7 research outputs found

    W. J. Rorabaugh, The Alcoholic Republic: An American Tradition

    Get PDF
    Book review by Paul Siff. Rorabaugh, W. J. The Alcoholic republic: an American tradition. New York: Oxford University Press, 1979

    The Catholic University in Transition: The Case of Sacred Heart University

    Get PDF
    As the University enters another phase in its development under its fifth president, Anthony J. Cernera, and with a new bishop heading the diocese, it has been worthwhile to step back and review its history. It sheds a great deal of light on the last three decades of American Catholic higher education

    Autoregulation in resistance training : addressing the inconsistencies

    Get PDF
    Autoregulation is a process that is used to manipulate training based primarily on the measurement of an individual's performance or their perceived capability to perform. Despite being established as a training framework since the 1940s, there has been limited systematic research investigating its broad utility. Instead, researchers have focused on disparate practices that can be considered specific examples of the broader autoregulation training framework. A primary limitation of previous research includes inconsistent use of key terminology (e.g., adaptation, readiness, fatigue, and response) and associated ambiguity of how to implement different autoregulation strategies. Crucially, this ambiguity in terminology and failure to provide a holistic overview of autoregulation limits the synthesis of existing research findings and their dissemination to practitioners working in both performance and health contexts. Therefore, the purpose of the current review was threefold: first, we provide a broad overview of various autoregulation strategies and their development in both research and practice whilst highlighting the inconsistencies in definitions and terminology that currently exist. Second, we present an overarching conceptual framework that can be used to generate operational definitions and contextualise autoregulation within broader training theory. Finally, we show how previous definitions of autoregulation fit within the proposed framework and provide specific examples of how common practices may be viewed, highlighting their individual subtleties

    Without Honor: Defeat in Vietnam and Cambodia, by Arnold R. Isaacs

    Get PDF
    Review of the book by Arnold R. Isaacs, Without Honor: Defeat in Vietnam and Cambodia. Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, 1983. 559 pp

    Readings in Civilizations

    No full text
    Second edition, revised. Readings selected by Professors Curran, Gradie, Roney and Siff for the History Department at Sacred Heart University. Table of contents: Greece -- Florence -- Industrial England -- China -- China narrative

    Scapula fractures: interobserver reliability of classification and treatment

    Full text link
    OBJECTIVES:There is substantial variation in the classification and the management of scapula fractures. The first purpose of this study was to analyze the interobserver reliability of the OTA/AO and the New International Classification of scapula fractures. The second purpose was to assess the proportion of agreement among orthopaedic surgeons on operative or nonoperative treatment. DESIGN:: Web-based reliability study SETTING:: Independent orthopaedic surgeons from several countries were invited to classify scapular fractures in an online survey. PARTICIPANTS:One-hundred and three orthopaedic surgeons evaluated 35 movies of 3DCT-reconstruction of selected scapular fractures, representing a full spectrum of fracture patterns. MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS:Fleiss' kappa (Îș) was used to assess the reliability of agreement between the surgeons. RESULTS:: The overall agreement on the OTA/AO Classification was moderate for the types (A, B, and C, Îș = 0.54) with a 71% proportion of rater agreement (PA) as well as for the nine groups (A1 to C3, Îș = 0.47) with a 57% PA. For the New International Classification, the agreement about the intra-articular extension of the fracture (Fossa (F), Îș = 0.79) was substantial, the agreement about a fractured body (Body (B), Îș = 0.57) or process was moderate (Process (P), Îș = 0.53), however PAs were more than 81%. The agreement on the treatment recommendation was moderate (Îș = 0.57) with a 73% PA. CONCLUSIONS:The New International Classification was more reliable. Body and process fractures generated more disagreement than intra-articular fractures and need further clear definitions
    corecore