• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 239
  • 28
  • 7
  • 7
  • 6
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 333
  • 333
  • 115
  • 113
  • 101
  • 98
  • 98
  • 83
  • 57
  • 54
  • 48
  • 47
  • 37
  • 35
  • 35
  • 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.
201

Facial expressions as predictors of long-term outcomes following a traumatic event: Comparing automated and manual coding systems

Pfeffer, Charlotte January 2023 (has links)
Human faces provide a rich source of behavioral data. Following acute, potentially traumatic events, manual and automated coding systems of facial behavior may help identify individuals at risk for developing psychopathology. In the present study, OpenFace, an automated system, and FACS, a manual method, were compared as predictors of long-term functioning using facial behavioral data from clinical interviews collected one-month after a potentially traumatic event that brought participants into the emergency department of a Level-1 Trauma Center in New York City. We evaluated similarities and differences in facial emotions identified by FACS and OpenFace to determine their predictive accuracy in capturing Depression and PTSD 6-months and 12-months later. The findings suggest OpenFace is a more sensitive and precise measure of facial behavior than FACS.
202

An Analysis Of Trauma Narratives Perceptions Of Children On The Experience Of Sexual Abuse

Foster, Jennifer Marie 01 January 2011 (has links)
Child sexual abuse (CSA) is estimated to affect 1 in 4 girls and 1 in 6 boys before the age of 18 (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2005). Despite the prevalence of sexual abuse and frequent negative outcomes for child victims as well as adult survivors, little is known about CSA from the perspective of the child. To date, the vast majority of research has targeted adults. Studies conducted on children are mostly quantitative and have explored the effectiveness of various treatment interventions. To address the gap in the research literature, the present study investigated the perspectives of children on sexual abuse through thematic analysis of trauma narratives, which were written by children as a therapeutic intervention and described life prior to, during, and following sexual abuse. Analysis of 21 trauma narratives selected through purposive sampling revealed one metatheme, which was titled Fear and Safety. Children's descriptions of past and current fears as well as concerns about their safety and the safety of others were evident throughout all sections of the narratives. Three themes also emerged from the analysis: (1) Memories of the Abuse, (2) The Disclosure and Subsequent Events, and (3) The Healing Journey. The first theme, Memories of the Abuse, included three subthemes: descriptions of the sexual abuse, details about the perpetrators, and children's thoughts and feelings about the abuse. The second theme, The Disclosure and Subsequent Events, included three subthemes: perceptions of the abuse disclosure, experiences during the investigation, and experiences with the justice system. The third theme, The Healing Journey, also resulted in three subthemes: experiences in counseling, how life had changed, and future hopes and dreams. The themes are discussed, and ramifications for prevention efforts, treatment of child victims of sexual abuse, and counselor preparation are iv explored. Additionally, implications of the present study for counselors and community members are delineated. Finally, recommendations are made for future research with child victims of sexual abuse.
203

A Rooted Sorrow: (W)Ri(gh)ting the Rhizomes and Ruptures

Richard, Sarah Elizabeth January 2023 (has links)
This dissertation is an exploration of trauma in the secondary English classroom. It examines what trauma is and the ways in which English classrooms can center healing through rhizomatic explorations of fiction in order to reassemble experiences with trauma and create hope. The heart of this work is a young adult novel embodying a rhizomatic exploration of trauma. In exploring trauma in fiction in a rhizomatic epistemology, the novel uses multiple genres and non-linear storytelling to examine the roots of trauma that are nomadic and non-binary. This writing to heal invites teachers and students to follow the rhizomatic roots necessary for their own healing and allows teachers to think differently about the purpose of the English classroom and what healing-centered practices can look like.
204

Evaluating The Knowledge Of Adverse Childhood Experiences Survey And The Adverse Childhood Experiences Video As Brief Online E-health Interventions With Latinx Adults: Identifying Predictors Of More Severe Adverse Childhood Experiences

Alfano, Lucia Judith January 2023 (has links)
Given the public health crisis of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) in childhood and adolescence, and the potential lifelong repercussions, this study sought to identify significant predictors of a high self-rating for having experienced ACEs in childhood/adolescence with Hispanic/Latinx adults (n=292) with 55.8% female and 81.5% U.S. born with a mean age of 33 years. Some 52.5% presented moderately high to extremely high levels of race-related stress due to being Hispanic/Latinx; 63.6% experienced moderate to very severe toxic stress in childhood/adolescence and, 66.1% in the past year; 82.6% reported depression, 87% anxiety, and 86.2% trauma during childhood/adolescence; and, 83.1% reported depression, 89.7% anxiety, and 81.1% trauma for the past year. The study introduced the Knowledge of Adverse Childhood Experiences Survey (KACES-20) finding a moderate level of knowledge with deficits regarding how ACEs in childhood/adolescence can place individuals at risk later in life for type 2 diabetes, cancer, and high blood pressure. An ACEs video was included in the study with over 90% recommending the KACES-20 and ACEs video to others; and, together these brief online e-health interventions were associated with significant increases in knowledge of ACEs and self-efficacy for the ability to recognize ACEs in children/adolescents. After taking the KACES-20 and watching the ACEsvideo, 94.6% revealed experiencing ACEs during childhood/adolescence. Having more severe experiences of ACEs was significantly predicted by male gender, higher race-related stress due to being Hispanic/Latinx, higher toxic stress in childhood/adolescence, higher mental distress in childhood/adolescence and the past year, and a higher KACES-20 score. Findings highlight the value of the KACES-20 and ACEs video as brief online e-health interventions, and the important contribution of a new methodology for investigating experiences of ACEs in childhood/adolescence without causing discomfort or re-traumatization. These findings have particular value as contributions to the literature, while focusing on the neglected Hispanic/Latinx population, especially at this historic time of a pandemic and post-pandemic era when ACEs have risen; and, there is an urgent need for tools for prevention and intervention. This study has provided evidence for using the KACES-20 and ACEs video, as well as the study measures for prevention and future research.
205

Understanding Learner Trauma in the Emergency Medicine Clerkship: An Analysis of Self-Efficacy and Psychological Safety in the Clinical Learning Environment

Papanagnou, Dimitrios January 2024 (has links)
As third-year medical students transition from the classroom to the high-stakes, high-stress environment of the emergency department (ED), they confront a unique set of challenges that result in significant personal trauma. The literature offers limited insight into the trauma experienced specifically during the shift to emergency medicine (EM) as medical students’ first clinical rotation. The purpose of this study was to bridge this gap by examining the interplay between students’ perceived psychological safety of their ED teams and their own self-efficacy on the trauma they experienced as learners when working in this unique learning environment. This mixed-methods study included interviews with 17 third-year medical students who immediately completed the EM clerkship at an urban, academic ED. The study addressed four main questions: 1) What types of trauma do students experience in the EM clerkship as they transition from the classroom into the clinical learning environment for the first time in their training? What are the factors of the learning environment that trigger trauma? 2) In what ways, if any, do students’ intersectional demographics affect their experiences of trauma during the EM clerkship? 3) To what extent does general self-efficacy predict medical students’ perceptions of the psychological safety afforded by their clinical team during the EM clerkship? 4) How are students’ experiences of trauma associated, if at all, with perceived psychological safety? What factors in the clinical learning environment contribute to psychological safety or its lack? This study utilized several data collection methods: (a) a pre-interview questionnaire soliciting information on student demographics and responses to items on the General Self-Efficacy Scale, (b) in-depth interviews using the critical incident technique, and (c) responses to items from the Team Psychological Safety Questionnaire. Several key findings emerged. A substantial amount of trauma that students experienced was rooted in a lack of peer support and student empowerment. Various triggers for trauma were identified that transcended different types of trauma. Demographic factors, such as race/ethnicity and gender, influenced the prevalence and nature of these traumatic experiences, with students from underrepresented backgrounds reporting deeper emotional connections with patients. While student self-efficacy was generally high, it did not correlate with the perceived psychological safety provided by their clinical teams. Furthermore, the perception of psychological safety within ED teams correlated with the nature of trauma experienced; those with lower safety scores reported trauma connected to peer support or issues related to cultural, historical, and gender considerations. Lastly, the opportunity for students to safely take risks or learn from mistakes, coupled with their own medical knowledge limitations, emerged as central to their perception of psychological safety within the team dynamic. Deeper insights into the data were revealed through a cross-interview analysis, and several analytical categories were used to further synthesize and interpret the data. Six conclusions were drawn from the study’s findings and analysis: 1) Medical students experience different types of primary trauma when immersed in the ED. 2) Several forces that are intrinsic to the ED workplace influence the trauma students experience. 3) Clerkship leadership must be aware of the unique experiences underrepresented students have in the EM clerkship. 4) The psychological safety provided to students by their teams impacts their experiences of trauma in the ED. 5) Self-efficacy offers a lens to understand students’ experiences of trauma in the ED, but it is insufficient. 6) Clerkship-specific interventions exist to amplify the team psychological safety afforded to medical students.
206

Moving Ever Forward: Reading the Significance of Motion and Space as a Representation of Trauma in Toni Morrison’s Song of Solomon and Colson Whitehead’s The Underground Railroad

Unknown Date (has links)
This thesis argues that three models of trauma theory, which include traditional trauma theory, postcolonial trauma theory, and cultural trauma theory, must be joined to fully understand the trauma experienced by African Americans within the novels Song of Solomon by Toni Morrison and The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead. By implementing these three theories, we can see how each novel’s main character is exploring and learning about African American trauma and better understand how an adjustment of space and time creates the possibility for the implementation of trauma theory. Each novel presents a journey, and it is through this movement through space that each character can serve as a witness to African American trauma. This is done in Morrison’s text by condensing the geographical space of the American north and south into one town, which serves to pluralize African American culture. In Whitehead’s text, American history is removed from its chronological place, which creates a duality that instills Freud’s theory of the uncanny within both the character and the reader. / Includes bibliography. / Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2017. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
207

Aucun de nous ne reviendra the journey of working through trauma /

Kussman, Soosun Kim. January 2009 (has links)
Title from first page of PDF document. Includes bibliographical references (p. 49-51).
208

Witnessing violence: The link to reactive aggression

Stevens, Nicole Marie 01 January 2005 (has links)
This study uses a multiple regression correlational (MRC) analytic approach to examine the association between witnessing violence and reactive aggression, post-traumatic stress, and insecure attachment. One hundred adult male California State University students were surveyed using the Conflict Tactics Scale, the Adolescent Anger Rating Scale, the Inventory of Parent and Peer Attachment scale, the Child Report of Post Traumatic Symptoms scale, the Conduct Disorder scale, and the Modified Impact of Events scale.
209

Coping with the effect of secondary traumatisation: pastoral care with survivors of organised political violence in Zimbabwe

Mudede, Dennis 30 November 2004 (has links)
This study acknowledges the fact that compassionate witnesses working with traumatised clients suffer from secondary traumatisation. Weingarten (2000, 2001, 2003) and Figley (1995) are some of the authors on this subject. The study is based within the Zimbabwean context, which is going through a period of transition involving political and economic factors. Survivors of political violence seek assistance from counselling agencies like CONNECT and Mopane Trust. Mopane Trust chose to specialise in this work through counselling and research. This study explores how Mopane Trust trauma counsellors cope with secondary trauma. / Practical Theology / M.Th. (Pastoral Therapy)
210

Pastorale berading aan sekondêre slagoffers van misdaad en trauma in die pre-adolessente ouderdomsgroep

Roux, Anna Magdalena Petronella 28 February 2005 (has links)
In this study a research is done on the pastoral counselling given to pre-adolescent secondary victims of trauma and crime in the age group (11-13 years). Certain concepts will be discussed which will be used as a framework for this study. The nature and effect of trauma on the pre-adolessent will be addressed pastoral-theologically. Theories that will be investigated as appropriate on the counselling of the pre-adolessent is narrative theory, Biblical counselling and Stone's crisis counselling. The manner in which assistance will be given through pastors and counsellors to the traumatised pre-adolescent will be investigated and discussed. The application of certain therapies like narrative therapy, children's drawings, and family drawings, children's drawings as projection-technique and children's drawings as diagnostic aid as well as the interpretation thereof will be explained according to a case study. The shortcomings of some of these approaches will be highlighted and application thereof will also be highlighted. / Philosophy, Practical & Systematic Theology / M. Th. (Practical Theology)

Page generated in 0.0652 seconds