• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 441
  • 62
  • 59
  • 59
  • 59
  • 59
  • 59
  • 58
  • 19
  • 12
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 670
  • 524
  • 117
  • 104
  • 98
  • 97
  • 76
  • 71
  • 67
  • 61
  • 52
  • 49
  • 48
  • 42
  • 40
  • 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.
651

A Single-Subject Evaluation of Facilitated Communicationin the Completion of School-Assigned Homework

Meissner, Nancy A., Meissner 14 March 2018 (has links)
No description available.
652

Central Mechanisms Regulating Pituitary-Adrenal Activity in Infant Guinea Pigs (Cavia porcellus) during Exposure to Psychological Stressors: Independent and Combined Effects of Maternal Separation and Novelty

Maken, Deborah Suzanne 11 December 2009 (has links)
No description available.
653

Utilization of Placebo Response in Double-Blind Psychopharmacological Studies, Contextual Perspective

Ashirova, Margarita Olegovna 29 October 2015 (has links)
No description available.
654

Oxytocin: Biomarker of Affiliation and Neurodevelopment in Premature Infants

Weber, Ashley M. 16 September 2016 (has links)
No description available.
655

Marital Quality Affects Biobehavioral Outcomes in Advanced and Recurrent Breast Cancer Patients

Schuler, Tammy A. 28 July 2011 (has links)
No description available.
656

The loss of a dream: parents raising an autistic child

Ritchie, Tiffany L. January 1900 (has links)
Master of Science / Department of Family Studies and Human Services / Anthony Jurich / This study explored the parents’ perspective of having a child with Autism living in the home. Specifically, the researcher was looking to explore the attachment style between the parent and child, as well as the process of the parents’ changing their expectations of their child, from the expectation of raising a normal child to raising a child with Autism. In order to understand the experience of both families interviewed, the researcher, through semi-structured, qualitative interviews, interviewed each parent separately. A multiple case study approach was used in order to allow for comparison within each family. Methods for analyzing the data included coding the data, so that the data could be analyzed from the individual interviews and also analyzed based on family response. For the parents interviewed in the study, four themes emerged that were similar for all parents. These themes included the diagnosis process, the differences in attachment before and after their child was diagnosed, the changing expectations of themselves, each other and their diagnosed child, and the parents’ views on getting professional help, such as therapy. Both families shared the experience of confusion during the diagnostic process, especially confusion surrounding the cause and prognosis of Autism. All parents in the study illustrated the attachment injury after their child’s diagnosis, in addition to when the child began showing the classic signs of Autism. The study also found that each parent’s expectations changed from higher ones of themselves, spouse and diagnosed child to more moderate and low expectations of their spouse and diagnosed child. Last, all parents interviewed expressed that seeking therapy would have helped them deal with the diagnostic process and better cope with having a child with Autism. It is believed by the researcher that these themes have emerged because of the families’ shared experience of raising an Autistic child.
657

Epigenetica comportamentale della prematurità: Come la metilazione del DNA media l'impatto di precoci esperienze avverse sullo sviluppo socio-emozionale in bambini nati fortemente pretermine / PRETERM BEHAVIORAL EPIGENETICS: HOW DNA METHYLATION CONTRIBUTES TO THE EMBEDDING OF EARLY ADVERSE EXPERIENCES INTO THE SOCIO-EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT OF VERY PRETERM INFANTS

PROVENZI, LIVIO 17 March 2016 (has links)
Nel presente lavoro di tesi sono riportati i risultati di un innovativo progetto di ricerca longitudinale nell'ambito della psicobiologia. I recenti progressi nel campo dell'epigenetica sono stati applicati allo studio delle conseguenze di esperienze avverse precoci sullo sviluppo socio-emozionale in bambini nati fortemente pretermine. La nascita pretermine costituisce un fattore di rischio per lo sviluppo socio-emozionale, in parte per l'esposizione ad eventi stressanti (es.: dolore neonatale) durante l'ospedalizzazione in terapia intensiva neonatale (TIN). L'epigenetica si riferisce a processi biochimici altamente sensibili alle esperienze ambientali e che alterano la funzione di trascrizione di specifici geni, senza modificare la struttura della sequenza di DNA. Il candidato ha sviluppato un razionale clinicamente rilevante per la ricerca epigenetica comportamentale della prematurità. Inoltre il progetto di ricerca ha dimostrato che il livello di esposizione a procedure dolorose si associa a esiti avversi sul piano temperamentale e della risposta allo stress a tre mesi e che tale associazione è mediata da alterazioni epigenetiche a livello del gene che codifica per il trasportatore della serotonina. Le implicazioni teoriche, cliniche ed etiche di questi risultati sono trattate nella sezione conclusiva. Il progetto di epigenetica comportamentale della prematurità fornisce una nuova prospettiva teorica ed empirica sul tema dell’interazione tra genetica ed ambiente. / In the present work, the candidate reports the results of an innovative longitudinal research project in the field of psychobiology. The recent epigenetic progresses have been applied to the study of the consequences of early adverse event exposures on the socio-emotional development of very preterm infants. Preterm birth is a major concern for socio-emotional development, partly due to the exposure to adverse stressful stimulations (i.e., skin-breaking procedures) during the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) stay. Epigenetics refers to biochemical processes which are sensitive to environmental cues and which alter the transcriptional activity of specific genes without changing the DNA structure. The candidate has developed a clinically relevant rationale for preterm behavioral epigenetics (PBE). The research project has demonstrated that the early exposure to high levels of skin-breaking procedures during NICU stay associate with non-optimal temperamental profile and stress regulation at 3 months of age. This association was mediated by epigenetic modifications (DNA methylation) of the stress-related gene encoding for serotonin transporter. The theoretical, clinical and ethical implications of these findings are discussed further in the final section of the thesis. The PBE project provides a new framework for the issue of the interconnections between nature and nurture.
658

Réorganisation neurofonctionnelle permettant le maintien des habiletés d’évocation lexicale lors du vieillissement

Marsolais, Yannick 12 1900 (has links)
Le maintien de performances cognitives optimales au cours du vieillissement a été associé à des changements adaptatifs au niveau de l’activité cérébrale relative à diverses habiletés qui tendent à décliner avec l’âge. Peu d’études ont toutefois évalué cette réorganisation neurofonctionnelle dans le cadre des habiletés de communication, notamment en ce qui concerne le langage expressif. Or, considérant que plusieurs composantes langagières demeurent généralement intègres chez les aînés, il s’avère nécessaire d’explorer davantage les mécanismes cérébraux sous-jacents afin de mieux cerner les déterminants du vieillissement cognitif réussi. L’objectif de la présente thèse est d’examiner en détail les effets de l’âge sur les patrons d’activations et les interactions fonctionnelles entre les substrats neuraux contribuant aux habiletés de communication expressive. Deux études en neuroimagerie fonctionnelle, ayant recours à des approches méthodologiques distinctes, ont ainsi été menées à l’aide d’un paradigme mixte novateur et d’une tâche auto-rythmée d’évocation lexicale sémantique et orthographique, effectuée par des participants jeunes et âgés présentant plusieurs années de scolarisation. S’intéressant spécifiquement aux patrons d’activations associés à un rendement élevé à cette tâche, la première étude révèle que le maintien des habiletés d’évocation lexicale lors du vieillissement s’accompagne de changements neurofonctionnels superficiels chez les adultes âgés performants. Par contre, la seconde étude indique que les interactions fonctionnelles entre les régions corticales contribuant aux productions lexicales déclinent considérablement avec l’âge, sans qu’il y ait toutefois d’impact au plan comportemental. Cet effet du vieillissement sur l’intégration fonctionnelle du réseau de l’évocation sémantique et orthographique est aussi exacerbé par la difficulté de la tâche, ce qui s’exprime par des perturbations locales de la connectivité fonctionnelle. Somme toute, cette thèse démontre qu’une réorganisation neurofonctionnelle afin de maintenir les habiletés d’évocation lexicale au cours du vieillissement s’avère superflue chez les adultes âgés instruits et performants, et ce, malgré une diminution des interactions fonctionnelles au sein des réseaux corticaux sous-jacents. Ces résultats reflètent possiblement une perte d’efficience neurale avec l’âge, toutefois insuffisante pour avoir un impact comportemental chez des individus bénéficiant de facteurs de protection susceptibles de favoriser le vieillissement réussi, ce qui est discuté à la lumière du concept de réserve cognitive. / The maintenance of optimal cognitive performance in aging has been associated with adaptive changes in cerebral activation patterns for various abilities that tend to decline with age. Yet, few studies have investigated this neurofunctional reorganization based on communication abilities, particularly with regard to the expressive side of language. Considering that a number of language components usually remain well preserved in older adults, it is, however, necessary to further explore the underlying cerebral mechanisms to better understand the determinants of successful cognitive aging. The objective of this thesis is to examine in detail the effects of aging on activation patterns and functional interactions among neural substrates contributing to expressive communication abilities. Two functional neuroimaging studies, using distinct methodological approaches, have been conducted by means of an innovative mixed design and an overt self-paced semantic and orthographic verbal fluency task, performed by well-educated young and older adults. Specifically focusing of cerebral activation patterns associated with high levels of verbal fluency performance, the first study shows that the relative preservation of lexical speech production abilities in aging is characterized by marginal neurofunctional changes in high-performing older adults. Yet, the second study indicates that functional interactions between cortical areas contributing to speech productions significantly decrease with age, without, however, having an impact at the behavioral level. In addition, this effect of aging on the functional integration of the network engaged during semantic and orthographic verbal fluency was found to be exacerbated by task demands, which is expressed by local functional connectivity disruptions. In sum, this thesis demonstrates that a neurofunctional reorganization to maintain lexical speech production abilities in aging is unnecessary in well-educated and high-performing older adults, despite an age-related decrease in functional networks integration. These results may reflect a loss of neural efficiency with age, although insufficient to have behavioral outcomes in individuals who benefited from protective factors known to promote successful aging, which is discussed in light of the concept of cognitive reserve.
659

Implication de la connectivité anatomique dans les caractéristiques des fuseaux de sommeil

Gaudreault, Pierre-Olivier 02 1900 (has links)
No description available.
660

Increased delay discounting tracks with later ethanol seeking but not consumption

Beckwith, Steven Wesley 31 July 2014 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Assessments of delay discounting in rodent lines bidirectionally selected for home cage intake and preference of alcohol have had mixed findings. The current study sought to examine if delay discounting related differentially to alcohol seeking versus and alcohol drinking, two processes underlying alcohol intake and preference. Three strains of rats were utilized to answer this question Long Evans (LE), high alcohol drinking rats (HAD2), and alcohol preferring P rats. All strains were compared in an adjusting amount delay discounting task. Operant self-administration of alcohol was then assessed in the sipper tube model, and finally home cage drinking was assessed in a 24 hour 2 bottle choice paradigm. In the delay discounting it was found that the P rats were steeper discounters than both the LE and HAD2. In the sipper tube model, P rats displayed higher levels of seeking than both the HAD2s and the LE, but both the P rats and the HAD2s had higher intakes than the LE. During 24 hour home cage access, the P rats and the HAD2s had higher intake and preference for alcohol than the LE, but were not different from each other. These results show that increased discounting of delayed rewards tracks with appetitive processes versus consummatory factors and home cage intake of alcohol. This builds on prior findings using selected line pairs by providing an explanation for discordant results, and supports the hypotheses that increased delay discounting is an intermediate phenotype that predisposes individuals to alcohol use disorders.

Page generated in 0.0435 seconds