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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
111

Ecological Analysis of Physical Activity and Health-related Quality of Life in Female College Students.

Dunn, Jacqueline 12 1900 (has links)
Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) is a comprehensive construct including physical and psychosocial health functioning. Despite significant health benefits of regular physical activity (PA), over 40% of female college students do not meet recommended PA guidelines to improve their health. This study investigated the influences of individual, social, and physical environmental factors on students’ PA and HRQOL. Participants were 235 female university students who completed validated surveys assessing their perceptions of PA, HRQOL, and social ecological factors. Three hierarchical regressions revealed individual and physical environmental factors as predictors of PA and HRQOL. These findings indicated health professionals need to consider students’ individual factors and physical environmental factors to promote female students’ PA and HRQOL.
112

The Use of Public Electronic Forums to Manage Conflict among Female Peers: An Explorative Study

Clark, Krista Nicole 16 June 2016 (has links)
This qualitative study explored how female college students manage conflict on public electronic forums such as social media. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with twelve female college students to investigate the process of using social media to manage conflict with peers. Data were analyzed using grounded theory analysis and the following three categories emerged: motivation, third party involvement, and remorse/regret. Participants reported a range of motivations for choosing social media to manage their conflict along with the implications that accompanied this decision. Study limitations, directions for future research, and clinical implications are discussed. / Master of Science
113

Physical Activity and Markers of Cardiovascular Health: Understanding the Influence of Menopause and Stroke

Huynh, Eric January 2023 (has links)
In females, menopause-related reductions in estrogen may cause declines in cardiovascular health and increase the risk for stroke. In the event of stroke, cardiovascular health of postmenopausal females may be further worsened. It is well established that physical activity and exercise improves cardiovascular health in the general population and in those with chronic conditions, including stroke. However, the nature and extent of the associations between physical activity and cardiovascular health of pre- and post-menopausal females with, and without, stroke are unclear. This thesis is comprised of two studies to address this knowledge gap. The first study was a systematic review to examine the effect of aerobic exercise on cardiovascular health of postmenopausal females, and the association with different exercise intensities. Five electronic databases from inception to May 6th, 2022, were searched for randomized-controlled trials of aerobic exercise interventions reporting cardiovascular outcomes in postmenopausal females. Data was synthesized qualitatively, and random-effects meta-analyses and subgroup analyses (for light, moderate, vigorous intensity) were performed. Fifty-six studies (4134 participants;45-78 years of age) were identified. Aerobic exercise interventions varied in frequency (3-21x/week), intensity, type, time (8-60 min/session), and duration (3-52 weeks). Fifty studies (n=3730) were included in the quantitative synthesis. Aerobic exercise improved systolic blood pressure (SBP) (Mean difference(MD)=-3.67mmHg, 95%CI[-6.88,-0.46],p=0.03), resting heart rate (MD=-5.76bpm, 95%CI[-5.76,-1.61],p<0.01), body mass index (BMI)(MD=-0.65kg/m2, 95%CI[-0.99,-0.31],p<0.01), waist circumference (WC) (MD=-2.03cm, 95%CI[-2.65,-1.41],p<0.01), body fat (MD=-2.57kg, 95%CI[-3.65,-1.49],p<0.01), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (MD=-10.46mg/dL, 95%CI[-16.31,-4.61],p<0.01), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (MD=3.28mg/dL, 95%CI[0.20,6.36],p=0.04) and cardiorespiratory fitness (Standardized MD=1.43, 95%CI[1.17,1.70],p<0.01). Subgroup differences in exercise intensity were only present for BMI where light- and vigorous-intensities were beneficial, and moderate intensity had no effect (X2=9.79, df=2,p<0.01), and for blood triglycerides and blood glucose where light intensity showed a beneficial effect and there was no effect of moderate and vigorous intensities (triglycerides X2=7.70, df=2, p=0.02; glucose X2=20.98, df=2, p<0.01). The second study was a cross-sectional analysis of baseline data from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging that examined the association between physical activity and cardiovascular health in females with stroke, and the interaction with menopause. Generalized linear models with applied sampling weights were used to examine the associations between cardiovascular health, and self-reported physical activity, while controlling for age and smoking history. Subsequent models included an interaction between physical activity and menopausal status. The sample included 1468 females with stroke (103 premenopausal). Physical activity was beneficially associated with SBP (ß = -0.02 (SE=0.01), p=0.04, 95% CI: -0.42 to -0.0005), WC (ß = -0.03 (SE=0.008), p<0.01, 95% CI: -0.05 to -0.02), waist-to-hip ratio (ß = -0.00009 (SE=0.00004), p=0.03, 95% CI: -0.0002 to -0.0000007), C-Reactive protein (ß = -0.007 (SE=0.003), p<0.02, 95% CI: -0.013 to -0.001). There were no interactions between physical activity and menopausal status for all outcomes. Together, these studies contribute to the development of future guidelines and research to improve cardiovascular health in underrepresented and high-risk populations of postmenopausal females and females with stroke. / Thesis / Master of Science Rehabilitation Science (MSc) / Exercise and physical activity are good for the health of the heart and blood vessels. We do not know how physical activity also benefits females after menopause and females with stroke. This thesis examined the association between physical activity and the health of the heart and blood vessels in females before and after menopause, with and without stroke. The first study reviewed other studies that looked at the effect of aerobic exercise on the health of the heart and blood vessels in females after menopause. We found that after menopause females might benefit from aerobic exercise. We also found that different intensities of exercise may affect the health of the heart and blood vessels better than others, but more research is needed. The second study found that physical activity is related to better health of the heart and blood vessels in females after stroke, and whether a female has undergone menopause does not change this relationship. These studies show that exercise and physical activity may help the health of heart and blood vessels in females after menopause and females with stroke. Together they may help inform future exercise and physical activity guidelines and research to improve the health of the heart and blood vessels in these populations.
114

The impacts of pregnancy status, abortion risk, and other factors on replacement female values in Mississippi cattle auctions

Marshall, Tori Lee 09 August 2019 (has links)
A replacement female's value is primarily determined by her reproductive potential and the expected value of calves produced. To improve sales revenues, sellers benefit from understanding the buyers' valuation of physical characteristics related to reproductive potential and calf values. The goal of this research is to identify the impact of physical characteristics on the valuation of individual replacement females through a hedonic pricing model. Results suggest all facets of pregnancy (i.e. pregnancy status, months pregnant, expected due-date, and cow-calf pairs) are crucial to the valuation. Particularly, pregnant replacement females are discounted relative to non-pregnant, ascending in value as months pregnant increases and reaching a premium over non-pregnant status at approximately five months. It is suspected that newly pregnant replacements are discounted due to higher abortion risks. Finally, the largest premiums were observed for cow-calf pairs, where risk of abortion is zero and the replacement female has proven her reproductive potential.
115

The Reflective Experiences of Matriculated Black Females from CACREP Accredited Doctoral Programs

Stevens, Michelle C. January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
116

Effects of Fat Stigmatization on the Behavioral and Emotional Lives of Women of Size: Voicing Silence through Theatre of the Oppressed

Jester, JuliaGrace J. 18 April 2007 (has links)
No description available.
117

Stress relief by 'comfort food' in females

Egan, Ann January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
118

Goodwill Girls: Examining the Effectiveness of a Relational Aggression Intervention with Predominantly African American Females

Stoll-Juredine, Natasha January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
119

Psychopathy in delinquent girls: an examination of factor structure

Ugueto, Ana Maria 10 October 2005 (has links)
No description available.
120

Neurobiological Underpinnings of Autistic Traits, Sensory Processing, and Mental Health in Young Adult Males and Females

McQuarrie, Miranda Jane 07 May 2024 (has links) (PDF)
Females may present with autism more frequently than is diagnosed, due, in part, to autistic trait and sensory processing differences. Unfortunately, recruiting enough autistic female participants is difficult, because of such underdiagnoses. By approaching autism as a continuous variable, neurotypical (NT) individuals can be studied to better understand autistic individuals. Thus, to examine potential neurobiological underpinnings of sex-based behavioral profiles, we recruited 52 NT individuals (22 male; 30 female). Participants underwent resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine how functional network connectivity (via group independent components analysis) underpinned overall male/female differences in previously measured behavioral autistic trait and sensory processing questionnaire scores. Results showed that males' sensory processing and autistic trait patterns were correlated with sensorimotor and social brain areas while females' intolerance of uncertainty and autistic traits were correlated with areas implicated in sensory processing and anxiety. Additionally, both sexes exhibited a close relationship between sensory processing (e.g., auditory, higher order visual), social functioning (e.g., middle temporal gyrus), and empathizing (e.g., right temporal-parietal junction, fusiform gyrus), though the networks present within these correlations differed somewhat between the sexes. Systemizing was most strongly correlated with executive functioning and language processing areas in both sexes, with different brain networks showing greater significance in males than females. Overall, males and females displayed similar neurophysiological patterns involved in autistic traits, sensory processing, empathizing, and systemizing, though they seemed to activate these networks differently. Understanding these network differences in an autistic population may provide for sex-specific brain-based interventions for sensory processing, anxiety, and autistic trait manifestation.

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