It is underāresearched compared with other conditions of similar prevalence. Aim: To generate a Top 10 list of research priorities for the treatment and management of hyperhidrosis, with equal input from people with hyperhidrosis and healthcare professionals (HCPs). Methods: A priority setting partnership (PSP) was established and processes from the James Lind Alliance Handbook were followed. An online survey asked participants what questions they would like research to answer. These questions were grouped into āindicative questionsā, which were ranked in a second survey of 45 indicative questions. The top 23 questions were then taken to a final workshop event attended by key stakeholders, and ranked to generate the Top 10 list of research priorities. Results: There were 592 questions submitted by 268 respondents for the first survey. For the second survey, 286 participants ranked the indicative questions in order of priority. At the final workshop, the Top 10 list was generated. The top three priorities were: (i) Are there any safe and effective permanent solutions for hyperhidrosis? (ii) What is the most effective and safe oral treatment (drugs taken by mouth) for hyperhidrosis? and (iii) What are the most effective and safe ways to reduce sweating in particular areas of the body? Conclusions: There are many unanswered research questions that both people with hyperhidrosis and HCPs would like to see answered. The results from this PSP will help to ensure future research funding can be directed to these areas of priority.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
Recommended from our members
Integrated vs. referred management of CVD risk factors for HIV positive patients on antiretroviral therapy in Swaziland
Cardiovascular disease risk factors (CVDRF) are prevalent in people living with HIV (PLHIV), but the optimal clinical management strategy for patients with both HIV and CVDRF in low resource settings is unknown. In some contexts, care for both HIV and CVDRF is provided in the HIV clinic (āintegrated careā), which may be more convenient for patients. In others, PLHIV are referred to specialist clinics for management of their CVDRF (āreferred careā) which may lead to higher quality CVDRF management. We compared integrated vs. referred strategies for patients with HIV and CVDRF at an urban health facility in Swaziland, exploring linkage to and retention in CVDRF care, intervention fidelity, and HIV and CVDRF-related health outcomes
Incorporating Mobile Phone Technologies to Expand Evidence-Based Care
Ownership of mobile phones is on the rise, a trend in uptake that transcends age, region, race, and ethnicity, as well as income. It is precisely the emerging ubiquity of mobile phones that has sparked enthusiasm regarding their capacity to increase the reach and impact of health care, including mental health care. Community-based clinicians charged with transporting evidence-based interventions beyond research and training clinics are in turn, ideally and uniquely situated to capitalize on mobile phone uptake and functionality to bridge the efficacy to effectiveness gap. As such, this article delineates key considerations to guide these frontline clinicians in mobile phone-enhanced clinical practice, including an overview of industry data on the uptake of and evolution in the functionality of mobile phone platforms, conceptual considerations relevant to the integration of mobile phones into practice, representative empirical illustrations of mobile-phone enhanced assessment and treatment, and practical considerations relevant to ensuring the feasibility and sustainability of such an approach
Antiferromagnetic real-space configuration probed by x-ray orbital angular momentum phase dichroism
X-ray beams with orbital angular momentum (OAM) are an up-and-coming tool for
x-ray characterization techniques. Beams with OAM have an azimuthally varying
phase that leads to a gradient of the light field. New material properties can
be probed by utilizing the unique phase structure of an OAM beam. Here, we
demonstrate a novel type of phase dichroism in resonant diffraction from an
artificial antiferromagnet with a topological defect. The scattered OAM beam
has circular dichroism whose sign is coupled to the phase of the beam, which
reveals the real-space configuration of the antiferromagnetic ground state.
Thermal cycling of the artificial antiferromagnet can change the ground state,
as indicated by the changing phase dichroism. These results exemplify the
potential of OAM beams to probe matter in a way that is inaccessible using
typical x-ray techniques
- ā¦