4,288 research outputs found
Problem behavior and heart rate reactivity in adopted adolescents: Longitudinal and concurrent relations.
The present longitudinal study examined resting heart rate and heart rate variability and reactivity to a stressful gambling task in adopted adolescents with aggressive, delinquent, or internalizing behavior problems and adopted adolescents without behavior problems (total N=151). Early-onset delinquent adolescents showed heart rate hyporeactivity to the stress-eliciting gambling task compared to late-onset delinquent adolescents and adolescents without behavior problems. Heart rate, heart rate variability, and reactivity to stress were not related to environmental factors such as early-childhood parental sensitivity, parental socioeconomic status, or adoptee's health status at arrival. We conclude that the distinction between delinquency and aggression and between childhood-onset and adolescence-onset delinquency is important for the study of stress reactivity in adolescents. Copyright © 2008, Society for Research on Adolescence
Promoting Mental Health and Wellbeing with Men and Boys: What Works?
In May 2014 the Movember Foundation commissioned the Centre for Menâs Health, Leeds Beckett University, in collaboration with the Menâs Health Forum (England & Wales), to gather the current research evidence and practical (âtacitâ) knowledge about the core elements that make for successful work with boys and men around mental health promotion, early intervention and stigma reduction
Successful mental health promotion with men: evidence from 'tacit knowledge'
There remains significant concern about menâs mental health, particularly in terms of personal and societal barriers to help-seeking, negative coping mechanisms and high suicide rates. This paper presents findings from a multi-phase study looking at âwhat worksâ in mental health promotion for men. Work here reports the collection and analysis of the tacit knowledge of those working within mental health promotion interventions for men. A âmultiple hub and spokeâ approach was used to assist data collection. Thirteen key players, active in the menâs mental health field, half from the UK and half beyond, formed an Investigative Network collecting data, mainly through interviews, from wider geographical and professional community contexts where they had networks. The focus of data collection was on âwhat worksâ in mental health promotion for men. Data was analysed using thematic analysis techniques. Findings suggest that settings which created safe male spaces acted to promote trust, reduce stigma and normalise menâs engagement in interventions. Embedding interventions within the communities of men being engaged, fully involving these men, and holding âmale-positiveâ values engendered familiarity and consolidated trust. Using âmale-sensitiveâ language and activity-based approaches allowed for positive expressions of emotions, facilitated social engagement, and provided a base for open communication. Appropriate partnerships were also seen as a necessary requirement for success and as crucial for maximising intervention impact. The importance of gender and âmasculinityâ was apparent throughout these findings and taking time to understand gender could facilitate positive ways of working alongside men, increasing levels of engagement and successful outcomes
Comparative Effects of Haemodialysis and Haemofiltration on Plasma Atrial Natriuretic Peptide
The effects of 4 h haemodialysis (15 patients) or 4 h haemofiltration (five patients) on plasma concentrations of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) were compared by means of a sensitive radioreceptor binding assay, and related to accompanying changes in body weight, blood pressure and plasma renin activity. Before dialysis, plasma ANP concentrations were considerably elevated: haemodialysis group 10-484 pmol/l (mean 156 pmol/l); haemofiltration group 72-320 pmol/l (mean 170 pmol/l). Although plasma concentrations of ANP fell markedly with treatment in both groups: post-haemodialysis 2-187 pmol/l (mean 67 pmol/l); post-haemofiltration 47-135 pmol/l (mean 79 pmol/l), after treatment it remained above the normal range in 14 of the 20 patients. Pretreatment plasma ANP was related to systolic blood pressure (r=0.459; P<0.05) but bore no relationship to mean or diastolic blood pressure, or plasma renin activity. The fall in plasma ANP concentration during treatment correlated with the postural blood pressure drop after dialysis (r=0.505; P<0.05), but was unrelated to changes in weight or plasma renin activity with haemodialysis or haemofiltration. Plasma ANP concentrations rose rapidly again in the 60 min after dialysis treatment, without change in body weight. These results show that high levels of biologically active ANP circulate in end-stage renal disease. The fact that these are not reduced to normal by haemodialysis or haemofiltration, despite restoration to normovolaemic or hypovolaemic state, suggests that the increased levels of ANP in end-stage renal failure are due to both hypervolaemia and other factors, which may include occult cardiac dysfunction and loss of renal clearanc
Interaction of Hawking radiation with static sources outside a Schwarzschild black hole
We show that the response rate of (i) a static source interacting with
Hawking radiation of massless scalar field in Schwarzschild spacetime (with the
Unruh vacuum) and that of (ii) a uniformly accelerated source with the same
proper acceleration in Minkowski spacetime (with the Minkowski vacuum) are
equal. We show that this equality will not hold if the Unruh vacuum is replaced
by the Hartle-Hawking vacuum. It is verified that the source responds to the
Hawking radiation near the horizon as if it were at rest in a thermal bath in
Minkowski spacetime with the same temperature. It is also verified that the
response rate in the Hartle-Hawking vacuum approaches that in Minkowski
spacetime with the same temperature far away from the black hole. Finally, we
compare our results with others in the literature.Comment: 18 pages (REVTEX
Measuring Gravito-magnetic Effects by Multi Ring-Laser Gyroscope
We propose an under-ground experiment to detect the general relativistic
effects due to the curvature of space-time around the Earth (de Sitter effect)
and to rotation of the planet (dragging of the inertial frames or
Lense-Thirring effect). It is based on the comparison between the IERS value of
the Earth rotation vector and corresponding measurements obtained by a
tri-axial laser detector of rotation. The proposed detector consists of six
large ring-lasers arranged along three orthogonal axes.
In about two years of data taking, the 1% sensitivity required for the
measurement of the Lense-Thirring drag can be reached with square rings of 6
side, assuming a shot noise limited sensitivity ().
The multi-gyros system, composed of rings whose planes are perpendicular to one
or the other of three orthogonal axes, can be built in several ways. Here, we
consider cubic and octahedron structures. The symmetries of the proposed
configurations provide mathematical relations that can be used to study the
stability of the scale factors, the relative orientations or the ring-laser
planes, very important to get rid of systematics in long-term measurements,
which are required in order to determine the relativistic effects.Comment: 24 pages, 26 Postscript figure
A toy model of the five-dimensional universe with the cosmological constant
A value of the cosmological constant in a toy model of the five-dimensional
universe is calculated in such a manner that it remains in agreement with both
astronomical observations and the quantum field theory concerning the
zero-point fluctuations of the vacuum. The (negative) cosmological constant is
equal to the inverse of the Planck length squared, which means that in the toy
model the vanishing of the observed value of the cosmological constant is a
consequence of the existence of an energy cutoff exactly at the level of the
Planck scale. In turn, a model for both a virtual and a real
particle-antiparticle pair is proposed which describes properly some energetic
properties of both the vacuum fluctuations and created particles, as well as it
allows one to calculate the discrete "bare" values of an elementary-particle
mass, electric charge and intrinsic angular momentum (spin) at the energy
cutoff. The relationships between the discussed model and some phenomena such
as the Zitterbewegung and the Unruh-Davies effect are briefly analyzed, too.
The proposed model also allows one to derive the Lorentz transformation and the
Maxwell equations while considering the properties of the vacuum filled with
the sea of virtual particles and their antiparticles. Finally, the existence of
a finite value of the vacuum-energy density resulting from the toy model leads
us to the formulation of dimensionless Einstein field equations which can be
derived from the Lagrangian with a dimensionless (naively renormalized)
coupling constant.Comment: 52 pages, 1 figure; a post-final, rewritten version with a number of
new remarks and conclusion
Cosmic Microwave Background, Accelerating Universe and Inhomogeneous Cosmology
We consider a cosmology in which a spherically symmetric large scale
inhomogeneous enhancement or a void are described by an inhomogeneous metric
and Einstein's gravitational equations. For a flat matter dominated universe
the inhomogeneous equations lead to luminosity distance and Hubble constant
formulas that depend on the location of the observer. For a general
inhomogeneous solution, it is possible for the deceleration parameter to differ
significantly from the FLRW result. The deceleration parameter can be
interpreted as ( for a flat matter dominated universe) in a
FLRW universe and be as inferred from the inhomogeneous enhancement
that is embedded in a FLRW universe. A spatial volume averaging of local
regions in the backward light cone has to be performed for the inhomogeneous
solution at late times to decide whether the decelerating parameter can be
negative for a positive energy condition. The CMB temperature fluctuations
across the sky can be unevenly distributed in the northern and southern
hemispheres in the inhomogeneous matter dominated solution, in agreement with
the analysis of the WMAP power spectrum data by several authors. The model can
possibly explain the anomalous alignment of the quadrupole and octopole moments
observed in the WMAP data.Comment: 20 pages, no figures, LaTex file. Equations and typos corrected and
references added. Additional material and some conclusions changed. Final
published versio
Social support for and through exercise and sport in a sample of men with serious mental illness.
Social support is important for people experiencing serious mental illness and is also important during the initiation and maintenance of exercise. In this article we draw on interpretive research into the experiences of 11 men with serious mental illness to explore four dimensions of social support both for and through exercise. Our findings suggest that informational, tangible, esteem, and emotional support were both provided for and given by participants through exercise. We conclude that experiences of both receiving and giving diverse forms of support in this way are significant for some people living with and recovering from serious mental illness
Search for the glueball candidates f0(1500) and fJ(1710) in gamma gamma collisions
Data taken with the ALEPH detector at LEP1 have been used to search for gamma
gamma production of the glueball candidates f0(1500) and fJ(1710) via their
decay to pi+pi-. No signal is observed and upper limits to the product of gamma
gamma width and pi+pi- branching ratio of the f0(1500) and the fJ(1710) have
been measured to be Gamma_(gamma gamma -> f0(1500)). BR(f0(1500)->pi+pi-) <
0.31 keV and Gamma_(gamma gamma -> fJ(1710)). BR(fJ(1710)->pi+pi-) < 0.55 keV
at 95% confidence level.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
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