362,099 research outputs found
Depression, School Performance, and the Veridicality of Perceived Grades and Causal Attributions
An external criterion was assessed to test whether depressives have distorted perceptions of covariation information and whether their attributions are consistent with this information. Students’ actual and self-perceived grades, depression status, and attributions for failures were assessed. Furthermore, partici pants estimated average grades. Generally, self-perceived own past grades were inflated. Depressed students and those with low grades distorted their own grades (but not the average grade) more to their favor than individuals low in depression and those with high grades. Depression went along with lower actual grades and with internal, stable, and global failure attributions. Mood differences in attributions were not due to differences in previous grades. Depressed individuals drew (unrealistically) more depressogenic causal inferences when they perceived average grades to be low than when average grades were perceived to be high. However, they (realistically) attributed failure more in a depressogenic fashion than did nondepressives when their own grade history was low
Reconstructing the Distortion Function for Nonlocal Cosmology
We consider the cosmology of modified gravity models in which Newton's
constant is distorted by a function of the inverse d'Alembertian acting on the
Ricci scalar. We derive a technique for choosing the distortion function so as
to fit an arbitrary expansion history. This technique is applied numerically to
the case of LambdaCDM cosmology, and the result agrees well with a simple
hyperbolic tangent.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figure, dedicated to Stanley Deser on the occasion of his
78th birthday, revised version for publication in JCA
Productivity and the post-1990 U.S. economy
In this paper, the authors show that ignoring corporate intangible investments gives a distorted picture of the post-1990 U.S. economy. In particular, ignoring intangible investments in the late 1990s leads one to conclude that productivity growth was modest, corporate profits were low, and corporate investment was at moderate levels. In fact, the late 1990s was a boom period for productivity growth, corporate profits, and corporate investment.Productivity ; Economic history
[Review of] Darrell Y. Yamamoto. Monitored Peril
Television has been one of the most influential media in constructing the racialized social image of Asian Americans. Through meticulous examinations of roles and stories given to Asian Americans in television and combined with careful analysis of political and social events, the author successfully reconstructs a comprehensive history of Asian Americans in the entertainment world over the period of the past five decades. In fact, this book merits more than a mere media study of Asian Americans for its delivery of a critical view of historical relationships of the United States with Asia which are responsible for creating continuously popular and distorted images of Asians
Orbital frequencies in the carbonate sedimentary record: distorted by diagenesis?
The most important archive of Earth’s climate change through geologic history is the sedimentary rock record. Rhythmic sedimentary alternations are usually interpreted as a consequence of periodic variations in the orbital parameters of the Earth. This interpretation enables the application of cyclostratigraphy as a very precise chronometer, when based on the assumption that orbital frequencies are faithfully recorded in the sedimentary archive. However, there are numerous uncertainties with the application of this concept. Particularly in carbonates, sediment properties such as mineralogical composition and fossil associations are severely altered during post-depositional alteration (diagenesis). We here point out that the assumption of a 1:1 recording of orbital signals in many cases is questionable for carbonate rhythmites. We use computer simulations to show the effect of diagenetic overprint on records of orbital signals in the carbonate record. Such orbital signals may be distorted in terms of frequency, amplitude, and phase by diagenetic processes, and cycles not present in the insolation record may emerge. This questions the routine use of carbonate rhythmites for chronostratigraphic datin
A Deep Radio Survey of Abell 2125 III: The Cluster Core - Merging and Stripping
We use radio, near-IR, optical, and X-ray observations to examine dynamic
processes in the central region of Abell 2125. In addition to the central
triple, including members of both major dynamical subsystems identified from a
redshift survey, this region features a galaxy showing strong evidence for
ongoing gas stripping during a high-velocity passage through the gas in the
cluster core. The disk galaxy C153 exhibits a plume stretching toward the
cluster center seen in soft X-rays by Chandra, parts of which are also seen in
[O II] emission and near-UV continuum light. HST imaging shows a distorted
disk, with star-forming knots asymmetrically distributed and remnant spiral
structure possibly defined by dust lanes. The stars and ionized gas in its disk
are kinematically decoupled, demonstrating that pressure stripping must be
important, and that tidal disruption is not the only mechanism at work.
Comparison of the gas properties seen in the X-ray and optical data on the
plume highlight significant features of the history of stripped gas in the
intracluster medium. The nucleus of C153 also hosts an AGN, shown by the weak
and distorted extended radio emission and a radio compact core. The unusual
strength of the stripping signatures in this instance is likely related to the
high relative velocity of the galaxy with respect to the intracluster medium,
during a cluster/cluster merger, and its passage very near the core of the
cluster. Another sign of recent dynamical events is diffuse starlight
asymmetrically placed about the central triple in a cD envelope. Transient and
extreme dynamical events as seen in Abell 2125 may be important drivers of
galaxy evolution in the cores of rich clusters.Comment: 36 pages, 16 figures, accepted AJ, paper with full resolution figures
is available at http:www.aoc.nrao.edu/~fowen/papers/a2125/a2125paper3.ps.g
Attentional bias towards positive and negative images amongst offenders and non-offenders with intellectual disabilities
Aims: The aim of the study was to examine attentional bias towards positive and negative images amongst men with intellectual disabilities, some of whom had a history of criminal offending. A secondary aim was to explore the relationship between attentional bias, empathy and distorted cognitions.
Method: Forty-six men with intellectual disabilities with a history of criminal offending and 51 men with intellectual disabilities without any known history of criminal offending were recruited and invited to complete a dot-probe paradigm using images, as well as measures of distorted cognitions and empathy. Comparisons were made between the two groups.
Results: Non-offenders had a significant attentional bias away from negative images, while offenders had a small attentional bias towards negative images. There was a significant positive relationship between distorted cognitions and an attentional bias towards negative images. There was a significant negative relationship between empathy and an attentional bias towards negative images
Experimental investigation of evolving anisotropy in unsaturated soils
This paper investigates the ‘initial’ and ‘evolving’ mechanical anisotropy of a compacted unsaturated
soil. Awide campaign of triaxial compression and extension tests, involving different stress and suction
paths, has been performed on both isotropically and anisotropically compacted samples of unsaturated
Speswhite kaolin. The first objective is the definition of the initial yield surface of the compacted soil
after suction equalisation and before any plastic loading/wetting path takes place. This is followed by
the investigation of the evolution of the yield surface induced by plastic straining along different
loading/wetting paths. Experimental results are interpreted by using two alternative stress variables,
namely net stresses σij and Bishop’s stress σ�
ij ¼ σij þ δijSrs (where δij is Kronecker delta, Sr is the
degree of saturation and s is suction). Constant suction cross-sections of the yield surface are
represented as distorted ellipses not passing through the origin in the q:p plane of deviator stress plotted
against mean net stress, and by distorted ellipses passing through the origin in the q:p* plane of deviator
stress plotted against mean Bishop’s stress. The inclination of these distorted elliptical yield curves
evolves with plastic straining but remains the same at all suction levels for a given level of plastic
deformation. The critical state lines in the planes q:p and q:p*, or in the semi-logarithmic v:lnp and
v:lnp* planes (v is the specific volume), are generally independent of initial anisotropy or stress history,
suggesting that fabric memory tends to be erased at critical state
Irregular sloshing cold fronts in the nearby merging groups NGC 7618 and UGC 12491: evidence for Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities
We present results from two \sim30 ks Chandra observations of the hot
atmospheres of the merging galaxy groups centered around NGC 7618 and UGC
12491. Our images show the presence of arc-like sloshing cold fronts wrapped
around each group center and \sim100 kpc long spiral tails in both groups. Most
interestingly, the cold fronts are highly distorted in both groups, exhibiting
'wings' along the fronts. These features resemble the structures predicted from
non-viscous hydrodynamic simulations of gas sloshing, where Kelvin-Helmholtz
instabilities (KHIs) distort the cold fronts. This is in contrast to the
structure seen in many other sloshing and merger cold fronts, which are smooth
and featureless at the current observational resolution. Both magnetic fields
and viscosity have been invoked to explain the absence of KHIs in these smooth
cold fronts, but the NGC 7618/UGC 12491 pair are two in a growing number of
both sloshing and merger cold fronts that appear distorted. Magnetic fields
and/or viscosity may be able to suppress the growth of KHIs at the cold fronts
in some clusters and groups, but clearly not in all. We propose that the
presence or absence of KHI-distortions in cold fronts can be used as a measure
of the effective viscosity and/or magnetic field strengths in the ICM.Comment: ApJ, accepted. Uses emulateapj styl
Confronting the Ghost: Legal Strategies to Oust Medical Ghostwriters
Articles published in medical journals contribute significantly to public health by disseminating medical information to physicians, thereby influencing prescribing practices. However, the information guiding treatment decisions becomes distorted by selective publishing and medical ghostwriting, which negatively affects overall patient care. Although there is general consensus in the medical community that these practices of publication bias represent a moral failing, the issue is rarely framed as a wrong that necessitates legal consequences. This Note takes the stance that medical ghostwriting constitutes an act prohibited under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) and argues that physicians fraudulently named as authors should be held civilly liable under RICO. This Note explores civil RICO, its origin, its legislative and judicial history, and the evolution of RICO to areas beyond traditional organized crime. By applying the elements of civil RICO to medical ghostwriting, this Note argues that physicians named as authors who knowingly fail to fulfill journal authorship criteria should be held accountable for their role in disseminating misleading medical information. This Note argues that, at the very least, current regulations governing the medical publication framework should be better enforced and revised to mandate authorship disclosure
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