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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.
1

An ethnographic study of profoundly mentally retarded deinstitutionalized adults

Lee, Calvin January 1988 (has links)
This study was concerned with the behaviours, actions, and patterns of interaction of profoundly mentally retarded non-verbal deinstitutionalized adults (PMRs). The methodology utilized field research techniques which are observations of participants in their natural setting. The observations were of five profoundly retarded deinstitutionalized adults and took place over a three month period in the participants' group home and day program. The observations were recorded daily in a field note book and were later transcribed into a protocol format. The protocols were then coded. The coding categories were developed by the researcher through abstractions which emerged from the data. The coding categories revealed insights into the PMRs. The participants exhibited a heirarchical social order, displayed consistent seating patterns, and understood property ownership. The participants were noted to anticipate daily-routines such as meals, outings, and bedtimes. The researcher observed preferences by the individual participants for specific staff members. One participant appeared to display a heterosexual erotic preference for one staff member. Autoerotic sexuality was observed in three participants. Individual preferences for food, music, activities, and people were also displayed by the participants. Stereotypic behaviours were prevalent behavioural patterns exhibited by participants who had individual and unique stereotypic motions. The coding of the stereotypic behaviour revealed that emotional responses were present during stereotic movement. The researcher hypothesized that stereotypic movement was an observable response to the inner thoughts or ideations of the participants. The literature on sensory deprivation suggests that individuals when exposed to a montonous environment develop their own sensory data (hallucinations) in the reticular area of the brain. Stereotypic behaviour appears to be an adaptation by the individual to monotony through self generated stimuli. The data from this study suggests that the degree of environmental stimulation influences the prevalence and incidence of stereotypic behaviour. There were data to support the hypothesis that the participants' stereotypic movement was interactive with the degree of environmental stimulation and the specific like or dislike of the participant to the stimulation. / Education, Faculty of / Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of / Graduate
2

A study of X-linked mental retardation in British Columbia

Herbst, Diana Shawn January 1980 (has links)
An excess of males among the mentally retarded has been noted in practically all surveys of a mentally retarded population. It has been hypothesized that X-linked genes may account for this excess. The main purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis using data on the mentally retarded in British Columbia. A second purpose was to calculate the frequency of non-specific X-linked mental retardation in the population. In addition, an attempt was made to delineate clinical types of X-linked mental retardation. Data on the mentally retarded in British Columbia were obtained from the B.C. Health Surveillance Registry. The Registry also provided information on sibships with two or more sibs affected with non-specific mental retardation. Family histories on sibships with two or more affected males were obtained from the Department of Medical Genetics, institutions for the mentally retarded, namely Woodlands School and Tranquille, and in some cases personal interviews. The number of mothers in British Columbia giving birth to two or more sons in a defined birth cohort was retrieved from the linked family records of the B.C. Record Linkage Project. Families with a pattern of X-linked inheritance for non-specific mental retardation were ascertained while family histories on sibships with two or more affected males were being recorded and by reviewing files of other non-specific mentally retarded males in the Department of Medical Genetics, Woodlands School and Tranquille. Clinical and psychological characteristics of the mental retardation in males from these families were obtained from medical files from the same sources. Among the mentally retarded in British Columbia, there is an overall 28.2% excess of males. The extent of this excess is similar to that observed in other studies. This excess of males is seen at all levels of retardation except at the profound level. Mental retardation of known causes does not significantly contribute to the excess, which is due primarily to nonspecific mental retardation. Non-specific mental retardation in two or more sibs may be genetic in origin. Data from sibships with both males and females affected do not support an hypothesis of multifactorial inheritance with specific sex thresholds accounting for the excess of mentally retarded males. A ratio of 3.1:1 of sibships with two or more affected males to sibships with two or more affected females suggests that X-linked inheritance may account for the excess of male affected sibships. Family history data on sibships with two or more affected males provide evidence that X-linked genes can account for the excess of male affected sibships. A minimum frequency of 1.83 per 1,000 males for X-linked mental retardation in the population of British Columbia was calculated using sibship data. This frequency can account for the entire excess of non-specific mentally retarded males in the province. Mental retardation inherited in an X-linked pattern may be due to either single genes on the X chromosome or autosomal dominant genes with sex-limited expression. Distinguishing between the two types of genes was not possible in the present study. Specific clinical subtypes of X-linked mental retardation could not be differentiated due to a large amount of variability which was found not only in the level of retardation but also in associated psychological, neurological and physical characteristics. Although further clinical, biochemical and cytogenetic investigations of affected males in families with X-linked mental retardation may elucidate subtypes of non-specific mental retardation, variabiliy in phenotypic expression has been identified as an important feature of X-linked mental retardation. / Medicine, Faculty of / Medical Genetics, Department of / Graduate

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