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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

Coping and psychological distress among head and neck cancer patients

Elani, Hawazin January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
112

Does attendance in Head Start and Early Head Start programs influence social and emotional development in young children?

Thorne, Mary Elizabeth 10 May 2024 (has links) (PDF)
Social and emotional development is a crucial domain of development that influences child outcomes. Apart from a child’s family, early care and education (ECE) programs offer opportunities to develop critical skills that promote academic achievement, emotion regulation, cognition, and literacy. There are achievement gaps in these areas when comparing children from low and high socioeconomic backgrounds, lending to the federal legislation to form Head Start and Early Head Start programs nationwide. While these programs have attendance mandates, the national attendance average is below the requirements, which may hinder the full benefits of Head Start and Early Head Start programs. Using attendance rates and scores from the Ages and Stages Questionnaire – Third Edition (ASQ-3), we examined the differences between Head Start and Early Head Start groups, gender, and high and low attendance groups. The researcher conducted regression analyses to determine if attendance rates predict ASQ-3 scores. Analysis revealed a positive relation among these variables, with significant differences between Head Start and Early Head Start groups and low and high-attendance groups.
113

Does head extension and flexion increase postural instability in elderly subjects when visual information is kept constant?

Buckley, John, Anand, Vijay, Scally, Andy J., Elliott, David 17 July 2014 (has links)
No / The present study determined the effects of flexing and extending the head on the postural stability and mean anterior-posterior (A-P) center of mass (CM) position during upright stance in the elderly. To ensure visual input to stability was not a confounding variable, visual information was kept as constant as possible for all head positions. Twelve healthy elderly subjects (72.3±4.7 years) were asked to stand stationary on a single force-platform. Postural stability (assessed using the rms A-P excursion of the center of pressure (CP)) was determined for standing with the head erect, and with the head flexed and extended. The vestibular contribution to postural stability becomes increasingly important under challenging conditions, so to highlight the effects of vestibular system input, measurements of postural stability under conditions where visual and somatosensory inputs were disrupted were included. Changes in the mean A-P CM position when tilting the head were assessed by determining changes in the mean A-P location of the CP from standing with the head erect. Compared to standing with the head erect and looking straight ahead, postural stability was reduced when the head was flexed or extended (P<0.01). Changes in mean A-P CM position were only significant when standing with the head flexed (P<0.05). This suggests that increases in postural instability with the head tilted from the erect position may be in part due to mechanical perturbation rather than solely vestibular disruption.
114

Sustained attention to response

Manly, Tom January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
115

White matter damage after acute brain injury

McCracken, Eileen January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
116

A study of factors affecting the coefficient of discharge of twinned poppet-valves

Stevenson, Philip Mark January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
117

Efficient analysis of ordinal data from clinical trials in head injury

McHugh, Gillian Stephanie January 2012 (has links)
Many promising Phase II trials have been carried out in head injury however to date there has been no successful translation of the positive results from these explanatory trials into improved patient outcomes in Phase III trials. Many reasons have been hypothesised for this failure. Outcomes in head injury trials are usually measured using the five point Glasgow Outcome Scale. Traditionally the ordinality of this scale is disregarded and it is dichotomised into two groups, favourable and unfavourable outcome. This thesis explores whether suboptimal statistical analysis techniques, including the dichotomisation of outcomes could have contributed to the reasons why Phase III trials have been unsuccessful. Based on eleven completed head injury studies, simulation modelling is used to compare outcome as assessed by the conventional dichotomy with both modelling that takes into account the ordered nature of the outcome (proportional odds modelling) and modelling which individualises a patient’s risk of a good or poor outcome ( the ‘sliding dichotomy’). The results of this modelling show that both analyses which use the full outcome scale and those which individualise risk show great efficiency gains (as measured by reduction in required sample sizes) over the conventional analysis of the binary outcome. These results are consistent both when the simulated treatment effects followed a proportional odds model and when they did not. Consistent results were also observed when targeting or restricting improvement to groups of subjects based on clinical characteristics or prognosis. Although proportional odds modelling shows consistently greater sample size reductions the choice of whether to use proportional odds modelling or the sliding dichotomy depends on the question of interest.
118

Relationship between symptoms of mild head injury, psychosocial ability, psychological morbidity and coping style

Tessler, Emma-Rose January 2007 (has links)
The mild head inured population accounts for 80 per cent of all head injuries and whilst research has identified no neurological abnormalities, this population still report to experience functional impairment. The current study set out to explore the biopsychosocial factors that could exacerbate the symptoms of mild head injury. In this respect, the study looks at the relationship between post concussion symptoms, social ability, psychological morbidity and coping style using the Rivermead Post-concussion symptoms Questionnaire, the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support, the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and the COPE questionnaire. Questionnaires were sent out to 138 individuals at 6 months post injury to identify relationships between coping style, post concussion symptoms, social support and psychological morbidity. 32 respondents completed and returned the questionnaires. Post concussion symptoms were positively related to social support, depression and anxiety. Active coping was found to be negatively related to post concussion symptoms whereas emotion focused and avoidant coping were positively associated with post concussion symptoms. The results of the study suggest that in order to improve symptoms of mild head injury practitioners must address symptoms of depression and anxiety, in addition to promoting a more productive coping style.
119

Teaching functions of a head nurse in training institutions

Anandan, Barbara Sughandi January 1964 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Boston University / PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authorization To Manage form for this thesis or dissertation. It is therefore not openly accessible, though it may be available by request. If you are the author or principal advisor of this work and would like to request open access for it, please contact us at open-help@bu.edu. Thank you. / 2031-01-01
120

Neural compass or epiphenomenon? : experimental and theoretical investigations into the rodent head direction cell system

van der Meer, Matthijs January 2007 (has links)
How does the brain convert sensory information into abstract representations that can support complex behaviours? The rodent head-direction (HD) system, whose cell ensembles represent head direction in the horizontal plane, is a striking example of a “cognitive” representation without a direct sensory correlate. It can be updated by sensory inputs fromdifferentmodalities, yet persists in the absence of external input. Together with cells tuned for place, the HD system is thought to be fundamental for navigation and spatial information processing. However, relatively few studies have sought to characterise the connection between the HD system and spatial behaviour directly, and their overall outcome has been inconclusive. In the experiments that make up the first part of this thesis, we approach this issue by isolating the self-motion component of the HDsystem. We developed an (angular) path integration task in which we show that rats rely on their internal sense of direction to return to a trial-unique starting location, allowing us to investigate the contribution of the HD system to this behaviour without influences from uncontrolled external cues. Using this path integration task, we show that rats with bilateral lesions of the lateral mammillary nuclei (LMN) are significantly impaired compared to sham-operated controls. Lesions of the LMN, which contains HDcells, are known to abolish directional firing in downstream HD areas, suggesting that impairment on the task is due to loss of HD activity. We also recorded HD cell activity as rats are performing the path integration task, and found the HD representation to correlate with the rats’ choice of return journey. Thus, we provide both causal and correlational experimental evidence for a critical role of the HD system in path integration. For the second part of this thesis, we implemented a computational model of how the HD system is updated by head movements during path integration, providing a novel explanation for HD cells’ ability to anticipate the animal’s head direction. The model predicts that such anticipatory time intervals (ATIs) should depend on the frequency spectrum of the rats’ head movements. In direct comparison with experimental recording data, we show that the model can explain up to 80% of the experimentally observed variance, where none was explained by previous models. We also consider the effects of propagating the HD signal through multiple layers, identifying several potential sources of anticipation and lag. In summary, this thesis provides behavioural, lesion, and unit-recording evidence that during path integration, rats use a directional signal provided by the head direction system. The neural mechanisms responsible for the generation and maintenance of this signal are explored computationally. The finding that ATIs depend on the statistics of head movements has methodological implications and constrains models of the HD system.

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