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EFFECTS OF A HOT CLIMATE ON THE PERFORMANCE OF LACTATING HOLSTEIN COWS GROUPED BY PERCENTAGE OF WHITE COAT COLORRundle, Vickie Lynn, 1959- January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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Influence of age, retrieval task, and working memory on dual-task performanceWhiting, Wythe Lawler, IV 05 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Investigating the relationship between metamemory and memory performance predictionsSaylor, Laurie 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Personality, sensitivity to alcohol reinforcement and family history of alcoholism : different sources of motivation for substance use in high risk and substance abusing individualsConrod, Patricia J. January 1998 (has links)
This thesis involves a comprehensive review of the personality, psychiatric, and genetic risk factors for alcoholism and drug abuse. Based on this review, it is hypothesised that specific risk factors cluster together to represent separate vulnerability pathways to substance abuse and that differential susceptibility to the pharmacological effects of drugs of abuse (reinforcement and intoxication) mediates the relationship between such risk characteristics and drug-taking behaviour. A series of four studies are presented indicating that groups of individuals characterized by different risk factors for alcoholism are differentially sensitive to the reinforcing properties of alcohol. Non-alcoholic young adult men presumed to be at genetic risk for alcoholism (due to high genetic loading for alcoholism) were shown to be sensitive to the effects of alcohol on resting and stress-induced physiological states hypothesized to reflect activity within a brain reward system involved in the activation of approach and avoidance behaviour. Non-alcoholic young adult males self-reporting a personality profile that has been associated with increased risk for the development of panic disorder also demonstrated idiosyncratic responses to alcohol intoxication in that they appeared particularly sensitive to the. fear-dampening effects of alcohol. Finally, a group of non-alcoholic males were identified as being particularly susceptible to elevated and problematic alcohol and drug use in early adulthood due to a disinhibited/antisocial personality profile. These findings were interpreted as reflecting separate vulnerability pathways to substance use/abuse in which differential sensitivity to drug reinforcement and disinhibited personality are thought to play an important role in determining liability to seek out behavioural reinforcement from drugs of abuse. A second set of studies tested whether these factors are implicated in the maintenance of problematic alcohol and drug consumptio
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産後抑うつ状態に関する心理学的研究の概観小林, 佐知子, KOBAYASHI, Sachiko 20 April 2006 (has links)
国立情報学研究所で電子化したコンテンツを使用している。
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Dual control of HIV transcription elongation virus-specific negative control by NELF-E is counterbalanced by positive transcription factor P-TEFb /Jadlowsky, Julie Kendal. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Case Western Reserve University, 2008. / [School of Medicine] Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology. Includes bibliographical references.
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Exploring the Listeria monocytogenes secretome : identification and functional characterization of novel virulence factors and secretion systems /Port, Gary C. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2007. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 170-192).
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Early pancreas development and endocrine induction Ptf1a and VEGF /Wiebe, Peter O. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D. in Molecular Physiology and Biophysics)--Vanderbilt University, Aug. 2007. / Title from title screen. Includes bibliographical references.
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Choices for childbirth : the role of psychological and social factors in the nature and extent of women's decisions for labour and delivery and their influence on post-natal outcomesHayes, Liane January 2014 (has links)
Research into birth plans has considered women’s experiences of their usefulness as an aid to communicating preferences for childbirth. It has also evaluated implications for post-natal well-being based on the realisation of expressed preferences in labour and delivery. The current study aimed to identify the psychosocial profile of birth planners and to explore the outcomes for these women as compared with non-planners post-natally. It also compared the psychological constructs measured in the sample with a non-pregnant population to see differences between pregnant, post-natal and non-pregnant women on these dimensions. A sample of 140 women who had not been pregnant in the past year completed a questionnaire measuring: Age, occupational group; ethnic group; general health status, health knowledge, attitudes towards doctors and medicines; locus of control; coping style; perceived social support; and beliefs about pain control. A questionnaire was also given to 120 women in four antenatal clinics across a primary care trust in the North West of England. This questionnaire produced data on all of the variables in the comparison questionnaire, plus: Parity; antenatal education; birth plan use; medical conditions; information seeking; and childbirth self-efficacy. Women also described in text their preferences for birth. At least four weeks after delivery these women completed a further questionnaire consisting of the seven measures used in both the previous two questionnaires, plus: experience of birth; usefulness of birth plan; and post-natal depression. They also described in text their experience of birth. Results showed that birth planners were younger and had lower levels of internal health control than non-birth planners. Birth planners tended to use problem focussed coping styles, perceived less support from their significant other and perceived doctors as more powerful in pain control than non-birth planners. More positive psychological post-natal outcomes were experienced by women who valued their birth plans if they had one but overall birth planners experienced more negative psychological post-natal outcomes than non-birth planners. The non-pregnant sample was comparable in demographic terms to the pregnant sample but differed in most subscales across all measures to the pregnant sample pre-natally and to a lesser extent post-natally. The factors implicated in birth planning and psychological post-natal outcomes are discussed both in terms of the literature and possible implications for the training and practice of midwives.
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A Physical and Chemical Investigation of Eagle Mountain Lake with Reference to Biological ProductivitySmith, Burns Ashby 08 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this investigation is to attempt by correlation of chemical-physical factors to ascertain if any one of the necessary features might act as a factor limiting growth and reproduction of either plants or animals. The body of water used in this investigation is Eagle Mountain Lake, a reservoirs approximately five years of age.
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