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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.
501

Brain structural connectivity and neurodevelopment in post-Fontan adolescents

Watson, Christopher 03 November 2016 (has links)
Congenital heart disease (CHD) is the most common congenital anomaly, with single ventricle (SV) defects accounting for nearly 10% of all CHD. SV defects tend to be the most severe forms of CHD: all patients born with SV require multiple open heart surgeries, often beginning in the neonatal period, ultimately leading to the Fontan procedure. Due to improvements in surgical procedures and medical care, more patients are surviving into adolescence and adulthood. Brain imaging and pathology studies have shown that patients with SV have differences in brain structure and metabolism even before the first surgery, and as early as in utero. Furthermore, a significant number of patients have new or more severe lesions after the initial surgery, and many still have brain abnormalities into early childhood. However, there are no detailed brain structural data of SV patients in adolescence. Our group recruited a large cohort of post-Fontan SV patients aged 10-19 years. Separate analyses of neuropsychological and behavioral outcomes in these patients show deficits in multiple areas of cognition, increased rates of attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and increased use of remedial and/or special education services compared to a control group. Post-Fontan adolescents have more gross brain abnormalities, including evidence of chronic ischemic stroke. Furthermore, there are widespread reductions in cortical and subcortical gray matter volume and cortical thickness, some of which are associated with medical and surgical variables. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) analyses show widespread areas of altered white matter microstructure in deep subcortical and cerebellar white matter. In this dissertation, I use graph theory methods to characterize structural connectivity based on gray matter (cortical thickness covariance) and white matter (DTI tractography), and examine associations between brain structure and neurodevelopment. I found that brain network connectivity differs in post-Fontan patients compared with controls, both at the global and regional level. Additionally, deficits in overall network structure were associated with impaired neurodevelopment in several domains, including general intelligence, executive function, and visuospatial skills. These data suggest that early neuroprotection should be a major focus in the care of SV patients, with the goal of improving long-term neurodevelopmental outcomes.
502

Exercising Non-Dominant Mediative Power Violence Interruption in the Periphery Communities of Florianópolis, Brazil

Ordway, Jared Lodric January 2015 (has links)
This thesis examines how informal mediation is practiced in Brazil’s urban periphery communities, which are often associated with high levels of violence and insecurity. Based on ethnographic data from low-income neighborhoods in Florianópolis, my analysis of local people’s interventions offers insight into the way that non-state, unarmed actors exercise mediative agency in the midst of everyday violence and insecurity. While a growing body of research shows that state and non-state actors are guided by diverse conceptions, intentions and approaches when they attempt to mediate public and private conflict amongst residents, less attention has been paid to the symbiotic relationship between, or the social impact of, conflict intervention and the reproduction of violence. This thesis argues that interveners use their interactions with antagonists in a particular territory in order to cultivate nondominant power, which serves to obstruct and interrupt the way that violence reproduces and transmits into residents’ lives. As such, it suggests that mediators can enable social change because they have a very particular relationship with the different and interdependent types of violence present in the periphery. Interveners develop and deploy a repertoire of social mediative tactics in order to contend with the complexity of local tensions and the erosion of democratic citizenship that these tensions produce. Defining mediative practices as a source of power invites discussion into community mediation’s strategic potential in the project of urban peacebuilding and violence reduction, positing new directions for applied practices in Brazil and beyond. / Marie Curie Sustainable Peacebuilding Fellowship
503

TIME-VARYING MEDIATION EFFECTS WITH BINARY MEDIATOR IN SMOKING CESSATION STUDIES

Chakraborti, Yajnaseni, 0000-0002-6747-8821 08 1900 (has links)
The majority of current smokers in the United States want to quit smoking; however, long-term abstinence rates do not improve beyond 30%, despite the availability of effective pharmaco-behavioral treatments and increased outreach of awareness programs on quitting benefits. One of the reasons is non-adherence to pharmacological treatment. Pharmacological treatments are developed to alleviate withdrawal symptoms experienced during a quit attempt. However, without continued treatment adherence, especially in the first few weeks of a quit attempt (when withdrawal symptoms fluctuate the most), the chances of relapse peak. Thus, adherence to pharmacological treatments must be improved to sustain long-term smoking abstinence. Moreover, smoking cessation is a complex and time-varying process. Therefore, the time-varying causal structure of adherence and smoking cessation must be studied carefully.The time-varying mechanisms underlying the smoking cessation process can be captured efficiently through intensive longitudinal data and quantified through appropriate methods. Mediation analysis is an efficient tool for studying such mechanisms. However, despite the time-varying nature of the data, existing approaches for assessing mediation provide overall average (in)direct effects over time and omit describing the temporal characteristic of the dynamic effect. This dissertation research aims to develop a new approach to estimating time-varying causal (in)direct effects of pharmacological treatments on daily smoking cessation outcome(s) mediated via daily treatment adherence. Additionally, it is hypothesized that adherence is influenced by daily stress events related to social contextual factors, not treatment-induced. The purpose of this research is to derive time-varying causal (in)direct effects. A local polynomial regression-based approach integrated with the mediational g-formula was proposed as a possible solution. Furthermore, since no other studies have studied time-specific mediation effects using a potential outcomes framework-based method, the performance of the proposed method was tested using two simulation studies. Finally, the optimum analytical approach (based on the findings from the simulation studies) was applied to answer the substantive research questions on smoking cessation using empirical data from a smoking cessation clinical trial. This dissertation is divided into six chapters. A brief overview of the chapters is as follows: Chapter 1 provides a comprehensive background and rationale for the methodological and substantive research that motivated this work. The chapter concludes with the three specific aims addressed in this research and a summary of the next steps. In Chapter 2, the longitudinal causal frameworks and the assumptions required to interpret the estimated time-varying (in)direct effects as causal are described in detail. These frameworks were further used in Chapters 3 and 4 for the two simulation studies that evaluated the performance of the proposed new approach. The simulation study in Chapter 3 evaluates the time-varying (in)direct effects in a longitudinal study in the absence of exposure-induced time-varying confounding of a mediator-outcome pathway. Four outcome scenarios with a binary exposure, a binary mediator, and a time-varying binary confounder of the mediator-outcome pathway were examined: 1) continuous outcome, 2) rare binary outcome, 3) common binary outcome, and 4) count outcome that is not zero-inflated. Two types of path-specific causal estimands are identifiable for these scenarios. The findings suggest good performance of the proposed analytical approach in producing accurate effect estimates (reduced bias and reasonable coverage) of these estimands for all the outcome scenarios. The simulation study in Chapter 4 evaluates the time-varying (in)direct effects in a longitudinal study in the presence of exposure-induced time-varying confounding of a mediator-outcome pathway. A zero-inflated count outcome scenario with a binary exposure, a binary mediator, and a time-varying binary confounder of the mediator-outcome pathway was examined. Four types of path-specific causal estimands are identifiable for this scenario, and the findings suggest good performance of the proposed analytical approach in producing accurate effect estimates. Chapter 5 uses the Wisconsin Smokers Health Study II data to assess the mechanisms via which pharmacological smoking cessation treatments affect the cessation-related outcome(s) in the presence of time-varying confounding that is not exposure induced. We found that individuals randomized to Nicotine Patch only group have better smoking cessation outcome(s) compared to individuals on Varenicline or combination Nicotine Replacement Therapy. This is due to better adherence among Nicotine Patch-only users. Finally, Chapter 6 presents the concluding remarks, including key findings from the three studies, limitations, and recommendations for future research. / Epidemiology
504

Appraisal and Coping: Mediators between Caregiver Stress and Psychological Wellbeing

Stevens, Elizabeth K. January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
505

EXPLORING THE IMPACT OF PARENTAL OVERPROTECTION ON ADULT SOCIAL ANXIETY VIA PERFECTIONISM: A MEDIATION MODEL

Banerjee, Prashant 09 August 2005 (has links)
No description available.
506

Avoidance and intolerance of uncertainty: Precipitants of rumination and depression

Anderson, Nicholas L. 22 November 2013 (has links)
No description available.
507

Coping with Cancer Recurrence: a Test of the Mediating Role of Emotion Regulation

Conley, Claire Cecile 06 June 2014 (has links)
No description available.
508

THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PARENTING BEHAVIORS AND BEREAVEMENT-RELATED SYMPTOMS IN PARENTS AND SIBLINGS INVOLVED IN PEDIATRIC PALLIATIVE CARE (PPC)

Morris, Adam Thomas 25 June 2014 (has links)
No description available.
509

Anxiety Sensitivity as a Mediator of the Association between Asthma and Smoking

Avallone, Kimberly M. 08 September 2014 (has links)
No description available.
510

The Impact of Expressive Flexibility and Context Sensitivity on Distress

Southward, Matthew Wayne January 2014 (has links)
No description available.

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