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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.
181

The Female Athlete: The Role of Gender in the Assessment and Management of Sport-Related Concussion

Covassin, Tracey, Elbin, R. J. 01 January 2011 (has links)
Concussions remain a serious public health concern, with approximately 1.6 million to 3 million sport and recreational traumatic and brain injuries occurring every year in the United States. Most research on concussions has been conducted on male athletes, specifically, football players. However, female sport participation has steadily increased over the past decade. Recent studies suggest that the incidence of and recovery from sport-related concussion varies between male and female athletes, with women having a higher risk of sustaining a concussion and taking a longer time to recover than men. As a result, this article addresses the role of gender in the assessment and management of sport-related concussion.
182

Site Distance, Gender, and Knowledge of Geographic Sites

Zinser, Otto, Palmer, Debra L., Miller, Christy R. 01 December 2004 (has links)
The primary purpose of the experiments presented in this report was to study systematically the geographic site-name, associative memory of male and female college students (predominantly White and middle class) for locations that varied in distance: local, national, and international sites. In the first experiment, participants were to match listed names of campus buildings and local cities with their marked locations on maps. In the second experiment, under a site-name memory, a site-name/map-aid memory, and a map-aid/name-aid memory (site-name associative memory) condition, participants were to recall or match as many of the 50 US states and the 25 largest US cities as they could. In the third experiment, the participants were to match a listed grouping of the world's largest bodies of water and continents, a set of countries, and the world's largest cities, with their marked locations on maps. In the first experiment, men matched significantly more local cities than did women; in the second experiment, men recalled significantly more of the cities under the site-name/map-aid and the map-aid/name-aid memory conditions than did women; and in the third experiment, men matched significantly more sites on all three maps than did women. The absence of gender differences for campus buildings and states may have been a product of the participants having had extensive opportunities to learn these sites. That men displayed greater knowledge of cities and international sites suggests that they have a greater interest in geography than do women. Because of the limitations of the methodology used, the gender differences favoring men could not be interpreted as primarily a product of nature or of nurture, and thus it was concluded that they were a joint product of nature and nurture.
183

Explaining gender differences in psychological distress among adolescents : the roles of interpersonal problems and response styles

Di Dio, Pasqualina. January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
184

Sex Differences in the Distribution and Regulation of Glucocorticoid Receptors in Cardiac Tissues of Rats

Turner, Barbara B., Moses, Linda F. 01 January 1986 (has links)
We compared the binding of [3H]-dexamethasone in cytosols prepared from atria and ventricles. The effects of steroid treatment and adrenalectomy on receptor concentration were measured in both male and female rats. In male rats the distribution of receptors was similar in atria and ventricles. In contrast, the atria of female rats in all treatment groups had twice the number of receptors as did the ventricles. Adrenalectomy in females resulted in receptor up-regulation, but dexamethasone treatment, which was effective in reducing binding in males and in the ventricles of females, failed to alter atrial binding in females. These results suggest that the atria of female rats may be more responsive than ventricles to the effects of circulating glucocorticoids.
185

SEX AND GENDER DIFFERENCES IN THE MANAGEMENT AND TREATMENT OF OPIOID ADDICTION

Bawor, Monica 11 1900 (has links)
Background and Objectives: Opioid addiction is a major contributor to the global burden of disease and carries a significant risk of morbidity and mortality. Individuals with opioid addiction are subject to numerous adverse consequences including infectious diseases, medical complications, psychiatric disorders, and social disintegration. Women especially experience a heightened vulnerability to the adverse medical and social consequences of opioid addiction as a result of biological sex characteristics and socially-defined gender roles, which increases their risk for poor treatment outcomes. The general objective of this thesis if to investigate sex and gender differences in the management and treatment of opioid addiction with a focus on hormonal influences, genetic variation, and sociobehavioral characteristics including substance use behavior, health status, and social functioning. Methods: Using various methodologies, we compared the biological and social characteristics of men and women with opioid addiction in the context of methadone treatment. We assessed sex and gender differences in methadone treatment outcomes using a systematic review of the literature and a meta-analysis, which was developed based on published protocol. Next, we used data from the multi-centre GENOA cross-sectional study including 250 patients with opioid addiction recruited from Ontario methadone clinics to measure testosterone levels among men and women compared to non-opioid using controls; total serum testosterone was assayed using ELISA and RIA techniques. Following this study, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to test the effect of opioid use on testosterone levels, performing subgroup analyses by sex and type of opioid used. Using the previous GENOA sample, we then completed genotype analysis on variants of BDNF and DRD2 genes to test the genetic effect on continued opioid use, measured through urine drug screening. Finally, we recruited an additional 503 participants meeting criteria for opioid use disorder who were receiving treatment with methadone, from which we obtained information on drug use patterns and addiction severity using the Maudsley Addiction Profile (MAP) tool to evaluate sex and gender differences. Results: In our initial systematic review, we found 20 studies collectively showing that women were less likely than men to report alcohol use, employment, or legal involvement, but were more likely to misuse amphetamines. Using the GENOA dataset of methadone patients, we found a significant reduction in testosterone level among men but not women, which was associated with methadone dose. We also determined that testosterone did not fluctuate significantly between menstrual cycle phases. In line with these findings, our systematic review showed a significant suppression in mean testosterone level among men that use opioids compared to controls, but not in women. Our results also showed that methadone did not affect testosterone differently than other opioids. Among GENOA participants, BDNF rs6265 and DRD2 rs1799978 genetic variants were not significantly associated with continued opioid use while in methadone maintenance treatment. Our final study identified sex and gender differences in substance use, health status, and social functioning. Women were younger, had children, were current smokers, had higher rates of benzodiazepine use, more frequent physical and psychological health problems, family history of psychiatric disorders, more partner conflict, and began regular use of opioids through a physician prescription. In comparison, men were more likely to be employed and to report cannabis and amphetamine use. Conclusions: This thesis has demonstrated that men and women are differentially affected by opioid addiction and experience sex- and gender-specific challenges throughout the course of methadone treatment that are likely to impact treatment outcomes. The identification of clinically-relevant sex and gender differences is important to our understanding of the addiction profile, and can therefore be used to promote strategies for effective treatment and management of opioid addiction among men and women incorporating both biological and social perspectives. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
186

GENDER DIFFERENCES IN INTERACTIVE TOY USE FOR LITERACY DEVELOPMENT

Strigens, Deanna Marie 12 October 2006 (has links)
No description available.
187

Implicit Theories of Intelligence as a Moderator of the Relationship between Experience-Taking and Performance

Smith, Stephanie M. 05 July 2017 (has links)
No description available.
188

Maximizing, Satisficing and Their Impacts on Decision-Making Behaviors

Rim, Hye Bin 19 December 2012 (has links)
No description available.
189

A comparison of participation in mathematics of male and female students in the transition from junior to senior high school in West Java - Indonesia /

Ruseffendi, Endang T. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
190

Antecedents and consequents of gender role conflict : an empirical test of sex role strain analysis /

Davis, Francine January 1987 (has links)
No description available.

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