14 results on '"Anat Levy"'
Search Results
2. Variables that influence the environmental behavior of adults
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Yossi Leshem, Anat Levy, and Nir Orion
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business.industry ,Multimethodology ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,050109 social psychology ,Qualitative property ,Cognition ,Sample (statistics) ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,Likert scale ,Environmental education ,Environmental behavior ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,business ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Socioeconomic status - Abstract
This study focuses on understanding the factors that encourage adults’ environmental behavior. This mixed approach methodology study used 10 Likert type questionnaires to collect data about nine cognitive and affective components that might influence environmental behavior. The qualitative data was collected through open questions and interviews. The main sample included 656 participants from amongst Israel’s working population. The questionnaires were found both reliable and valid. Most of the explored cognitive and affective aspects appeared to act as predictors of environmental behavior. The study indicates that environmental behavior is driven by ‘egoistic’ concerns rather than by altruistic views and motivations.
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- 2016
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3. Do biometric parameters of the hand differentiate schizophrenia from other psychiatric disorders? A comparative evaluation using three mental health modules
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Gaby Shefler, Ricardo Tarrasch, Eyal Shamir, Stanley Morris Cassan, Anat Levy, and Tova Lifshitz
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biometry ,Fingers ,Young Adult ,medicine ,Humans ,Minor physical anomalies ,Dermatoglyphics ,Psychiatry ,Biological Psychiatry ,Aged ,Mental Disorders ,Middle Aged ,Hand ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Mental Health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Mood disorders ,Schizophrenia ,Case-Control Studies ,Mann–Whitney U test ,Upper limb ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology - Abstract
The link between schizophrenia and anomalies in the distal upper limb is well documented. Preliminary studies have identified a number of biometric parameters of the hand by which schizophrenics can be distinguished from matched controls. The current study seeks to determine whether patients with schizophrenia can be singled out from a disparate group of other mental disorders by using the same parameters. We studied three groups, totaling 134 men: 51 diagnosed with schizophrenia, 29 with anxiety and mood disorders, and 54 comprising a control group. Seven parameters were studied: the proximal interphalangeal joint, the eponychia of the middle and ring digits, two dermatoglyphic features, and two constitutional factors. Examiners evaluated the parameters based on photographs and prints. An initial Mann Whitney comparison showed no significant difference between the control group and those identified with anxiety and mood disorders. We therefore accounted for them as a single group. In a discriminant analysis, an overall accuracy of 78.4% was established with a sensitivity of 80.4% (schizophrenics identified correctly) and a specificity of 77.1% (controls identified correctly). These results suggest that the biometric parameters employed may be useful in identifying patients with schizophrenia from a disparate group of other mental disorders.
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- 2015
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4. Clinical utility of biomarkers of the hand in the diagnosis of schizophrenia
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Yoav Domany, Tova Lifshitz, Ricardo Tarrasch, Stanley Morris Cassan, Shaul Schreiber, Anat Levy, and Eyal Shamir
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Bipolar Disorder ,Population ,Schizoaffective disorder ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Minor physical anomalies ,Bipolar disorder ,Psychiatry ,education ,Biological Psychiatry ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Hand ,030227 psychiatry ,Hospitalization ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Psychotic Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Female ,Schizophrenic Psychology ,business ,Dermatoglyphics ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Diagnosis of schizophrenia - Abstract
A number of biomarkers were assessed in photos and prints of the hands of 95 patients with a variety of mental disorders to determine whether patients with schizophrenia could be distinguished from the others. Patients were recruited as consecutive admissions from an outpatient psychiatric day hospital population. Fourteen patients were diagnosed with schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder and 81 were diagnosed with other mental disorders. A discriminant analysis yielded an overall 80% correct classification, with a sensitivity (schizophrenia patients identified correctly) of 78.6% and a specificity (non-schizophrenia patients identified correctly) of 80.2%. Significant differences were noted in the proximal interphalangeal joint, eponychium of the middle digit and fingernails. To determine biomarker frequency distribution patients with bipolar disorder were then compared to those with schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder and then to patients with PTSD. The former yielded an overall 78.6% correct classification, with a sensitivity of 71.4% and a specificity of 85.7% and with similar biomarker frequency distribution for bipolar disorder as for the entire non schizophrenia group. The latter comparison yielded an overall 58.6% correct classification, with no significant differences between the features. The application of these biomarkers in clinical practice could constitute an additional tool for the psychiatrist in cases lacking diagnostic clarity.
- Published
- 2017
5. Emotional Intelligence in Applicant Selection for Care-Related Academic Programs
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Anat Levy, Anna Zisberg, and Leehu Zysberg
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Psychometrics ,Intelligence quotient ,Item analysis ,Emotional intelligence ,Applied psychology ,Personnel selection ,Test validity ,Education ,Test (assessment) ,Clinical Psychology ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,General Psychology ,Selection (genetic algorithm) - Abstract
Two studies describe the development of the Audiovisual Test of Emotional Intelligence (AVEI), aimed at candidate selection in educational settings. Study I depicts the construction of the test and the preliminary examination of its psychometric properties in a sample of 92 college students. Item analysis allowed the modification of problem items, resulting in acceptable reliability (intraclass correlation = .67) and moderate to good discrimination indices. Study II examined criterion-related validity of the AVEI based on a sample of 102 nursing students in a large university in northern Israel. The results suggest that the AVEI correlated with students’ performance in field practice and in human relations training courses better than with any other relevant variable (e.g., GMA, GPA). Associations remained in the .45 to .60 range, even after controlling for factors such as academic ability, GPA, and gender. These results suggest that the AVEI may be a valid instrument in student selection for care-related programs.
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- 2010
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6. Diagnostic Clues for Identification of Nonorganic vs Organic Causes of Food Refusal and Poor Feeding
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Anat Levy, Marguerite Dunitz, Mona Boaz, Nophar Ben David, Lia Kornfeld, Eli Samuel, Yuval Levy, Ilan Dalal, Arie Levine, and Tsili Zangen
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Adult ,Parents ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Vomiting ,Behavioral Symptoms ,Weight Gain ,Irritability ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Child Development ,Feeding behavior ,medicine ,Humans ,Feeding and Eating Disorders of Childhood ,Infant feeding ,Food refusal ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,Infant ,Feeding Behavior ,medicine.disease ,Failure to Thrive ,Surgery ,Poor Feeding ,Malnutrition ,Child, Preschool ,Infant Behavior ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Failure to thrive ,Gastroesophageal Reflux ,medicine.symptom ,Energy Intake ,business ,Food Hypersensitivity - Abstract
Food refusal, poor feeding, and somatic symptoms such as vomiting, gagging, irritability and failure to thrive (FTT) are commonly found in both infantile feeding disorders (IFD) and common treatable medical conditions. Present diagnostic classifications for diagnosing IFD are complex and difficult to apply in daily practice, leading to underdiagnosis and delay in diagnosis of IFD. We attempted to identify parental and infantile behaviour patterns or symptoms that could help distinguish between organic or behavioural causes for these symptoms.We screened 226 children with poor feeding. After exclusion criteria, we divided the remaining 151 into 2 groups. The nonorganic group (n=83) included patients with onset of symptoms before age 2, persistent food aversion longer than 1 month, and a response to behavioural intervention. The second group consisted of children (n=68) presenting with similar characteristics, who responded to medical or nutritional therapy in which a final diagnosis of gastro-esophageal reflux disease, milk allergy, or idiopathic or nutritional FTT was made.Poor intake, poor weight gain, or vomiting did not discriminate between organic and nonorganic causes. Factors indicating the presence of a behavioural cause included food refusal, food fixation, abnormal parental feeding practices, onset after a specific trigger, and presence of anticipatory gagging (P0.0001 for all).Integration of a few structured questions regarding infant behaviour, parental feeding practices, infant symptoms, and triggers for the onset of symptoms may help clinicians distinguish between organic and nonorganic causes for food refusal or low intake FTT.
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- 2009
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7. Cerebral palsy risk factors and their impact on psychopathology
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Hilla Ben-Pazi, Anat Levy-Zaks, and Yehuda Pollak
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Male ,Parents ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Gestational Age ,CBCL ,Child Behavior Disorders ,Severity of Illness Index ,Brain Ischemia ,Cerebral palsy ,Young Adult ,Quality of life ,Risk Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Affective Symptoms ,Child ,Hypoxia, Brain ,Child Behavior Checklist ,Psychiatry ,Asphyxia ,Periventricular leukomalacia ,Psychopathology ,Cerebral Palsy ,Siblings ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Neurology ,Quality of Life ,Anxiety ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology - Abstract
Objective: We examined whether the type of brain injury impacts the psychopathological profile and quality of life in children with cerebral palsy (CP). Methods: We assessed 18 children with CP [9 premature, 9 asphyxia at term] and 16 siblings using parent forms of the child behavior checklist (CBCL), disruptive behavior disorder rating scale (DBDRS), and pediatric quality of life inventory (PEDSQL). Results: Children with CP demonstrated more emotional and behavioral symptoms (depression, anxiety, and social, thought, and attention problems) and lower quality of life than their siblings. The pathopsychological profile of children with CP due to prematurity and asphyxia was similar. Conclusion: Etiology does not impact the psychopathology in children with CP.
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- 2014
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8. [Laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy (LSG) in adolescents with morbid obesity]
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Zohar, Landau, Gideon, Karplus, Aaron, Hanukoglu, Shirli, Abiri, Anat, Levy, and Francis, Serour
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Treatment Outcome ,Adolescent ,Gastrectomy ,Humans ,Female ,Laparoscopy ,Body Mass Index ,Follow-Up Studies ,Obesity, Morbid - Abstract
Morbid obesity has become a significant health problem for the pediatric population. The medical impact of obesity in youth is determinant. Conservative methods for weight loss are disappointing and therefore, bariatric surgery should be considered.To present the experience of laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy in adolescents with morbid obesity, treated by the pediatric multi-disciplinary obesity clinic.All patients (n=7, all female) participated in a weight loss program for at least 6 months without success. At referral, the mean age was 16.2 years (range 13.8 - 18 years), mean body mass index (BMI in kg/m2) was 44.4 (range 38.9-55.2). All suffered from various co-morbidities of obesity: type 2 diabetes, insulin treated (n=1), hypertension (n=5), fatty liver (n=2), obstructive sleep apnea (n=2) and pseudotumor cerebri (n=1).There were no intra- or postoperative complications. After a mean follow-up of 15.1 months (range 5-25 months), all patients but one had reduced BMI (mean BMI of 32.55). In all subjects who lost weight, remission or improvement of the co-morbidities was noted.In this study, with a mean follow-up of 15.1 months, LSG was proven to be a safe and effective option of bariatric surgery in adolescents, resulting in a significant weight loss and remission or improvement of co-morbidities. We suggest that LSG might be considered as a single intervention for morbid obesity in adolescents. Long-term studies are needed to evaluate the efficacy of LSG and other bariatric surgeries in adolescents.
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- 2011
9. Screening criteria for diagnosis of infantile feeding disorders as a cause of poor feeding or food refusal
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Zvi Zadik, Yuval Levy, Mona Boaz, Zili Tsangen, Arie Levine, Dan Turner, Lia Kornfeld, Anat Levy, Lea Bachar, Ilan Dalal, and Avi Mizrachi
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Vomiting ,Child Behavior ,Anorexia ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Feeding and Eating Disorders ,Interviews as Topic ,Gagging ,Risk Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Diagnostic Errors ,Pathological ,Food refusal ,business.industry ,Medical screening ,Gastroenterology ,Infant ,Reproducibility of Results ,Feeding Behavior ,Poor Feeding ,Surgery ,Failure to Thrive ,Intention to Treat Analysis ,Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders ,Treatment Outcome ,El Niño ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Failure to thrive ,Infant Behavior ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Infantile feeding disorders (IFDs) are a common cause of food refusal, failure to thrive, and vomiting, but they may be difficult to diagnose. We have previously identified certain patterns of pathological feeding and behaviors as high-risk characteristics for IFDs and subsequently developed the diagnostic Wolfson criteria. Here, we evaluate these high-risk behaviors and prospectively compare the Wolfson criteria with 2 existing classifications of IFD, the Chatoor and that in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV).Infants and young children referred for food refusal were invited to participate by completing a feeding pattern questionnaire. Following physicians' interview and examination, patients were scored by all 3 criteria and enrolled in a structured treatment program for IFD. Infants whose food refusal was associated with an organic cause served as a comparison group. The ability of the criteria to detect IFD and to predict response to therapy was compared with an intention-to-treat analysis.Eighty-five infants with new-onset IFD and 55 controls were included. The Wolfson criteria, Chatoor, and DSM-IV accurately diagnosed 100%, 77%, and 56% of the patients with IFD, respectively. Anticipatory gagging occurred in 47% of the children with IFD compared to 2% controls (P0.001). The response to therapy was similar among the 3 criteria (73-76%), suggesting that the Wolfson criteria did not incorrectly diagnose organic disease as IFD. The 20 infants who were diagnosed as having IFD by Wolfson but not by Chatoor responded equally well (80%) to an IFD treatment program.Diagnostic criteria of IFD that are based on food refusal, pathological feeding, and anticipatory gagging have a higher detection rate than the present criteria and are simpler to implement.
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- 2011
10. Heterogeneity and union membership determination
- Author
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Anat Levy
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Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Labour economics ,Current Population Survey ,Agency shop ,Strategy and Management ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Economic rent ,Wage ,Sample (statistics) ,Test (assessment) ,Public use ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Economics ,Externality ,media_common - Abstract
This paper formalizes theoretical and empirical analyses of the determination of union membership. It is argued that an important (and usually ignored) consideration affecting the union status of workers is the externalities between (potential) union members: The gain a worker derives from unionization is affected by the characteristics of the workers who already belong to the union, and the gain union members derive from admitting an additional worker to membership depends on that worker’s characteristics. Thus, two conditions must hold if a worker is to join a union: (1) unionization should increase his wage, and (2) union members must benefit from adding him. The main implication of this analysis is that in a given industry/occupation a union is more likely to form among workers withlower rents. To test this proposition, I present an empirical analysis using data from the May 1979 Current Population Survey (CPS) Public Use Sample. A procedure for measuring worker’s rent is discussed and certain relationships between rent and union membership are identified.
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- 1990
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11. An Axiomatization of the Nonsymmetric, Nontransferable Utility Value
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Anat Levy and Richard P. McLean
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Bargaining problem ,Class (set theory) ,ComputingMilieux_PERSONALCOMPUTING ,Transferable utility ,Solution concept ,Mathematical economics ,Shapley value ,Value (mathematics) ,Axiom ,Fair division ,Mathematics - Abstract
Publisher Summary This chapter discusses an axiomatic solution concept for nontransferable utility value (NTU) games, that is, games in which utility is not necessarily transferable. Given a finite set of players, an NTU game is a specification of a set of payoffs that is available to each coalition of players, and a NTU game is analyzed as a fair division problem. on the chapter discusses two subclasses of NTU games: the two-person bargaining problems and the n-person games with transferable utility. There are many axiomatized solutions for the first class and prominent among these is the Nash bargaining solution (NBS). For the class of TU games, the Shapley value is the most widely studied axiomatic solution. The NBS and the Shapley value share certain abstract features and two solutions have been proposed for n-person NTU games that coincide with the NBS if n + 2 and with the value in the case of TU games. These are the NTU value and the Harsanyi solution. In each of the characterizations of these various solutions, some type of symmetry axiom is imposed.
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- 1990
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12. Individual and Collective Wage Bargaining
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Anat Levy and Lloyd S. Shapley
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Microeconomics ,Economics and Econometrics ,Core (game theory) ,Negotiation ,Economic situation ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Infinitesimal ,Wage ,Economics ,Settlement (trust) ,Shapley value ,Wage bargaining ,media_common - Abstract
Wage negotiation is modeled as an oceanic game. The employer and unions (if any) are atomic players, interacting with an 'ocean' of infinitesimal individual, unorganized workers. All workers are equally productive inside the firm, but may differ in their outside opportunities. The 'worth' of a coalition is its achievable surplus, and the Shapley value of the c -f game thereby defined provides a plausible, equitable wage settlement. Several different levels of unionization are investigated. It is noteworthy that this approach does not introduce specific bargaining procedures; instead (like the core) it builds on cooperative possibilities present in the economic situation itself.
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- 1997
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13. Weighted coalition structure values
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Anat Levy and Richard P. McLean
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Economics and Econometrics ,Class (set theory) ,Structure (category theory) ,Symmetry (geometry) ,Transferable utility ,Mathematical economics ,Finance ,Mathematics - Abstract
We analyze a class of solutions for transferable utility games with coalition structures. These are games in which players have partitioned themselves into groups for the purpose of bargaining. Such bargaining takes place at the intercoalitional and intracoalitional levels. We provide several axiomatizations of coalition structure values that relax the usual symmetry postulate at the intracoalitional and/or intracoalitional levels. Mathematically, our results unify and extend the work of Hart, Kurz, and Owen on symmetric coalition structure values and Kalai and Samet on weighted Shapley values.
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- 1989
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14. Biometric parameters of the hand as an index of schizophrenia—A preliminary study
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Stanley Morris Cassan, Tova Lifshitz, Anat Levy, Ricardo Tarrasch, and Eyal Shamir
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Adult ,Male ,Morphology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biometry ,Biometrics ,Schizophrenia (object-oriented programming) ,Audiology ,Developmental psychology ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Diagnosis ,False positive paradox ,medicine ,Humans ,Minor physical anomalies ,Dermatoglyphics ,Biological Psychiatry ,Middle Aged ,Control subjects ,Hand ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Case-Control Studies ,Schizophrenia ,Female ,Psychology ,Hand Deformities, Congenital - Abstract
Since abnormalities in distal upper limb development are among the minor physical anomalies associated with schizophrenia we attempted to determine whether patients with schizophrenia can be identified on the basis of specific morphologic and dermatoglyphic features of the hand. Photographs and prints of the hands of 38 patients with schizophrenia and those of 42 control subjects were evaluated and graded on 13 biometric parameters. Results were statistically evaluated. A combination of three of the parameters was found to have good predicting abilities to distinguish between schizophrenics and controls. Subjects having high values in these three parameters were found to have a higher propensity to be defined as schizophrenics. In order to define a simple rule for classifying subjects we chose a criterion of having a value of 3 (in a scale from 1 to 3) in at least one of these three discriminating variables. This rule yielded an overall accuracy of 81.2%. Among controls, 85.7% of subjects did not fulfill such criteria, while 14.3% were defined as false positives. Among schizophrenics 76.3% achieved this condition while 23.7% were false negatives. The technique's objectivity and ease of application could facilitate the diagnosis of this disease.
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