33 results on '"Suzanne Hood"'
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2. Implementation of a Metacognitive Learning Strategies Session in an Online Asynchronous Human Anatomy and Physiology Course
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Chasity O'Malley, Kyla Ross, Kerry Hull, Suzanne Hood, Olivia Page, and Murray Jensen
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- 2021
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3. The associations between early generative concern, moral identity, and well-being in adolescence and early adulthood
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Heather L. Lawford, Suzanne Hood, and Heather L. Ramey
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Moral identity ,Generativity ,Self ,Well-being ,Early adulthood ,Religious studies ,Psychology ,Generative grammar ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
Generativity, defined as care and concern for future generations as a legacy of the self, is central to developmental success in midlife, though recent research suggests that it is also an importan...
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- 2021
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4. Implementing Guided Inquiry Active Learning in an Online Synchronous Classroom and its Impact on Test Question Performance
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Ron Gerrits, Vicky F. Rands, Murray S. Jensen, and Suzanne Hood
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Cooperative learning ,Test question ,Science instruction ,Computer science ,Active learning ,Mathematics education - Published
- 2021
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5. Community College Anatomy and Physiology Education Research: Conducting Research Where It Ought to be Done
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Suzanne Hood, Murray S. Jensen, Betsy Ott, Kerry Hull, Ron Gerrits, Heather L. Lawford, and Kyla Ross
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Self-efficacy ,Educational research ,Medical education ,Evidence-based practice ,Teaching method ,medicine ,Anxiety ,Community college ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology - Published
- 2020
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6. 'I Like and Prefer to Work Alone': Social Anxiety, Academic Self-Efficacy, and Students' Perceptions of Active Learning
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Nancy Djerdjian, Heather L. Lawford, K. Ross, Hiranya S. Roychowdhury, Shawn Magner, N. Barrickman, Murray S. Jensen, M. Farr, Betsy Ott, O. Paige, Suzanne Hood, Ron Gerrits, Skye Stowe, and Kerry Hull
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Special Section on Cross-Disciplinary Research in Biology Education ,education ,050109 social psychology ,Context (language use) ,Academic achievement ,Anxiety ,Fear of negative evaluation ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Students ,Self-efficacy ,05 social sciences ,Social anxiety ,050301 education ,Fear ,Problem-Based Learning ,Self Efficacy ,Problem-based learning ,Active learning ,Perception ,medicine.symptom ,0503 education - Abstract
Although active learning improves student outcomes in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) programs, it may provoke anxiety in some students. We examined whether two psychological variables, social anxiety (psychological distress relating to the fear of negative evaluation by others) and academic self-efficacy (confidence in one's ability to overcome academic challenges), interact with student perceptions of evidence-based instructional practices (EBIPs) and associate with their final grades in a STEM-related course. Human anatomy and physiology students in community college courses rated various EBIPs for their perceived educational value and their capacity to elicit anxiety (N = 227). In general, practices causing students the most anxiety (e.g., cold calling) were reported by students as having the least educational value. When controlling for students' self-reported grade point averages, socially anxious students rated several EBIPs as more anxiety inducing, whereas high-efficacy students reported less anxiety surrounding other EBIPs. Furthermore, mediation analysis revealed that individual differences in academic self-efficacy at the beginning of the term explained some of the negative association between students' social anxiety levels and final grades in the course. Our results, obtained in a community college context, support a growing body of evidence that social anxiety and academic self-efficacy are linked with how students perceive and perform in an active-learning environment.
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- 2021
7. Some Believe, Not All Achieve: The Role of Active Learning Practices in Anxiety and Academic Self-Efficacy in First-Generation College Students
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Heather L. Lawford, Nancy Djerdjian, Murray S. Jensen, Suzanne Hood, Melaney Birdsong Farr, Olivia Page, Kerry Hull, Betsy Ott, Kyla Ross, Nancy L. Barrickman, Ron Gerrits, Shawn Magner, Hiranya Roychowdury, and Skye Stowe
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0106 biological sciences ,Higher education ,QH301-705.5 ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Face (sociological concept) ,Affect (psychology) ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Education ,Perception ,Underrepresented Minority ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,medicine ,Biology (General) ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,media_common ,Self-efficacy ,lcsh:LC8-6691 ,Medical education ,LC8-6691 ,lcsh:Special aspects of education ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Articles ,Special aspects of education ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Active learning ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Psychology ,business ,0503 education - Abstract
First-generation college students face a variety of barriers in higher education compared with their continuing-generation peers. Active learning practices in STEM classrooms can potentially narrow the achievement gap by increasing academic self-efficacy, or confidence in academic abilities. However, these practices can also provoke anxiety in students. Given that anxiety can impair cognitive performance, we sought to understand how first-generation students perceive active learning practices and whether these perceptions affect the anticipated benefits of active learning. As part of a larger study on pedagogical practices in anatomy and physiology courses at the community college level, we asked students to rate various active learning techniques on how much each provoked anxiety and how much each contributed to their learning. All students (N= 186) rated some techniques as more anxiety-provoking than others (e.g., cold calling); however, compared to continuing-generation students, first-generation students’ ratings tended to be higher. First-generation students anticipated doing more poorly in a course and attained lower final grades. Notably, the use of active learning practices did not improve first-generation students’ academic self-efficacy: by the end of term, academic self-efficacy decreased in non-white first-generation students whereas other students showed little change. When introducing active learning strategies, instructors may need to proactively address underrepresented minority students’ emotional reactions and ensure that all students experience success with these practices early in a course as a way to bolster academic self-efficacy.
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- 2020
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8. Academic Anxiety in Higher Education: Causes, Implications, and Potential Solutions
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Kerry Hull, Sky Stowe, Vanessa Oliveira, Murray S. Jensen, Suzanne Hood, Heather L. Lawford, and July-Ann El-Baze
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Higher education ,business.industry ,medicine ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Published
- 2018
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9. Academic Anxiety in Higher Education: Causes, Implications, and Potential Solutions
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July-Ann El-Blaze, Skye Stowe, Suzanne Hood, Heather Lawford, Murray Jensen, and Kerry Hull
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- 2018
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10. Professional Development, Shifting Perspectives, and Instructional Change among Community College Anatomy and Physiology Instructors
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Kerry Hull, Audrey Rose Hyson, Murray S. Jensen, Suzanne Hood, Megan C. Deutschman, Laura C. Seithers, and Branden Bonham
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Universities ,Professional development ,Physiology ,Problem-Based Learning ,Anatomy ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Education ,Active learning ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Humans ,Community college ,Students ,Psychology - Abstract
This paper presents community college (CC) instructors' responses to the Community College Anatomy and Physiology Educational Research (CAPER) project, a professional development program focused on active learning and educational research. We engage with conceptual change theory to better understand why and how CC instructors shifted their perspectives toward active learning. Qualitative data indicate that the participating CC instructors experienced pedagogical discontentment, leading to increased positive beliefs about active learning and educational research. In addition, we find that CC instructors have continued their pursuit of pedagogical change and educational research through communities of practice, which provide positive learning environments.
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- 2021
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11. The aging clock: circadian rhythms and later life
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Shimon Amir and Suzanne Hood
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0301 basic medicine ,Gerontology ,Biological clock ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Longevity ,Clockwork ,Review ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Circadian Rhythm ,03 medical and health sciences ,Global population ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Rhythm ,Animals ,Humans ,sense organs ,Circadian rhythm ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,media_common - Abstract
Circadian rhythms play an influential role in nearly all aspects of physiology and behavior in the vast majority of species on Earth. The biological clockwork that regulates these rhythms is dynamic over the lifespan: rhythmic activities such as sleep/wake patterns change markedly as we age, and in many cases they become increasingly fragmented. Given that prolonged disruptions of normal rhythms are highly detrimental to health, deeper knowledge of how our biological clocks change with age may create valuable opportunities to improve health and longevity for an aging global population. In this Review, we synthesize key findings from the study of circadian rhythms in later life, identify patterns of change documented to date, and review potential physiological mechanisms that may underlie these changes.
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- 2017
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12. Student Anxiety and Evaluation
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Kerry Hull, Heather Lawford, Suzanne Hood, Vanessa Oliveira, Michele Murray, Maxime Trempe, Jamie Crooks, Michael Richardson, and Murray Jensen
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Classroom teaching ,020205 medical informatics ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,02 engineering and technology ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,lcsh:Education (General) ,Evaluation methods ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,medicine ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,lcsh:L7-991 ,0503 education ,Humanities ,Test anxiety - Abstract
The increased prevalence and severity of academic-related distress is of significant concern on college campuses. Of particular relevance to instructors is the anxiety relating to classroom teaching and evaluation practices. Sources of evaluation anxiety include student uncertainty about the nature of the expected demands as well as their ability to meet these demands. This report presents work from a pilot study investigating correlations between evaluation anxiety and perceived evaluation fidelity for different evaluation techniques across four different disciplines. We also examined the potential mediating role of academic self-efficacy in the relationship between anxiety and expected grade. Our results provide insight into methods to reduce anxiety and increase performance: should instructors focus their efforts on modifying their evaluation tools or increasing academic self-efficacy? La prévalence et la gravité accrues de la détresse liée aux études sont une préoccupation importante sur les campus universitaires. L'angoisse liée aux pratiques d'enseignement et d'évaluation en classe est particulièrement importante pour les instructeurs. Les sources d'angoisse de l'évaluation comprennent l'incertitude des étudiants quant à la nature des demandes attendues ainsi que leur capacité à répondre à ces demandes. Ce rapport présente les résultats d'une étude pilote portant sur les corrélations entre l'anxiété de l'évaluation et la fidélité à l'évaluation perçue pour différentes techniques d'évaluation dans quatre disciplines différentes. Nous avons également examiné le rôle médiateur potentiel de l'auto-efficacité académique dans la relation entre l'anxiété et le grade attendu. Nos résultats donnent un aperçu des méthodes permettant de réduire l’anxiété et d’augmenter les performances: les instructeurs devraient-ils concentrer leurs efforts sur la modification de leurs outils d’évaluation ou sur l’amélioration de leur efficacité personnelle?
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- 2019
13. Community College Anatomy and Physiology Education Research (CAPER): Can Educational Research Drive Pedagogical Change?
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Ron Gerrits, Suzanne Hood, Kerry Hull, Betsy Ott, Murray S. Jensen, Heather L. Lawford, and Kyla Ross
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Medical education ,Educational research ,Genetics ,Community college ,Psychology ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry ,Biotechnology - Published
- 2019
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14. Sleep and Aging: Circadian Influences
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Shimon Amir and Suzanne Hood
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Cellular activity ,Time of day ,Rhythm ,Life span ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Endogeny ,Circadian rhythm ,business ,Sleep in non-human animals ,Neuroscience - Abstract
The endogenous circadian system provides an adaptive means of aligning cellular activity, physiological processes, and behaviors with the predictable 24 hour solar cycle. Circadian rhythms play a crucial role in the regulation of sleep by influencing not only the time of day at which sleep occurs but also a variety of other characteristics of sleep including sleep propensity, architecture, and the consolidation of nightly sleep episodes and daily waking in humans. Circadian rhythms exhibit marked plasticity across the life span, with older adulthood being no exception, and developmental changes in a variety of physiological rhythms are implicated in the characteristics of sleep observed in healthy older adulthood. In this chapter, we summarize the role of the circadian system in sleep, describe age-related changes in circadian rhythms, examine how these changes are implicated in the characteristics of sleep in later life, and consider how circadian-oriented interventions may help to address sleep disturbances among otherwise healthy older adults.
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- 2019
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15. Transparent Assessments: The Potential Benefits of Training Students in the How and Why of Evaluation
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Vanessa Oliveira, Murray S. Jensen, Suzanne Hood, Heather L. Lawford, Sarah Malmquist, and Kerry Hull
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Medical education ,Genetics ,Psychology ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry ,Training (civil) ,Biotechnology - Published
- 2018
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16. Biological Clocks and Rhythms of Anger and Aggression
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Suzanne Hood and Shimon Amir
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0301 basic medicine ,circadian rhythm ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Circadian clock ,Review ,Anger ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Rhythm ,medicine ,clock genes ,Circadian rhythm ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,media_common ,infradian rhythm ,Aggression ,Perspective (graphical) ,anger ,aggression ,CLOCK ,030104 developmental biology ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Infradian rhythm ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The body’s internal timekeeping system is an under-recognized but highly influential force in behaviors and emotions including anger and reactive aggression. Predictable cycles or rhythms in behavior are expressed on several different time scales such as circadian (circa diem, or approximately 24-h rhythms) and infradian (exceeding 24 h, such as monthly or seasonal cycles). The circadian timekeeping system underlying rhythmic behaviors in mammals is constituted by a network of clocks distributed throughout the brain and body, the activity of which synchronizes to a central pacemaker, or master clock. Our daily experiences with the external environment including social activity strongly influence the exact timing of this network. In the present review, we examine evidence from a number of species and propose that anger and reactive aggression interact in multiple ways with circadian clocks. Specifically, we argue that: (i) there are predictable rhythms in the expression of aggression and anger; (ii) disruptions of the normal functioning of the circadian system increase the likelihood of aggressive behaviors; and (iii) conversely, chronic expression of anger can disrupt normal rhythmic cycles of physiological activities and create conditions for pathologies such as cardiovascular disease to develop. Taken together, these observations suggest that a comprehensive perspective on anger and reactive aggression must incorporate an understanding of the role of the circadian timing system in these intense affective states.
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- 2018
17. Neurodegeneration and the Circadian Clock
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Shimon Amir and Suzanne Hood
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0301 basic medicine ,Aging ,Parkinson's disease ,Mini Review ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Circadian clock ,Disease ,Biology ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Huntington's disease ,medicine ,clock genes ,Circadian rhythm ,sleep ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Neurodegeneration ,neurodegeneration ,medicine.disease ,Sleep in non-human animals ,3. Good health ,CLOCK ,030104 developmental biology ,circadian rhythms ,Parkinson’s disease ,Neuroscience ,Alzheimer’s disease ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Huntington’s disease - Abstract
Despite varied etiologies and symptoms, several neurodegenerative diseases – specifically, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and Huntington’s diseases – share the common feature of abnormal circadian rhythms, such as those in behavior (e.g., disrupted sleep/wake cycles), physiological processes (e.g., diminished hormone release), and biochemical activities (e.g., antioxidant production). Circadian disturbances are among the earliest symptoms of these diseases, and the molecular mechanisms of the circadian system are suspected to play a pivotal, and possibly causal, role in their natural histories. Here, we review the common circadian abnormalities observed in Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and Huntington’s diseases, and summarize the evidence that the molecular circadian clockwork directly influences the course of these disease states. On the basis of this research, we explore several circadian-oriented interventions proposed as treatments for these neurological disorders.
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- 2017
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18. Effects of bilateral anterior agranular insula lesions on food anticipatory activity in rats
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Alex M. Gavrila, Shimon Amir, Suzanne Hood, and Barry Robinson
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Time Factors ,Physiology ,Social Sciences ,Agranular insular cortex ,lcsh:Medicine ,Locomotor activity ,Open field ,Electrolytes ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mathematical and Statistical Techniques ,0302 clinical medicine ,Thalamus ,Arcuate Nucleus ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Chocolate ,lcsh:Science ,Cerebral Cortex ,Mammals ,Meal ,Multidisciplinary ,Brain ,Animal Models ,Food restriction ,Experimental Organism Systems ,Thalamic Nuclei ,Vertebrates ,Physical Sciences ,Anatomy ,Statistics (Mathematics) ,Ibotenic acid ,Research Article ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Period (gene) ,Hypothalamus ,Biology ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Rodents ,03 medical and health sciences ,Model Organisms ,Physical Conditioning, Animal ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Statistical Methods ,Ibotenic Acid ,Nutrition ,Analysis of Variance ,Behavior ,Motivation ,Biological Locomotion ,Body Weight ,lcsh:R ,Food Consumption ,Organisms ,Cognitive Psychology ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Feeding Behavior ,Actigraphy ,Agranular insula ,Rats ,Diet ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Food ,Amniotes ,Cognitive Science ,lcsh:Q ,Physiological Processes ,Mathematics ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Food anticipatory activity (FAA) refers to a daily rhythm of locomotor activity that emerges under conditions of food restriction, whereby animals develop an intense, predictable period of activity in the few hours leading up to a predictable, daily delivery of food. The neural mechanisms by which FAA is regulated are not yet fully understood. Although a number of brain regions appear to be involved in regulating the development and expression of FAA, there is little evidence to date concerning the role of the anterior agranular insular cortex (AICa). The AICa plays a critical role in integrating the perception of visceral states with motivational behaviour such as feeding. We assessed the effect of bilateral electrolytic or ibotenic acid lesions of the AICa on FAA in male Wistar rats receiving food for varying lengths of time (2 h, 3 h, or 5 h) during the middle of the light phase (starting at either ZT4 or ZT6). Contrary to our initial expectations, we found that both electrolytic and ibotenic acid lesions significantly increased, rather than decreased, the amount of FAA expressed in lesioned rats. Despite increased FAA, lesioned rats did not eat significantly more during restricted feeding (RF) periods than control rats. Similar to controls, AlCa-lesioned rats showed negligible anticipatory activity to a restricted treat suggesting that the increased anticipatory activity in lesioned rats is associated with food restriction, rather than the appetitive value of the meal. Monitoring behaviour in an open field indicated that increased FAA in AlCa-lesioned rats was not explained by a general increase in locomotor activity. Together, these findings suggest that the AICa contributes to the network of brain regions involved in FAA.
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- 2017
19. Daily morphine injection and withdrawal disrupt 24-h wheel running and PERIOD2 expression patterns in the rat limbic forebrain
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Suzanne Hood, Pamela Cassidy, Jane Stewart, Sarah Mathewson, and Shimon Amir
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Male ,Agonist ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Striatum ,Chronobiology Disorders ,Amygdala ,Prosencephalon ,Quinpirole ,Internal medicine ,Limbic System ,medicine ,Zeitgeber ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Morphine ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Period Circadian Proteins ,Rats ,Clonidine ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Stria terminalis ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Symptoms of opiate withdrawal include disturbances in circadian rhythms. We examined in male Wistar rats (n=48) the effects of a daily, mid-morning morphine injection (5-40 mg/kg, i.p.) and its withdrawal on 24-h wheel-running activity and on the expression of the clock protein, PERIOD2 (PER2), in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), oval nucleus of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNSTov), central amygdala (CEA), and dorsal striatum. Rats were killed over 2 days at 10, 22, 46, and 58 h after the last daily morphine injection at zeitgeber times (ZT) 1 or ZT13. Daily morphine injections and their withdrawal suppressed nighttime wheel running, but did not entrain any increase in activity in advance of the injection. Neither morphine injection nor its withdrawal affected PER2 expression in the SCN, whereas the normal daily peaks of PER2 in the BNSTov, CEA, and dorsal striatum were blunted both during morphine administration and its withdrawal. Treatment with a dopaminergic agonist (the D2/3 agonist, quinpirole, 1.0 mg/kg) or a noradrenergic agonist (alpha2 agonist, clonidine, 0.1 mg/kg) in morphine withdrawal did not restore normal PER2 patterns in each affected region; however, both quinpirole and clonidine themselves altered normal daily PER2 expression patterns in morphine-naive rats. These findings confirm and extend previous observations that opiates disrupt daily patterns of clock gene expression in the limbic forebrain. Furthermore, catecholaminergic drugs, which have been previously found to alleviate symptoms of opiate withdrawal, do not alleviate the effects of morphine withdrawal on PER2, but do modulate daily patterns of PER2 expression in saline controls.
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- 2011
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20. Global Depletion of Dopamine Using Intracerebroventricular 6-Hydroxydopamine Injection Disrupts Normal Circadian Wheel-Running Patterns and PERIOD2 Expression in the Rat Forebrain
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Suzanne Hood, Shimon Amir, Alex M. Gavrila, and Luciana Gravotta
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Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Dopamine ,Striatum ,Motor Activity ,Biology ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Adrenergic Agents ,Internal medicine ,Limbic System ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Oxidopamine ,Medial forebrain bundle ,Suprachiasmatic nucleus ,Central nucleus of the amygdala ,Period Circadian Proteins ,General Medicine ,Circadian Rhythm ,Rats ,PER2 ,Stria terminalis ,Infusions, Intraventricular ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,nervous system ,Hypothalamus ,Periventricular nucleus ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Normal circadian rhythms of behavior are disrupted in disorders involving the dopamine (DA) system, such as Parkinson's disease. We have reported previously using unilateral injections of the catecholamine toxin, 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA), into the medial forebrain bundle that DA signaling regulates daily expression of the clock protein, PERIOD2 (PER2), in the dorsal striatum of the rat. In the present study, we made widespread lesions of DA fibers using large injections of 6-OHDA into the third ventricle to determine the involvement of DA in normal daily rhythms of wheel-running activity and PER2 patterns in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) and several regions of the limbic forebrain. Rats injected with 6-OHDA and housed in constant darkness were less active in the wheel and showed a disorganized pattern of activity in which wheel running was not confined to a specific phase over 24 h. The 6-OHDA injection had no effect on the daily PER2 pattern in the SCN, but blunted the normal rise in PER2 in the dorsal striatum. 6-OHDA also blunted PER2 expression in the periventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus, a region in which a daily PER2 pattern has not been previously reported in male rats, and in the oval nucleus of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, but not in the central nucleus of the amygdala. These results indicate that DA plays a prominent role in regulating circadian activity at both behavioral and molecular levels.
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- 2011
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21. Exploring issues of children as actors in social research
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Suzanne Hood and Jan Mason
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Sociology and Political Science ,business.industry ,Acknowledgement ,Power relations ,Public relations ,Research process ,Education ,Focus (linguistics) ,Social research ,Argument ,Agency (sociology) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Sociology ,business ,Social psychology - Abstract
In recent years, there has been an increasing focus among childhood researchers on the concept of children's agency, or children as social actors, within research. The argument for the focus on children as ‘agents’ has commonly critiqued an earlier dominant tradition of research, whereby children had been positioned as passive objects of investigation, with their capacity for social agency largely ignored. This paper provides a theoretical and methodological exploration of the concept of children's agency in the research process. The authors outline conceptual developments that have contributed to the increased focus on children's agency and discuss how this focus has influenced research methods, both in terms of counting children in and researching collaboratively with them. Key elements of a methodological framework for promoting children's agency in collaborative research are outlined and some of the contextual obstacles to the implementation of this framework are discussed, in particular those encountered in attempting to ‘balance power relations’ between adults and children. The facilitation by adults of children themselves as researchers is identified as a possible way forward. The paper concludes with a brief discussion on the extent to which the acknowledgement of children's agency in research may lead to more inclusive policy practices.
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- 2011
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22. Reporting on Children’s Well-being: The State of London’s Children Reports
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Suzanne Hood
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Sociology and Political Science ,business.industry ,Public health ,media_common.quotation_subject ,General Social Sciences ,Public policy ,Public relations ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Work (electrical) ,State (polity) ,Human geography ,Well-being ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Sociology ,Social science ,business ,Urban environment ,media_common ,Quality of Life Research - Abstract
Monitoring and reporting on the well-being of children has a central role to play in the development of policies to improve children's lives. This paper uses two reports on child well-being – the State of London's Children Reports – as exemplars to show how regular reporting on children can be linked to planning and policy-making in an urban environment. The paper describes how the some of the themes and key findings from the State of London's Children Reports are being taken forward through policies to improve the lives of London children. The paper also draws on the process of researching and writing the reports in a discussion of some broader issues relating to child well-being measurement, focusing particularly on the integration of children's own conceptions of their well-being within the processes of indicator development and reporting. The author proposes that children's perspectives on what constitutes their well-being should be integrated alongside and together with more adult-oriented measures; and that work to involve children in child well-being development should make a clear contribution to policies which are aimed at improving the lives of children.
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- 2006
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23. Reporting on Children in Cities: The State of London's Children Reports
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Suzanne Hood
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General Medicine - Published
- 2004
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24. Reward and Aversive Stimuli Produce Similar Nonphotic Phase Shifts
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Ilia Karatsoreos, Suzanne Hood, John S. Yeomans, Povilas Leknickas, Sean W. Cain, Martin Roland Ralph, and Michael Verwey
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Male ,Electroshock ,Light ,Mesocricetus ,genetic structures ,Darkness ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Electric Stimulation ,Circadian Rhythm ,Developmental psychology ,Arousal ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Reward ,Cricetinae ,Avoidance Learning ,Animals ,Brain stimulation reward ,Circadian rhythm ,Aversive Stimulus ,Entrainment (chronobiology) ,Self-administration ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Electrical brain stimulation - Abstract
Circadian rhythms in rodents respond to arousing, nonphotic stimuli that contribute to daily patterns of entrainment. To examine whether the motivational significance of a stimulus is important for eliciting nonphotic circadian phase shirts in Syrian hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus), the authors compared responses to a highly rewarding stimulus (lateral hypothalamic brain stimulation reward [BSR]) and a highly aversive stimulus (footshock). Animals were housed on a 14:10-hr light-dark cycle until test day, when they were given a 1-hr BSR session (trained animals) or a 1-mA electric footshock at 1 of 8 circadian times, and were maintained in constant dark thereafter. Both BSR pulses and footshock produced nonphotic phase response curves. These results support the hypothesis that arousal resulting from the motivational significance of a stimulus is a major factor in nonphotic phase shifts.
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- 2004
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25. Breaking barriers?provision and participation in an out-of-school centre
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Suzanne Hood and Berry Mayall
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Early childhood education ,Government ,Health (social science) ,Staffing ,Public policy ,Sociology ,Day care ,Public administration ,Space (commercial competition) ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Sociology of Education ,After-school activity ,Education - Abstract
This paper uses a research and development project – the A Space project in Hackney – as an exemplar for discussion of policy and practice issues arising from the recent expansion of out-of-school child care and study support services. In particular, the authors explore children's participation rights and multi-agency working, two key principles upon which A Space is based. The paper suggests that current government out-of-school policy raises key questions about the siting, staffing, coordination and costs of future services; and that underlying these are more fundamental questions about: how children should be spending their time; and whose perspectives on this should be taken into account. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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- 2001
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26. Home-school Agreements: A true partnership?
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Suzanne Hood
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Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,business.industry ,Strategy and Management ,General partnership ,Political science ,Accountability ,Context (language use) ,Professional association ,Public relations ,Key issues ,business ,Home school ,Education - Abstract
From September 1999 all schools in England and Wales will be expected to have a 'home-school' agreement in place. The home-school agreement initiative has provoked considerable debate amongst and between politicians, educationalists, professional associations and parents' organisations. This article provides an analysis of this controversy . The first part places home-school agreements within the historical context of home-school relations. The second part discusses two key issues of 'enforceability' and 'partnership' that have informed much of the debate . The article concludes by suggesting that models of parents as 'problems', as 'partners' and as 'consumers' are all implicit within this recent initiative and it questions whether an acceptable balance between these models can be incorporated in the process of implementation.
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- 1999
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27. Children's Accounts of Risk
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Peter Kelley, Suzanne Hood, and Berry Mayall
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05 social sciences ,Socialization ,0507 social and economic geography ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,Suicide prevention ,Developmental psychology ,050906 social work ,Social group ,Quality of life (healthcare) ,Injury prevention ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,0509 other social sciences ,Psychology ,050703 geography ,Social psychology ,Qualitative research - Abstract
This article discusses issues arising from a qualitative study, `Children, Parents and Risk', where children (aged 9 and 12 years) and their parents were asked to talk about children's daily life in and around the home, with emphasis on decision-making. The discussion of the data is contextualized mainly within the idea of children as a social group. Themes in the research are intergenerational identifications of risk, understandings of children, childhood and parenthood, power relations between children and parents, and how access to resources shapes children's and parents' understanding and management of risk. The article suggests that differences in perspective and debates between children and their parents hinge on ideas about socialization and the good childhood. Children, while recognizing and somewhat endorsing parental stress on children's time-future, place considerable emphasis on the quality of their lived childhoods in time-present.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The purchaser/provider separation in child and family social work: Implications for service delivery and for the role of the social worker
- Author
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Suzanne Hood
- Subjects
Health (social science) ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social work ,business.industry ,Service delivery framework ,Social Welfare ,Qualitative property ,Context (language use) ,Public relations ,law.invention ,Work (electrical) ,Nursing ,law ,CLARITY ,business ,Social policy - Abstract
This paper discusses some of the findings from a research study that was carried out in 1995. The study aimed to examine the implications of the use of the purchaser/provider separation (and associated care management processes) in social work with children and families, focusing on the effects of separation on service delivery and on the role of the social worker. The research involved two stages: a telephone survey (to gather quantitative data about the prevalence of organizational separation in England and qualitative data about perceived advantages and disadvantages of separation) and a single exploratory case study in a Local Authority Social Services Department. The paper is concerned primarily with the case study findings. It begins by locating organizational separation within a social policy context. This is followed by an overview of the existing literature on the implications of the purchaser/provider separation and care management for service delivery and for the social work role. The methods and key findings for the telephone survey and the case study are then described. Analysis of the case study data suggested that separation in this setting could be understood along three dimensions: efficient processing versus delays; control of the work and work processes versus lack of control; and clarity of role and task versus duplication. The paper ends with a discussion of the study’s main conclusion – that the purchaser/provider separation in child and family work may introduce benefits of specialization whilst also bringing problems associated with fragmentation of the traditional social work role.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Children as Research Subjects: a Risky Enterprise
- Author
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Suzanne Hood, Peter Kelley, and Berry Mayall
- Subjects
Research design ,Health (social science) ,Data collection ,business.industry ,Research methodology ,Public relations ,Research process ,Education ,Access to information ,Order (business) ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,business ,Psychology ,Qualitative research - Abstract
This paper is based on a qualitative research study, Children, Parents and Risk. This study looks at the ways in which risks to children are understood and managed by children and parents. The paper focuses on two areas of the research—gaining access and interviewing—in order to show how the research process itself has constituted an important source of data on childhood and risk.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Reporting on Children’S Well-Being: The State of London’S Children Reports
- Author
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Suzanne Hood
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Chronic buprenorphine reduces the response to sucrose-associated cues in non food-deprived rats
- Author
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Suzanne Hood, Jane Stewart, and Robert E. Sorge
- Subjects
Male ,Microdialysis ,Sucrose ,Reinforcement Schedule ,Narcotic Antagonists ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Self Administration ,Pharmacology ,Nucleus accumbens ,Toxicology ,Biochemistry ,Extinction, Psychological ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cocaine-Related Disorders ,Eating ,Reward ,Dopamine ,Medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Long-Evans ,Neurotransmitter ,Biological Psychiatry ,business.industry ,Heroin Dependence ,Buprenorphine ,Rats ,chemistry ,Opioid ,Catecholamine ,Cues ,business ,Self-administration ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The mechanisms through which buprenorphine (BUP), a mixed opioid agonist-antagonist, reduces both heroin and cocaine taking remain unclear. Evidence suggests that chronic exposure to BUP blunts drug seeking by attenuating the salience of drug-associated cues. Here, we examined the effect of chronic BUP treatment (osmotic minipumps, 3.0 mg/kg/day) in rats on responding for sucrose pellets and associated cues on FR1, FR5, and PR schedules and on extinction and reinstatement of sucrose seeking by sucrose priming. The effect of chronic BUP treatment on the dopamine (DA) response in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) to sucrose pellets and to lab chow was also measured using in vivo microdialysis. Whereas chronic BUP treatment had only a modest effect on pellet intake on the FR1 schedule, it significantly reduced responding at the outset of sessions and reduced lever pressing during sucrose-associated cue presentations. No effect was observed in the FR5 or PR schedules. BUP slightly reduced responding during extinction and significantly reduced reinstatement. Chronic BUP did not alter the NAc DA response to either sucrose pellets or lab chow, although it did significantly increase basal DA. Consistent with previous studies with heroin and cocaine, chronic BUP reduced responding in the presence of reward-related cues.
- Published
- 2006
32. Flight nurses are go
- Author
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Suzanne, Hood
- Subjects
Primary Health Care ,Aerospace Medicine ,Humans ,Air Ambulances ,Queensland ,Emergency Nursing ,Nurse's Role - Published
- 2006
33. Interference control in a new rule use task: age-related changes, labeling, and attention
- Author
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Ulrich Müller, Philip David Zelazo, Suzanne Hood, Lisa Rohrer, and Tullia Leone
- Subjects
Male ,Color vision ,Speech recognition ,Interference (wave propagation) ,Education ,Task (project management) ,Cognition ,Salience (neuroscience) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Attention ,Selective attention ,Control (linguistics) ,Child ,Verbal Behavior ,Play and Playthings ,Colored ,Practice, Psychological ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Cues ,Psychology ,Color Perception ,Psychomotor Performance ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Three experiments examined 3- to 6-year-olds' interference control using a task in which children saw 2 corresponding sets of colored cards, a large set in front of them and a small set behind them. A colored candy (Smartie) was placed on a large card with mismatching color, and children could win the Smartie by selecting the small card that matched the color of the large card. Three-year-olds performed poorly whereas older children performed well. Having children label the correct color before responding improved 3-year-olds' performance (Experiment 2), as did pointing to the large card (Experiment 3); decreasing the affective salience of the stimuli (colored beads vs. Smarties) did not (Experiment 3). Results reveal the role of selective attention in action control.
- Published
- 2004
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