25 results
Search Results
2. The Many Faces of Special Education Within RTI Frameworks in the United States and Finland.
- Author
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Björn, Piia M., Aro, Mikko T., Koponen, Tuire K., Fuchs, Lynn S., and Fuchs, Douglas H.
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DIAGNOSIS of learning disabilities , *LEARNING disabilities , *COMPARATIVE studies , *INTERNSHIP programs , *RESEARCH funding , *SCHOOL administration , *SPECIAL education , *TEACHERS , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *PREVENTION - Abstract
Response to intervention (RTI) can be considered an everyday practice in many parts of the United States, whereas, in Finland, only recently has a new framework for support in learning taken shape. Choosing Finland as the comparative partner for this policy paper is justified as its educational system has been widely referenced on the basis of good Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) results. The results of the present comparative article showed first, that the U.S. RTI was primarily intended for diagnosing and preventing learning disabilities whereas the Finnish RTI is mainly an administrative structure for support. Second, the U.S. RTI includes clear definitions regarding the intensity, duration, and content of support provided within each tier whereas the Finnish version contains no explicit guidelines for support. Third, the U.S. RTI assumes no special educational services in the first two tiers, but the Finnish framework includes special educational services from the onset of support. Implications for policy and practice are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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3. Whois the Practitioner in Faculty-Staff Sexual Misconduct Work?: Views from the UK and US.
- Author
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Coy, Maddy, Bull, Anna, Libarkin, Julie, and Page, Tiffany
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CORRUPTION prevention , *PREVENTION of sexual harassment , *RESEARCH , *HUMAN sexuality , *COLLEGE teachers , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *ORGANIZATIONAL behavior , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CRIME victims , *SEX customs , *DECISION making , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *DISEASE prevalence , *INTELLECT , *RESEARCH funding , *MANAGEMENT , *PERSONNEL management - Abstract
This article maps and compares four universities' policies and procedures for addressing faculty and staff sexual misconduct in higher education in the UK and US. While universities have engaged in significant work to grapple with student-student sexual misconduct, attention to misconduct perpetrated, and experienced, by higher education employees is relatively nascent. In this paper, we explore the maze of institutional processes and actors that victimsurvivors of FASSM might encounter. We describe what is known about prevalence of FASSM in the US and UK and offer an overview of the policy landscape in both settings. Inspired by Patricia Yancey Martin, we analyze publicly available policy documents on FASSM from two US and two UK universities and map out visually the range of investigative, reporting, and sanctioning processes. We introduce an analytic distinction between an actor and a practitioner within the FASSM context, whereby actors are those tasked with administrative duties in handling sexual misconduct reports, while practitioners are those with specialized knowledge and training that enables them to prioritize victim-survivor needs. These illustrative diagrams suggest that while university employees are tasked to act on reports and disclosures of sexual misconduct, it is difficult to identify specialist practitioners with expertise to support victim-survivors of FASSM. Ultimately, this work provides a deeper understanding of what practice looks like in relation to higher education FASSM, and we outline implications for future research directions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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4. Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) Screening and Referral Outcomes among Transgender Patients in a Primary Care Setting.
- Author
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Das, Kirsten J. H., Peitzmeier, Sarah, Berrahou, Iman K., and Potter, Jennifer
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EVALUATION of medical care , *RESEARCH , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *MEDICAL screening , *COMMUNITY health services , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *FISHER exact test , *INTIMATE partner violence , *PRIMARY health care , *MEDICAL protocols , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *T-test (Statistics) , *MEDICAL referrals , *CLINICAL medicine , *LGBTQ+ people , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *CHI-squared test , *INTEGRATED health care delivery , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *STATISTICAL correlation , *ODDS ratio , *ELECTRONIC health records , *METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
Transgender patients are at elevated risk of intimate partner violence (IPV), but national guidelines do not recommend routine screening for this population. This paper explores the feasibility and effectiveness of routine IPV screening of transgender patients in a primary care setting by describing an existing screening program and identifying factors associated with referral and engagement in IPV-related care for transgender patients. An IPV "referral cascade" was created for 1,947 transgender primary care patients at an urban community health center who were screened for IPV between January 1, 2014 to May 31, 2016: (a) Of those screening positive, how many were referred? (b) Of those referred, how many engaged in IPV-specific care within 3 months? Logistic regression identified demographic correlates of referral and engagement. Of the 1,947 transgender patients screened for IPV, 227 screened positive. 110/227 (48.5%) were referred to either internal or external IPV-related services. Of those referred to on-site services, 65/103 (63.1%) had an IPV-related appointment within 3 months of a positive screen. IPV referral was associated with being assigned male at birth (AMAB) versus assigned female at birth (AFAB) (AOR = 2.69, 95% CI 1.52, 4.75) and with nonbinary, rather than binary, gender identity (AOR = 2.07, 95%CI 1.09, 3.73). Engagement in IPV-related services was not associated with any measured demographic characteristics. Similar to published rates for cisgender women, half of transgender patients with positive IPV screens received referrals and two-thirds of those referred engaged in IPV-specific care. These findings support routine IPV screening and referral for transgender patients in primary care settings. Provider training should focus on how to ensure referrals are made for all transgender patients who screen positive for IPV, regardless of gender identity, to ensure the benefits of screening accrue equally for all patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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5. Urban poverty and regulation, new spaces and old: Japan and the US in comparison.
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Mahito Hayashi
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URBAN poor , *HOMELESSNESS , *FINANCIAL crises , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ECONOMIC development , *CAPITALISM - Abstract
After the 1970s the new urban poverty (NUP) ballooned in Japan and the US, and it evoked policy responses that produced new, rescaled regulatory spaces to contain the poor on the fringe of social rights and the capital circuit. The paper illuminates this process through the comparison of Japanese and US trajectories, both of which, evolving through economic crises, have established unique pathways. The author first constructs a theoretical framework based on Marxian, Polanyian, and Lefebvrean traditions. Then, he compares national-scale poverty regulation in Japan and the US from the 1950s through the 2000s. Lastly, the author examines how the countries' regulation of a major aspect of the NUP--homelessness--intensified multiscalar reseating processes. The paper concludes that regulation of the NUP represents a significant instance of uneven spatial development of capitalism mediated by the state that requires synthetic research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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6. Mode Effects in Free-list Elicitation: Comparing Oral, Written, and Web-based Data Collection.
- Author
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Gravlee, Clarence C., Bernard, H. Russell, Maxwell, Chad R., and Jacobsohn, Aryeh
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COMPARATIVE studies , *ACQUISITION of data , *WEBSITES , *INTERNET surveys , *ANTHROPOLOGY , *ETHNIC groups - Abstract
The growth of the Internet opens new possibilities for web-based data collection in cognitive anthropology. This study examines whether free-list data collected online are comparable to those collected with face to face interviews or with self-administered paper questionnaires. We collected free lists for two cultural domains in the United States: one diffuse (things that mothers do) and one relatively well defined (racial and ethnic groups). We selected a purposive sample of 318 university students and randomly assigned participants to provide free lists for one of these domains using a web-based survey, a face to face interview, or a self-administered paper questionnaire. All three modes identified the same set of salient concepts in each domain. Median list length per respondent varied across modes in response to a standard free-list question and to supplementary probes. For the well-defined domain of “racial and ethnic groups,” supplementary probes widened differences among modes; for the more diffuse domain of “things that mothers do,” probes erased evidence of mode effects. Collecting free lists online is viable but may yield different results depending on the study population and attributes of the cultural domains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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7. News Frames Terrorism: A Comparative Analysis of Frames Employed in Terrorism Coverage in U.S. and U.K. Newspapers.
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Papacharissi, Zizi and Oliveira, Maria de Fatima
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COMPARATIVE studies , *TERRORISM in mass media , *MASS media & public opinion , *NEWSPAPERS , *SEPTEMBER 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001 , *SCHOLARS - Abstract
Scholars have been increasingly concerned with portrayals of terrorism in mainstream and alternative media outlets following the September I I and subsequent terrorist attacks in the United Kingdom and Spain. Communication researchers have examined public response and reaction to terrorist attacks, definitions of terrorism, policy questions, media portrayals of terrorism, and framing across different media and nations.This study undertakes a comparative framing analysis of media coverage of terrorism, as reported by prominent U.S. and U.K. newspapers, combining quantitative and qualitative methods. Findings revealed that the U.S. papers engaged in more episodic coverage and the U.K. papers in more thematic coverage of terrorism and terrorism-related events. The U.S. papers were consumed with presenting news associated with the military approach, whereas the U.K. papers were oriented toward diplomatic evaluations of terrorist events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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8. Economic Outcomes among Latino Migrants to Spain and the United States: Differences by Source Region and Legal Status.
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Connor, Phillip and Massey, Douglas S.
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LATIN American foreign workers , *COMPARATIVE studies , *EMIGRATION & immigration ,UNITED States emigration & immigration - Abstract
Using representative national surveys, this paper compares economic outcomes among Latin American migrants to Spain and the United States in the first cross-national comparison using quantitative data. Considering the geographic location and social proximity of each country with respect to Latin America, we detect a critical selection effect whereby the majority of Latin American migrants to Spain originate in South America from middle class backgrounds, whereas most migrants to the United States are Central Americans of lower class origins. This selection effect accounts for cross-national differences in the probability of employment, occupational attainment, and wages earned. Despite differences in the origins and characteristics of Latino immigrants to each country, demographic and human and social capital factors appear to operate similarly in both places; and when models are estimated separately by legal status, we find that effects are more accentuated for undocumented compared with documented migrants, especially in the United States. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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9. From Illegal to Legal: Estimating Previous Illegal Experience among New Legal Immigrants to the United States.
- Author
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Jasso, Guillermina, Massey, Douglas S., Rosenzweig, Mark R., and Smith, James P.
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IMMIGRANTS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *UNDOCUMENTED immigrants , *NATURALIZATION , *ESTIMATES - Abstract
This paper develops a framework for estimating previous illegal experience among annual cohorts of new legal immigrants to the United States – using public-use administrative microdata alone, survey data alone, and the two jointly – and provides estimates for the FY 1996 cohort of new immigrants, based on both administrative and survey data. Our procedures enable assessment of type of illegal experience, including entry without inspection, visa overstay, and unauthorized employment. We compare our estimates of previous illegal experience to estimates that would be obtained using administrative data alone; examine the extent of previous illegal experience by country of birth, immigrant class of admission, religion, and geographic residence in the United States; and estimate multivariate models of the probability of having previous illegal experience. To further assess origins and destinations, we carry out two kinds of contrasts, comparing formerly illegal new legal immigrants both to fellow immigrants who do not have previous illegal experience and also to the broader unauthorized population, the latter using estimates developed by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (2002 ), Passel (2002 ), and Costanzo et al. (2002 ). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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10. Paved With Good Intentions: The Federal Role in the Oversight and Enforcement of the Individuals With Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB).
- Author
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Ramanthan, Arun
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LAWS on education of people with disabilities , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PUBLIC schools , *LAW enforcement ,UNITED States. Individuals with Disabilities Education Act ,NO Child Left Behind Act of 2001 - Abstract
Context: The context for this article is the public response to the federal role in the oversight and enforcement of the Individuals With Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB). This response has been characterized by a tension between concerns about federal interference in public education and support for federal activism. Despite a number of similarities between the state and local responses to the two laws, research on the federal role in implementing NCLB has largely disregarded the long record of federal oversight and enforcement of lDEA. Purpose: The purpose of this analytic essay is to address this omission through a comparative policy analysis of the oversight and enforcement mechanisms in IDEA and NCLB, the evolution of these mechanisms in the legislative process, their implementation by the Department of Education, and the interest group and academic responses to this implementation. Research Design: The research design consists of a review of the statutes, Congressional documents, governmental reports, interest group position papers, policy analyses, press reports, and relevant academic literature. The author discusses the implications of this analysis for the future of the federal role in the oversight and enforcement of NCLB, and the recently reauthorized IDEA and the federal focus on improving educational outcomes. The author argues that the design of NCLB's outcomes-based accountability model, combined with its dependence on the Department of Education to provide oversight and enforcement, has produced unintended consequences at the state level, including regulatory incoherence and incentives for "gaming the system." He notes that similar problems can be projected for the implementation of the new outcomes-based oversight and enforcement model in IDEA 2004. Recommendation: The author recommends that Congress turn the accountability model in NCLB "inside out, "establishing national standards, a single national performance assessment, fixed and achievable targets for proficiency, and predefined subgroup sizes while devolving responsibility for the details of the district-and school-level accountability system to the states. In IDEA's case, he recommends setting national targets for a small number of outcome indicators while maintaining the current system of focused monitoring. He argues that this model, in combination with federal incentives for meeting performance targets, would provide for a more realistic and effective federal role in improving public education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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11. Binocular rivalry and head-worn displays.
- Author
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Patterson, Robert, Winterbottom, Marc, Pierce, Byron, and Fox, Robert
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VISUAL perception , *BINOCULAR rivalry , *BINOCULAR vision , *VISUAL learning , *PEDESTRIANS , *CITY traffic , *STREET signs , *AGE groups , *TRAFFIC safety , *ERGONOMIC equipment , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DEPTH perception , *HEAD , *INFORMATION display systems , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *VISION , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Objective: We provide a review and analysis of much of the published literature on binocular rivalry that is relevant to the design and use of head-worn displays (HWDs).Background: This review draws heavily from both the basic vision literature and applied HWD literature in order to help provide insight for minimizing the effects of binocular rivalry when HWDs are worn.Method: Included in this review are articles and books found cited in other works as well as articles and books obtained from an Internet search.Results: Issues discussed and summarized are (a) characteristics of binocular rivalry, (b) stimulus factors affecting rivalry, (c) cognitive variables affecting rivalry, and (d) tasks affected by rivalry.Conclusion: This paper offers a set of recommendations for minimizing the effects of binocular rivalry when HWDs are used as well as recommendations for future research.Application: Considerations of the basic vision literature on binocular rivalry will provide insight for future design solutions for HWDs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2007
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12. Comparison of subject-specific and population averaged models for count data from cluster-unit intervention trials.
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Young, Mary L., Preisser, John S., Qaqish, Bahjat F., and Wolfson, Mark
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ESTIMATION theory , *LINEAR statistical models , *MATHEMATICAL models , *GENERALIZED estimating equations , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *STATISTICAL correlation , *POISSON processes , *POISSON algebras , *COMPARATIVE studies , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *PROBABILITY theory , *RESEARCH , *EVALUATION research ,ALCOHOL drinking prevention - Abstract
Maximum likelihood estimation techniques for subject-specific (SS) generalized linear mixed models and generalized estimating equations for marginal or population-averaged (PA) models are often used for the analysis of cluster-unit intervention trials. Although both classes of procedures account for the presence of within-cluster correlations, the interpretations of fixed effects including intervention effect parameters differ in SS and PA models. Furthermore, closed-form mathematical expressions relating SS and PA parameters from the two respective approaches are generally lacking. This paper investigates the special case of correlated Poisson responses where, for a log-linear model with normal random effects, exact relationships are available. Equivalent PA model representations of two SS models commonly used in the analysis of nested cross-sectional cluster trials with count data are derived. The mathematical results are illustrated with count data from a large non-randomized cluster trial to reduce underage drinking. Knowledge of relationships among parameters in the respective mean and covariance models is essential to understanding empirical comparisons of the two approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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13. Does caregiving increase poverty among women in later life? Evidence from the Health and Retirement survey.
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Wakabayashi, Chizuko and Donato, Katharine M.
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ELDER care , *MEDICAL care costs , *MEDICAL care of poor people , *MEDICAID , *HEALTH policy , *AGING parents , *POVERTY research , *CAREGIVERS , *FINANCE , *ECONOMIC history , *RETIREMENT & economics , *COMPARATIVE studies , *GERIATRIC nursing , *LONG-term health care , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *POVERTY , *RESEARCH , *RISK assessment , *EVALUATION research , *ACQUISITION of data - Abstract
Given the rapid aging of the U.S. population and reductions in federal funding, elder care has become a major issue for many families. This paper focuses on a long-term consequence of elder care by asking how caring for elderly parents affects women's subsequent risks of living in poverty. Using longitudinal data from the Health and Retirement Study, we examine whether and how caregiving for parents in 1991 increases women's risks of living in households with incomes less than the poverty threshold, receiving public assistance, and receiving Medicaid in 1999. Our findings illustrate that caregiving in earlier life raises women's poverty risks in later life by intensifying the negative effects of stopping work and declining health on women's economic well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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14. Effects of vision and friction on haptic perception.
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Perreault, Jesse O. and Cao, Caroline G. L.
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VISION , *FRICTION , *SENSORY perception , *HUMAN information processing , *SURGERY , *MEDICAL care , *PSYCHOPHYSICS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONNECTIVE tissues , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *OPERATIVE surgery , *TOUCH , *USER interfaces , *VISUAL perception , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Objective: Two experiments were conducted to examine the effects of vision and masking friction on contact perception and compliance differentiation thresholds in a simulated tissue-probing task.Background: In minimally invasive surgery, the surgeon receives limited haptic feedback because of the current design of the instrumentation and relies on visual feedback to judge the amount of force applied to the tissues. It is suggested that friction forces inherent in the instruments contribute to errors in surgeons' haptic perception. This paper investigated the psychophysics of contact detection and cross-modal sensory processing in the context of minimally invasive surgery.Method: A within-subjects repeated measures design was used, with friction, vision, tissue softness, and order of presentation as independent factors, and applied force, detection time, error, and confidence as dependent measures. Eight participants took part in each experiment, with data recorded by a custom force-sensing system.Results: In both detection and differentiation tasks, higher thresholds, longer detection times, and more errors were observed when vision was not available. The effect was more pronounced when haptic feedback was masked by friction forces in the surgical device (p < .05).Conclusion: Visual and haptic feedback were equally important for tissue compliance differentiation.Application: A frictionless endoscopic instrument can be designed to restore critical haptic information to surgeons without having to create haptic feedback artificially. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
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15. Perceptual issues in the use of head-mounted visual displays.
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Patterson, Robert, Winterbottom, Marc D., and Pierce, Byron J.
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VISUAL perception , *HELMET-mounted displays , *VISUAL texture recognition , *INFORMATION display systems , *VISUAL pathways , *INTERNET searching , *COMPARATIVE studies , *COMPUTER terminals , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *PRODUCT design , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Objective: We provide a review and analysis of much of the published literature on visual perception issues that impact the design and use of head-mounted displays (HMDs).Background: Unlike the previous literature on HMDs, this review draws heavily from the basic vision literature in order to help provide insight for future design solutions for HMDs.Method: Included in this review are articles and books found cited in other works as well as articles and books obtained from an Internet search.Results: Issues discussed include the effect of brightness and contrast on depth of field, dark focus, dark vergence, and perceptual constancy; the effect of accommodation-vergence synergy on perceptual constancy, eyestrain, and discomfort; the relationship of field of view to the functioning of different visual pathways and the types of visual-motor tasks mediated by them; the relationship of binocular input to visual suppression; and the importance of head movements, head tracking, and display update lag.Conclusion: This paper offers a set of recommendations for the design and use of HMDs.Application: Consideration of the basic vision literature will provide insight for future design solutions for HMDs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
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16. Modeling driver behavior in a cognitive architecture.
- Author
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Salvucci, Dario D.
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AUTOMOBILE drivers , *BEHAVIOR , *ABILITY testing , *AUTOMOBILE steering , *AUTOMOBILE driving , *COGNITION , *COMPUTER simulation , *ACT theory (Communication) , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MATHEMATICAL models of psychology , *RESEARCH , *EVALUATION research , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Objective: This paper explores the development of a rigorous computational model of driver behavior in a cognitive architecture--a computational framework with underlying psychological theories that incorporate basic properties and limitations of the human system.Background: Computational modeling has emerged as a powerful tool for studying the complex task of driving, allowing researchers to simulate driver behavior and explore the parameters and constraints of this behavior.Method: An integrated driver model developed in the ACT-R (Adaptive Control of Thought-Rational) cognitive architecture is described that focuses on the component processes of control, monitoring, and decision making in a multilane highway environment.Results: This model accounts for the steering profiles, lateral position profiles, and gaze distributions of human drivers during lane keeping, curve negotiation, and lane changing.Conclusion: The model demonstrates how cognitive architectures facilitate understanding of driver behavior in the context of general human abilities and constraints and how the driving domain benefits cognitive architectures by pushing model development toward more complex, realistic tasks.Application: The model can also serve as a core computational engine for practical applications that predict and recognize driver behavior and distraction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
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17. Multiple roles and mental health in cross-cultural perspective: the elderly in the United States and Japan.
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Kikuzawa, Saeko
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MENTAL health of older people , *MENTAL health , *CULTURE , *FAMILY-work relationship , *JAPANESE people , *AMERICANS , *GERIATRICS , *HEALTH , *COMPARATIVE studies , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *SOCIAL role , *ETHNOLOGY research , *EVALUATION research , *ACQUISITION of data - Abstract
This paper examines how multiple roles affect the mental health of the elderly in Japan and the United States, two countries with vastly different cultures. Hypotheses were drawn based on the cultural differences in role experiences, and these hypotheses are tested by analyzing nationally representative samples of the elderly in these countries. The results show that Americans are more likely to be involved in roles related to family, work, and community, while the Japanese are more likely to be involved in only those roles related to family and work. Multiple roles are also found to be less beneficialfor the mental health of Japanese elderly compared to American counterparts. National differences in the effects of individual roles and role configurations on mental health are also documented. Overall, the results show the importance of broad cultural contexts for understanding the relationship between roles and mental health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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18. The use of flight progress strips while working live traffic: frequencies, importance, and perceived benefits.
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Durso, Francis T., Batsakes, Peter J., Crutchfield, Jerry M., Braden, Justin B., and Manning, Carol A.
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AIR traffic control , *AERONAUTICS , *GLOBAL Positioning System , *PUBLIC administration , *TRAFFIC engineering , *COMPARATIVE studies , *WORKING hours , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *ORGANIZATIONAL effectiveness , *RESEARCH , *SAFETY , *TELECOMMUNICATION , *USER interfaces , *TASK performance , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
The Federal Aviation Administration's effort to automate air traffic control (ATC) requires that the functionality provided today be captured in future systems. We report the first quantitative naturalistic observation of paper flight progress strip interactions during operational use. Strip use was similar in a variety of situations, but some uses varied as a function of altitude, staffing, or the cooperative style used by controller teams. Design of automation should proceed by prioritizing changes based on frequency of use and importance and should ensure that an effective method of interacting with flight information is incorporated. In addition to applied relevance to the ATC domain, the results touch on several theoretical concerns relevant to dynamic environments. Actual and potential applications of this research include the establishment of a database of strip activity and an arsenal of information valuable to system designers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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19. Old and homeless: a review and survey of older adults who use shelters in an urban setting.
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Stergiopoulos, Vicky and Herrmann, Nathan
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OLD age , *SURVEYS , *OLDER homeless persons , *MENTAL health , *COMPARATIVE studies , *HEALTH service areas , *HOMELESS persons , *HOUSING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *CITY dwellers , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Objectives: Research on the mental health and service needs of homeless seniors has been scant. This paper reviews the available literature and presents findings of a Toronto survey in an effort to describe the demographics of homeless seniors, their level of impairment, and their mental and physical health needs.Methods: We searched the Medline, AgeLine, and PsycINFO databases, using the following key words: elderly homeless, elderly hostel users, and urban geriatrics. To better describe the service needs of the elderly homeless, we obtained demographic data from the Community and Neighbourhood Services Department and distributed a survey questionnaire to 11 Toronto hostel directors. The questionnaire elicited data relating to reasons for shelter use, problem behaviours, and mental health needs of those over age 65 years.Results: Although seniors represent a small percentage of the homeless population, their numbers are growing. The available literature suggests a high prevalence of psychiatric disorders and cognitive impairment in this population, with a greater proportion of older women than men having severe mental illness. Further, our survey suggests that the service needs of elderly hostel users in Toronto differ from those of their younger counterparts.Conclusion: The homeless elderly are the most vulnerable of this impoverished population. Although more research is needed to define their mental and physical health needs and ways of meeting them, their characteristics appear to be unique. Geriatric psychiatrists could play a significant role in evaluating and treating this population more comprehensively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2003
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20. Measuring the fit between human judgments and automated alerting algorithms: a study of collision detection.
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Bisantz, Ann M. and Pritchett, Amy R.
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ERGONOMICS , *JUDGMENT (Psychology) , *ALGORITHMS , *AIRPLANES , *AUTOMATION , *COMPARATIVE studies , *INFORMATION display systems , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *SAFETY , *EVALUATION research , *PROMPTS (Psychology) - Abstract
Methodologies for assessing human judgment in complex domains are important for the design of both displays that inform judgment and automated systems that suggest judgments. This paper uses the n-system lens model to evaluate the impact of displays on human judgment and to explicitly assess the similarity between human judgments and a set of potential judgment algorithms for use in automated systems. First, the need for and concepts underlying judgment analysis are outlined. Then the n-system lens model and its parameters are formally described. This model is then used to examine a previously conducted study of aircraft collision detection that had been analyzed using standard analysis of variance methods. Our analysis found the same main effects as did the earlier analysis. However, n-system lens model analysis was able to provide greater insight into the information relied upon for judgments and the impact of displays on judgment. Additionally, the analysis was able to identify attributes of human judgments that were--and were not--similar to judgments produced by automated systems. Potential applications of this research include automated aid design and operator training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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21. Computational modeling of foveal target detection.
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Witus, Gary and Ellis, R. Darin
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DEVELOPMENTAL Test of Visual Perception , *MILITARY science , *NIGHT vision devices , *RETINA physiology , *CALIBRATION , *COMPARATIVE studies , *COMPUTER simulation , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *MILITARY personnel , *VISUAL perception , *EVALUATION research ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
This paper presents the VDM2000, a computational model of target detection designed for use in military developmental test and evaluation settings. The model integrates research results from the fields of early vision, object recognition, and psychophysics. The VDM2000 is image based and provides a criterion-independent measure of target conspicuity, referred to as the vehicle metric (VM). A large data set of human responses to photographs of military vehicles in a field setting was used to validate the model. The VM adjusted by a single calibration parameter accounts for approximately 80% of the variance in the validation data. The primary application of this model is to predict detection of military targets in daylight with the unaided eye. The model also has application to target detection prediction using infrared night vision systems. The model has potential as a tool to evaluate the visual properties of more general task settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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22. Proving non-inferiority or equivalence of two treatments with dichotomous endpoints using exact methods.
- Author
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Chan, I.S.F.
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MATHEMATICAL statistics , *MEDICAL research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *COMPUTER software , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *PHARMACOKINETICS , *RESEARCH , *STATISTICS , *DATA analysis , *EVALUATION research , *RELATIVE medical risk , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *ODDS ratio - Abstract
Since the early work of RA Fisher, exact methods have been recognized as important tools in data analysis because they provide valid statistical inference even with small sample sizes, or with sparse or skewed data. With the recent advance of computational power and the availability of commercial software packages, exact methods have gained substantial popularity over the past two decades. However, most of these exact methods have been devoted to testing classical null hypotheses of no differences, and until recently little was known about exact methods dealing with non-inferiority or equivalence hypotheses. The presence of nuisance parameters in testing non-inferiority/equivalence hypotheses presents a special challenge for exact methods because of the intense computational requirement. In this paper, we review exact methods available for proving non-inferiority or equivalence of two treatments with a dichotomous endpoint. First, we present the general methodology for conducting exact tests for non-inferiority or equivalence; we then discuss several unconditional and conditional methods available for constructing hypothesis tests and confidence intervals based on three commonly used measures, namely, the difference, relative risk, and odds ratio of two independent proportions or rates. Finally, we illustrate with several examples the application of these exact methods in analysing and planning non-inferiority or equivalence trials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Ethical issues in oncology biostatistics.
- Author
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Thall, Peter F
- Subjects
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PROFESSIONAL ethics , *MEDICAL ethics , *BIOMETRY , *ONCOLOGY , *CLINICAL trials & ethics , *CANCER treatment , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ETHICS , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *INFORMED consent (Medical law) , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *RESEARCH ethics , *STATISTICAL sampling , *EVALUATION research , *SPECIALTY hospitals - Abstract
A medical statistician's routine professional activities are likely to have important ethical consequences. This is due in part to the fact that good medical practice and scientifically valid medical research both require as precursors high quality statistical design and data analysis. In this paper I discuss various ethical issues that I have encountered while working as a biostatistician at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. I describe particular experiences and the ethical issues involved. Topics include medical decision making, benefit-harm trade-offs, safety monitoring, adaptive randomization, informed consent, and publication bias. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Inferences about population means of health care costs.
- Author
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Zhou, Xiao-Hua
- Subjects
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MEDICAL care costs , *HETEROSCEDASTICITY , *DRUG utilization statistics , *MEDICAL care cost statistics , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEDICAL informatics , *PATIENT compliance , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICS , *DATA analysis , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
The analysis of health care costs is complicated by the skewed and heteroscedastic nature of their distribution with possibly additional zero values. Statistical methods that do not adjust for these features can lead to incorrect conclusions. This paper reviews recent developments in statistical methods for the analysis of health care costs; our focus is on population means. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Estimating the population impact of an intervention: a decision-analytic approach.
- Author
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Hersh, A.L., Black, W.C., and Tosteson, A.N.
- Subjects
- *
DECISION making , *MEDICAL care , *COMPARATIVE studies , *COST effectiveness , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *EVALUATION research , *RELATIVE medical risk , *STATISTICAL models - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to highlight the role for decision analysis in assessing outcomes of medical interventions at a population level. The basic steps of decision analysis are introduced and an illustrative hypothetical preventive intervention is examined. Specific modelling challenges that arise when estimating the population impact of an intervention are described and each is accompanied by an example. Decision analysis can provide useful information for health policy decision makers by identifying the intervention(s) with the largest beneficial impact on health over a wide range of assumptions. In addition, by focusing attention on the parameters with the greatest influence on projected outcomes, decision analysis can aid in identifying critical areas for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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