252 results
Search Results
2. New Directions for Kinship Care Policy and Practice: A Position Paper from the Kinship Summit at Albany, New York, September 2016.
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KINSHIP care , *KINSHIP , *CHILD welfare , *COLLECTIVE action , *NEEDS assessment , *CAREGIVERS , *FAMILIES , *GOVERNMENT policy , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *U.S. states , *CUSTODY of children , *FOSTER home care , *GUARDIAN & ward , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIAL case work - Abstract
The article discusses potential developments involving kinship care policies and practices which were addressed at the Kinship Summit event in Albany, New York in September 2016, and it mentions collaborative partnerships, the needs of children, youth, and families, and gaps involving child welfare services in America. Continuity in kinship care is examined, along with kinship caregivers, the U.S. Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) program, and Voluntary Placement Agreements.
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- 2017
3. Improving Students Access to Primary Health Care Through School‐Based Health Centers.
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Davis, Charles R., Eraca, Jennifer, and Davis, Patti A.
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HEALTH services accessibility , *IMMUNIZATION , *STUDENT health services , *MENTAL health services , *HUMAN services programs , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *MEDICAL care , *EDUCATIONAL technology , *INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems , *STUDENTS , *ACADEMIC achievement , *MEDICAL appointments , *ACCESS to primary care , *QUALITY assurance , *SCHOOL health services - Abstract
Background: More than 20 million children in the United States lack access to primary health care. Practice Learning: Research shows that students with regular access to physical and mental health services have fewer absences, are more social, less likely to participate in risky behaviors, have improved focus and higher test scores. Implication For School Health Policy, Practice, And Equity: School‐based health centers (SBHCs) can be an important, valuable and viable health care delivery option to meet the full‐range of primary health care needs of students where they spend the majority of their wake hours, ie, in school. Children in rural and other underserved communities, as well as those underinsured, non‐insured, economically challenged, underserved, and the most vulnerable among us are especially at risk. Conclusions: This paper discusses the history, value, and importance of SBHCs from myriad perspectives, including physical and emotional wellbeing, academic and social success, and the promotion of a positive transition to adulthood. In addition, the authors' experiences that resulted in building the first SBHC in the Mid‐Hudson Valley Region of New York State are shared. These experiences form the foundation for creating an important roadmap for individuals and school leaders that are interested in bringing a SBHC to their school and district. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Contributed Papers in Specimen Mineralogy: Part 3.
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Lupulescu, M., Nizamoff, J. W., Falster, A. U., Simmons, W. B., Francis, C. A., Lange, D. E., Menezes, L., Rein, P. E., Wise, M. A., Richards, R. P., Wilson, M. L., Isaac, R. L., Anderson, A. J., Shelton, W., Burgess, D., Levine, D., Robinson, G. W., Sheffer, A. A., and Jarnot, B. M.
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MINERALOGY , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *KIMBERLITE , *DIOPSIDE - Abstract
Presents several abstracts of research on specimen mineralogy that were presented at the 30th Rochester Mineralogical Symposium. "Mineralogy of the Kimberlites From New York State," by M. Lupulescu; "Mineralogy of the Hiddenite and Emerald Vein Assemblage, Hiddenite, North Carolina," M. A. Wise, A. J. Anderson and R. L. Isaac; "Diopside From the Atwater Quarry Area, Westfield, Massachusetts," by W. Shelton, G. W. Robinson, D. Burgess and D. Levine.
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- 2004
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5. RESEARCH PAPERS Comorbidity of Fibromyalgia and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms in a Community Sample of Women.
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Raphael, Karen G., Janal, Malvin N., and Nayak, Sangeetha
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COMORBIDITY , *FIBROMYALGIA , *POST-traumatic stress disorder , *PSYCHOBIOLOGY , *DISEASES in women - Abstract
To test alternative explanations for the comorbidity between fibromyalgia (FM), a medically unexplained syndrome involving widespread pain, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). In contrast to a default “risk factor” hypothesis, tested hypotheses were that: A) The association is due to a sampling bias introduced by the study of care-seeking individuals; B) FM is an additive burden that strains coping resources when confronting life stress; and C) Arousal symptoms of PTSD and FM are confounded. Community-dwelling women in the New York/New Jersey metropolitan area (N=1,312) completed a telephone survey regarding FM-like symptoms prior to September 11, 2001. Approximately 6 months after the World Trade Center terrorist attacks, they again completed the survey, to which questions regarding PTSD symptoms were added. The odds of probable PTSD were more than three times greater in women with FM-like symptoms, both assessed after 9/11. The odds ratio was not reduced by controlling for FM-like symptoms before 9/11 or for the potentially confounded symptoms of PTSD specifically related to arousal. These findings lead us to reject alternate explanations for the comorbidity between FM and PTSD. Speculations that FM and PTSD share psychobiological risk factors remain plausible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
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6. Duchamp's Labyrinth: First Papers of Surrealism, 1942.
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Demos, T.J.
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SURREALIST exhibitions , *EXHIBITIONS - Abstract
Focuses on two exhibitions of surrealist art works in New York in October 1942. Definition of surrealism; Key examples of the avant-garde's forays into installation art; Details of the two exhibitions.
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- 2001
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7. Recombinant DNA paper model simulation.
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Wagner, Joan
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DNA , *SCIENCE , *TECHNOLOGY , *HIGH school students - Abstract
Focuses on a DNA science and technology course which taught at the University of Albany for high school students during the summer of 1998. What was learnt during the course; Details on the use of Escherichia coli in experiments; Information on plasmids; In-depth look at the course.
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- 1998
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8. Cellulose Acetate/Citrate Agar Electrophoresis of Filter Paper Hemolysates From Heel Stick.
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Schedlbauer, Lewis M. and Pass, Kenneth A.
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HEMOGLOBINS , *ELECTROPHORESIS , *CELLULOSE acetate , *AGAR , *TESTING - Abstract
Presents information on a study which screened hemoglobin with alkaline electrophoresis on cellulose acetate followed by acid electrophoresis on citrate agar in New York City. Critical application of specimens to the citrate agar plates of the screening procedure; Accurate monitoring of the hemoglobin screening method; Results and discussion.
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- 1989
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9. Social capital: papers selected from a critical workshop.
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Greenwood, Davydd J.
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INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) , *SOCIAL capital , *ADULT education workshops , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *COMMUNITY development - Abstract
Discusses some of the papers presented at the social capital workshop and conference held in Cornell University in Ithaca, New York on September 2002. Conceptual and methodological universe into which social capital fits; Role of social capital in local or community development.
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- 2003
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10. Trans death at Rikers Island: sites of (in)visibility and reframing mass incarceration.
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Montano, Nicolas
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CORRECTIONAL institutions , *UNEMPLOYMENT , *HEALTH services accessibility , *MORTALITY , *PSYCHOLOGY of LGBTQ+ people , *TRANSACTIONAL sex , *VIOLENCE , *HOUSING stability , *GENDER , *CRIME victims , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *INSTITUTIONAL racism , *GOVERNMENT policy , *DEATH , *HOMELESSNESS , *GENDER inequality - Abstract
On June 7th, 2019, Layleen Xtravaganza Cubilette-Polanco, a transgender woman from New York, died at Rikers Island while in solitary confinement. According to officials from the Department of Corrections, Layleen's death was a result of a series of interrelated health problems.. Trans, queer, and gender non-conforming people, especially youth of colour and Black trans women, face heightened rates of homelessness, violent victimisation, barriers to housing, employment, and healthcare. These social conditions are tied to heightened engagement in survival sex work, over-policing, and surveillance of their communities. As a result, Trans and queer people are disproportionately impacted by mass incarceration, and must contend with the nexus of a system that functions on racist and colonial legal construction of gender, making carceral spaces sites of (in)visibility and death. The death of Trans people within these carceral spaces are followed by multiple discursive deaths, including the use of dead names in media, misgendering, and transphobic political debate. This paper aims to highlight and explore carceral settings as sites of death and (in)visbility for Trans and queer people and how reframing allows us to identify how (neo)liberal reforms meant to protect Trans people only entrench mass incarceration in the United States. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Residential wood heating: An overview of U.S. impacts and regulations.
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Marin, Arthur, Rector, Lisa, Morin, Barbara, and Allen, George
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WOOD stoves , *HEATING , *AIR quality , *AIR pollution , *EMISSION standards - Abstract
Air pollution from residential wood heating poses a significant public health risk and is a primary cause of PM nonattainment in some areas of the United States. Those emissions also play a role in regional haze and climate change. While regulatory programs have focused on emissions reductions from large facilities, the residential heating sector has received limited attention. The failure to develop effective programs to address this emission source hampers the ability of state and local air quality programs to meet clean air goals. An updated New Source Performance Standard (NSPS) for Residential Wood Heaters was promulgated in 2015, which includes more stringent emissions standards for wood stoves and broadens its scope to regulate additional types of wood heating appliances. However, weaknesses in the test methods and programs used to certify compliance with the NSPS limits hamper the efficacy of those requirements. Current emissions certification tests measure stove performance under defined laboratory conditions that (1) do not adequately reflect operation and performance of appliances in homes, (2) are not sufficiently repeatable to allow for comparison of emissions of different appliances, and (3) allow manufacturers leeway to modify critical test fueling and operating parameters which can significantly impact performance outcomes. These foundational regulatory issues present substantial challenges to promoting the cleanest and most efficient wood heating systems. This paper provides an overview of the air quality and public health impacts of residential wood heating and discusses the weaknesses in the current emission certification approaches and work by the Northeast States for Coordinated Air Use Management (NESCAUM) and the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority to develop improved testing methods. Other articles in this issue discuss the development and testing of those methods in detail. Implications: Air pollution from residential wood heating poses a significant public health risk and is a primary cause of PM nonattainment in some areas of the United States. Those emissions also play a role in regional haze and climate change. While regulatory programs have focused on emissions reductions from large facilities, the residential heating sector has received limited attention. The failure to develop effective programs to address this emission source hampers the ability of state and local air quality programs to meet clean air goals. This paper provides an overview of the issue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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12. Las Novedades (Nueva York, 1876-1918) como baluarte de la cultura y la lengua españolas en los Estados Unidos.
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García Caba, Marta
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LANGUAGE policy , *SPANISH language , *NEWSPAPER publishing , *CULTURAL values , *NINETEENTH century - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to analyse a corpus of 137 texts published between 1888 and 1899. These texts are included in one of the most successful Spanish-language newspapers published in the United States during the second half of the nineteenth century: Las Novedades (New York, 1876-1918). In the analysis I will determine the linguistic ideologies and the discursive strategies used for the promotion of Hispanism and Spanish language in a sociopolitical context in which the Spanish hegemony was losing all its power at an international level. Thus, the ideologies found are divided in two different categories: the linguistic ideologies that give the language a cultural value and the linguistic ideologies that make reference to the economic and commercial value of the language. The results obtained from this analysis will contribute to understand the role of Spanish language in the United States. Furthermore, this paper presents an unpublished corpus of clear historiographic interest that contributes to clarify the panorama of Hispanism in a country like the United States. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
13. A population study of the NYS measles epidemic: Lessons learned.
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Marye, Stacey and Spencer, Gale
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VACCINATION , *MEASLES , *MASS media , *IMMUNIZATION , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *POPULATION geography , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *JEWS , *MEASLES vaccines , *RELIGION - Abstract
Objectives: In 2019 the United States experienced the largest outbreak of measles in 27 years, 19 years after the United States declared measles eliminated. The purpose of this paper was to present a population study of a measles outbreak within Orthodox Jewish communities in New York that led to the elimination of religious exemption for school mandated vaccines. Methods: Peer reviewed articles, news media, health department, and government resources were used to investigate environmental factors that led to this outbreak. State, county, and city immunization records were accessed to explore measles compliance rates before and after policy change. Results: Rockland County had low compliance rates compared to the rest of the state, and the elimination of religious exemptions raised compliance rate almost to state level. In all but one affected New York City zip codes, compliance following policy change rose to 97.95%–99.15%. Conclusions: Overall, changes in measles compliance rates reflect policy goals, but localized differences imply a need for more customized interventions for each unique community. Public health planning to promote vaccination should be sensitive to the concerns and perceptions of each community in order for health interventions to have a positive effect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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14. Declining Enrollment in Catholic Schools in the West and Insights from the United States.
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Wodon, Quentin
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SCHOOL enrollment , *STUDENT attrition , *CATHOLIC schools , *CATHOLIC education , *SCHOOL rankings ,WESTERN countries ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
While enrollment in Catholic schools is rising in the global south, it is declining in many Western countries. Providing a quality and holistic education experience remains essential in both developed and developing countries, especially for disadvantaged groups. But in addition, in developed countries, trade-offs may have to be confronted to stem the decline in enrollment that affects the financial sustainability of schools. Building on a presentation made at the closing plenary of OIEC's World Congress in New York, this paper focuses on the United States where enrollment in Catholic schools has been dropping for more than 50 years. In the absence of state support for Catholic schools and in a context of rising operating costs and therefore tuition, the decline in enrollment is due in part to a lack of affordability of schools given high out-of-pocket costs paid by parents. But other factors related to perceptions about Catholic schools also play a role. To stem the decline in enrollment, market research can help, including to assess how favorably Catholic and other types of schools are perceived in the population. The paper relies on data collected for the National Catholic Education Association to compare favorability ratings by type of schools and assess factors associated with these perceptions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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15. Utilization of a forensic accountant to investigate financial exploitation of older adults.
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Dauenhauer, Jason, Heffernan, Kristin, Webber, Karen, Smoker, Kari, Caccamise, Paul, and Granata, Allison
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PREVENTION of abuse of older people , *ACCOUNTING , *ABUSE of older people , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *CLINICAL competence , *EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements , *ENDOWMENTS , *FORENSIC sciences , *HEALTH care teams , *INTERNET , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *MEDICAL personnel , *RESEARCH funding , *THEMATIC analysis , *INFORMATION needs , *CROSS-sectional method , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to describe the results of an online program evaluation survey conducted in the USA in 2018 which was designed to understand how members of an enhanced multidisciplinary team (E-MDT) use the expertise of a forensic accountant (FA) in suspected cases of elder financial exploitation. Design/methodology/approach: This paper analyzes responses to an online survey from 54 E-MDT members. Narrative responses to open-ended questions were analyzed by using cross-case thematic analysis. Data from demographic questions and those with nominal response options were analyzed using descriptive statistics. Findings: Overwhelmingly, the E-MDT members described how useful the FA's expertise and subsequent detailed reports are in helping determine whether financial exploitation is taking place and providing information needed to continue an investigation and pursue criminal charges. Practical implications: The increasing longevity and sheer number of older adults present ongoing challenges in the fight to address financial exploitation. Findings suggest that FAs working with E-MDTs can help identify signs, collect evidence and help investigate cases of suspected financial abuse of older adults. The development of training programs focused on educating accountants to fill a need in a growing area of forensic accounting may be needed. Originality/value: This paper adds to the growing evidence of multidisciplinary teams as an effective model for investigating cases of financial elder exploitation by focusing specifically on the expertise of an FA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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16. Impact of plastic bag bans on retail return polyethylene film recycling contamination rates and speciation.
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Meert, Jenna, Izzo, Austin, and Atkinson, John D.
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PLASTIC bag laws , *POLYETHYLENE films , *PLASTIC films , *RESOURCE recovery facilities , *WASTE minimization , *WASTE recycling - Abstract
• First study to report role of "bag bans" on retail return polyethylene contamination. • 1.4 – 2.8x increase in post-"bag ban" contamination from concentration effect. • 43-category contamination speciation increases understanding of the material stream. Plastic films are abundant, but seldom recycled in the United States (US). It is both economically and operationally challenging to recycle plastic films because their light weight makes accumulating material difficult. Additionally, films are not allowed in most curbside recycling programs in the US because they tangle around equipment used at material recovery facilities (MRFs) and effect a MRFs' ability to effectively sort other materials. As a result, the only recycling pathway for post-consumer plastic films in the US is retail return collection programs. Currently, only the most abundant type of post-consumer plastic film, polyethylene (PE), is accepted by these programs in the US. Although PE films come in many forms, grocery bags are the most well-known, and therefore most abundant, film in the retail return recycling stream. The New York State (NYS) Plastic Bag Waste Reduction Law prohibits the distribution of single use plastic bags. This work explored how ending the distribution of grocery bags impacted retail return recycling programs for PE films in Western New York. We show that a loss of the most recognizable and abundant PE film results in a 1.4 – 2.8x increase in contamination rates, devaluing films that are still collected. As a result, increased contamination rates may threaten the viability of this recycling pathway. The study also provides a complete speciation of this recycling stream with a novel level of detail, as existing research on this recycling pathway is limited. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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17. Fake Science: Legal Implications in the Creation and Use of Fake Scientific Data Published as Grey Literature and Disseminated through social media.
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Lipinski, Tomas A. and Henderson, Kathrine A.
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GREY literature , *SOCIAL media , *RESTRAINT of trade , *SCIENCE publishing ,EUROPE-United States relations - Abstract
In this six-part paper, the authors first define fake science as a concept and identify at a high level the problems and consequences of fake science dissemination especially where fake science is published as grey literature and/or disseminated across social media platforms. In addition, they identify factors contributing to the creation of fake science from the "the replication crisis" in scientific research to the impact of technologies such as Artificial Intelligence. Part 2 moves into the United States Legal Landscape and considers US policy around fake science and related issues illustrated through a detailed discussion of applicable statutes and case law. Specifically, the authors discuss ISP immunity under 47 U.S.C. § 230 and the Constitutional implications of the United States v. Alverez, 132 S. Ct. 2537 (2012) and the decision and the applications of Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corp. v. Public Service Commission of New York, 447 U.S. 557 (1980). There will also be consideration of fake grey data as commercial speech or as a deceptive trade practice. Part 3 addresses the European Legal Landscape through a discussion of applicable laws and legal precedents in a similar manner to part 2. Part 4, Comparisons of the United States and European Legal Landscapes looks at the similarities and differences between the United States and Europe in addressing their shared concerns over the creation, use and dissemination of fake scientific information. Part 5, Prevention and Deterrence considers measures and actions which help to reduce the creation of fake science or that mitigate the problems it creates. These measures and actions are presented and incorporated into the fake science lifecycle presented in Part 1, Problem Definition. In Part 6, the authors make recommendations including technology driven solutions designed to ferret out fake science and in turn reducing the serious problems fake science presents. Recommendations include Facebook and other social media AI tools; manually flagging fake data; and the creation of truth seeking algorithms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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18. Guidelines for determining restorability of competency to stand trial and recommendations for involuntary treatment.
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Cochrane, Robert E., Laxton, Kelsey L., Mulay, Abby L., and Herbel, Bryon L.
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INVOLUNTARY treatment , *MENTAL health personnel , *MEDICAL personnel , *LEGAL judgments , *CRIMINAL procedure - Abstract
Over 50,000 defendants are referred for competency to stand trial evaluations each year in the United States (Psychological evaluations for the courts: A handbook for mental health professionals and lawyers, New York, NY: The Guildford Press; 2018). Approximately 20% of those individuals are found by courts to be incompetent and are referred for "restoration" or remediation (Psychological evaluations for the courts: A handbook for mental health professionals and lawyers, 4th edn. New York, NY: The Guildford Press; 2018; Bull Am Acad Psychiatry Law. 1991;19:63–9). The majority of those incompetent defendants meet criteria for psychotic illnesses (J Am Acad Psychiatry Law. 2007;35:34–43). Forensic mental health professionals frequently have such patients/defendants decline recommended treatment with psychotropic medication. For a significant minority of defendants diagnosed with psychotic disorders, treatment with medication is thought to be necessary to restore their competency to stand trial. Without psychiatric intervention to restore competency, defendants may be held for lengthy and costly hospitalizations while criminal proceedings are suspended. In these situations, clinicians are guided by the Supreme Court decision, Sell v. United States (2003). The Sell opinion describes several clinical issues courts must consider when determining whether a defendant can be treated involuntarily solely for the purpose of restoring his/her competency. This paper offers some guidance to clinicians and evaluators who are faced with making recommendations or decisions about involuntary treatment. Using a question and answer format, the authors discuss data that support a decision to request, or not request, court authorization for involuntary treatment. Specifically, eight questions are posed for forensic evaluators to consider in determining the prognosis or viability of successful treatment and restoration. Finally, a clinical vignette is also presented to highlight important factors to consider in Sell‐related evaluations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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19. Paper's Coverage of Suicide Draws Fire.
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CRITICISM , *SUICIDE , *PERIODICALS , *ETHICS - Abstract
Focuses on the criticisms against the "New York Post" for running a photograph of Diana Chien who committed suicide in New York City. Defense of chief copy editor, Barry Gross on the use of the picture; Effects of the incident on the manner of reporting suicides in the media.
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- 2004
20. Physics Papers Sold at Auction.
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Feder, Toni
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AUCTIONS , *PHYSICS - Abstract
Deals with the success of the auction of physics-related books and manuscripts on October 4, 2002 at Christie's auction house in New York City. Comments from Francis Wahlgren of Christie's; Worth of the Albert Einstein-Michele Besso manuscript sold at the auction; Purpose of Harvey Plotnick in selling his physics collection.
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- 2002
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21. Call for Papers.
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CONFERENCES & conventions , *MALE sexual abuse victims , *SEX crimes - Abstract
Announces the Ninth International Conference of the National Organization on Male Sexual Victimization from October 25 to 28, 2001 in New York City. Theme of the conference.
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- 2000
22. The unsustainability of exurban development in London and New York: calculating transport CO 2 emissions.
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Focas, Caralampo
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SUSTAINABILITY , *EXURBAN regions , *CARBON dioxide & the environment , *REGIONAL planning , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
London and New York have often been hailed for their sustainable planning practices. However, when one focuses on the entire city region, there is ever-increasing car-dependent development. This paper focuses on the exurban region of the two cities investigating transport-created CO2emissions. The research is based on the analysis of data of the National Travel Surveys of Great Britain and the USA through a quantification of personal travel and a top-down estimation of CO2emissions. It is the exurban region that accounts for the vast majority of CO2emissions: 77% for London and 87% for New York. In the wider region for both cities there is a policy vacuum and dearth of regional planning mechanisms to deliver policies to reduce CO2emissions. The paper argues that transport needs to be planned at the city-regional scale.ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHERCopyright of Journal of Environmental Planning & Management is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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23. Globalization of Sports Activities and Sport Perceptions Among Adolescents From Berlin and Suburban New York.
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Rees, C. Roger, Brettschneider, Wolf-Deitrich, and Brandl-Bredenbeek, Hans Peter
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SPORTS , *TEENAGERS - Abstract
While economic-oriented theories identify a "homogenized" or "Americanized." unidirectional model of global sport, figurational theories conceptualize globalization as much more complicated, multifaceted, and interactional. However, the spread or "achievement" sport is seen as central in both approaches. This paper investigates the degree to which "achievement" criteria characterize the sporting behavior and sporting perceptions of adolescents in Berlin and suburban New York. We find evidence that adolescents from both samples accept competition and training as important components of their sport concepts, and examples of some of these components associated with gender differences transcending national boundaries. We also identify differences in the sport concepts or Berlin and suburban New York youth, both in the types of sports they play and in the meaning they attach to these activities. These differences lead us to question the ubiquity of "achievement" sport as a component of globalization, and hence, the efficacy of theories stressing "homogenization" and unidirectionality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
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24. The past of others: Korean memorials in New York's suburbia.
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Matsumoto, Noriko
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COLLECTIVE memory , *WAR memorials , *DIASPORA , *KOREANS , *ASSIMILATION (Sociology) , *HISTORY - Abstract
Since the first decade of this century, public monuments to the memory of "comfort women" - women and girls forced into sexual service from the 1930s through 1945, by the Japanese Imperial Army - have been established in the United States by the Korean diaspora. This paper analyses recent memorials in the suburbs of New York that have experienced rapid immigration from Korea since the 1990s. The memorials met local resistance due to perceptions of unrelatedness to the American land. Such immigrant initiatives, however, have been supported by municipal governance. The project of inscribing a passage from East Asian history in the American context may be considered symptomatic of wider cognitive and social shifts in immigrant adaptation. Assimilation through the inclusion of immigrant heritage, along with an increasing sense of entitlement in being both "ethnic" and "American", have been integral to this contest regarding collective memory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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25. Abstracts of papers to be presented at the sixty-third annual meeting of the American Association...
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FORENSIC anthropology , *WOMEN'S health - Abstract
Presents an abstract of the study `A comparison of the health status of women in nineteenth century Rochester N.Y.: Monroe County Poorhouse vs. the City of Rochester,' by R.L. Higgins. Health status of poorhouse women and women from the general population; Analysis of specimens from a cemetery in Rochester, New York; Causes of death.
- Published
- 1994
26. Advancing system and policy changes for social and racial justice: comparing a Rural and Urban Community-Based Participatory Research Partnership in the U.S.
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Devia, Carlos, Baker, Elizabeth A., Sanchez-Youngman, Shannon, Barnidge, Ellen, Golub, Maxine, Motton, Freda, Muhammad, Michael, Ruddock, Charmaine, Vicuña, Belinda, and Wallerstein, Nina
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ACTION research , *BLACK people , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *COMMUNITY health services , *FOCUS groups , *HEALTH care rationing , *HEALTH risk assessment , *HISPANIC Americans , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *CASE studies , *TYPE 2 diabetes , *POLITICAL participation , *RACE , *RURAL population , *SOCIAL justice , *CITY dwellers , *HEALTH equity , *HEALTH & social status - Abstract
Background: The paper examines the role of community-based participatory research (CBPR) within the context of social justice literature and practice. Methods: Two CBPR case studies addressing health inequities related to Type 2 Diabetes and Cardiovascular disease were selected from a national cross-site study assessing effective academic-community research partnerships. One CBPR partnership works with African Americans in rural Pemiscot County, Missouri and the other CBPR partnership works with African American and Latinos in urban South Bronx, New York City. Data collection included semi-structured key informant interviews and focus groups. Analysis focused on partnerships' context/ history and their use of multiple justice-oriented strategies to achieve systemic and policy changes in order to address social determinants of health in their communities. Results: Community context and history shaped each partnership's strategies to address social determinants. Four social justice approaches (identity/recognition, procedural, distributive, and structural justice) used by both partnerships were identified. These social justice approaches were employed to address underlying causes of inequitable distribution of resources and power structures, while remaining within a scientific research framework. Conclusion: CBPR can bridge the role of science with civic engagement and political participation, empowering community members to become political agents who integrate evidence into their social justice organizing strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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27. A comparison of tenurial change and privatization in two Garden City communities: Sunnyside Gardens, New York City and Garbatella, Rome.
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Annunziata, Sandra
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- *
PUBLIC housing , *PRIVATIZATION , *INCLOSURES , *LAND tenure , *LAND use planning , *GARDENS - Abstract
The paper problematizes public housing privatization. It compares the trajectory of tenure change in two garden communities – Garbatella, Rome and Sunnyside Gardens, New York City – which privileged public and private ownership, respectively. The cases are currently dealing with tenure change. Sunnyside experienced the enclosure of gardens and citizens’ attempt to reclaim what was held in common in order to bring back the communal spaces. Garbatella is a place where growth over time of rights, powers, immunities, and privileges is manifested in long-lasting processes of appropriation of public housing goods. Despite their different stories, Sunnyside helps to problematize the process of public housing privatization in Garbatella which is further complicated by tenure complexity, State-induced rent gap and institutional displacement. The analysis of tenure change, done by using the ‘incidents of ownership’ notion developed by Marcuse, contributes to the understanding of what public housing privatization means in social and spatial terms. Housing privatization leads to an erosion of the in-between space where individual and collective aspiration meet as a precondition for the reproduction of what is held in common: spatial goods such as open spaces and housing – a fundamental aspect of our citizenship. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The meaning of the park.
- Author
-
Kumkar, Nils C.
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC spaces , *PARKS , *OCCUPY Wall Street protest movement , *SOCIAL classes , *OCCUPATIONS , *MIDDLE class - Abstract
The occupation of public urban space is a prominent feature in most descriptions of the global wave of protests after 2011. This paper examines the occupation of one significant space, New York’s Zuccotti Park, to investigate how first, ‘occupying’ became the central form of practice of what later was called Occupy Wall Street. By reconstructing the habitus of the movement’s core constituency and its resonance with the practice of the occupation, this investigation also explains why it was so difficult for the movement to evolve into other forms. It sketches out how the practice of occupying influenced the cooperation between members of different social classes participating in the protest and compares the development of this occupation to the very different trajectory of the Occupy movement in Germany. It is argued that the US occupation only temporarily overcame obstacles to mobilizing the discontent of those young adults that found themselves biographically blocked from joining the new petty bourgeoisie and to building alliances with other social groups in the USA of the post-recession era. Since the eviction from the park reinforced these obstacles, it triggered a de-mobilizing dynamic. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Abstracts of papers presented at the annual meeting.
- Subjects
- *
INCOME inequality , *CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
Presents an abstract of the paper `Income Growth and Inequality: Considering the New York Housing Censuses, 1855-1875,' by Lee Soltow, during the fifty-fifth annual meeting of the Economic History Association.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Victor Prevost: Painter, Lithographer, Photographer.
- Author
-
Mellby, Julie
- Subjects
- *
CALOTYPE , *TELEPHOTOGRAPHY , *PHOTOGRAPHERS , *19TH century photography - Abstract
This article examines the life and work of the nineteenth-century French-American artist Victor Prevost. While Prevost's name is familiar to photography historians, the diversity of his artistic accomplishments has not been fully appreciated. An artist celebrated for work in several mediums, Prevost was already making large-format calotypes in 1851 while living in New York City. He was also responsible for innovations in telescopic photography, joining with astronomers at the West Point Military Academy in 1854 to capture a solar eclipse on paper. This paper seeks to broaden knowledge of Prevost's life and work as a commercial artist in New York during the nineteenth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Security in public space: an empirical assessment of three US cities.
- Author
-
Németh, Jeremy
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC spaces , *TOWN security & safety measures , *ZONING , *SECURITY systems - Abstract
Critics often mourn a loss of publicness in cities due to the increased presence of antiterror security zones and related behavioral and access controls, although recent work suggests that security landscapes have shifted from the hard, intense, militarized architecture of the late 1990s-early 2000s to a softer, less obtrusive approach more commonly seen today. Nonetheless, these studies are mostly anecdotal in nature: few studies attempt to back these claims with empirical evidence and even fewer connect this physical security imposition with the policies and plans governing its implementation and operation. In this paper I describe results of site visits to Civic Centers and Financial Districts in New York City, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. In each neighborhood I catalog security landscapes using a simple tool to assess the intensity, duration, and location of individual security zones. I find that the security landscape covers between 3.4% and 35.7% of publicly accessible space in the districts studied, and that this landscape is most prevalent and intense in New York City. I also find that security zones governed by multistakeholder networks are more intense and militarized than zones managed by a single entity. By understanding how the policies impact physical security, albeit in a relatively small sample of cities and districts, we can better predict what the future of urban security measures might hold. This paper provides empirical grounding to more common theoretical speculations regarding the future of the urban security landscape in the global West. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. “I too was an Immigrant”: An Analysis of Differing Modes of Mobilization in Two Bronx Mexican Migrant Organizations “J' AI ÉTÉ UN IMMIGRANT MOIAUSSI”: ANALYSE DES DIFFÉRENTS TYPES DE MOBILISATION AU SEIN DE DEUX ORGANISATIONS DE MIGRANTS MEXICAINS DU BRONX “YO TAMBIÉN FUI INMIGRANTE”: UN ANÁLISIS DE LOS MODOS DE MOVILIZACIÓN DIVERGENTES DE DOS ORGANIZACIONES DE MIGRANTES MEXICANOS EN EL BRONX
- Author
-
Gálvez, Alyshia
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRANTS , *MEXICANS , *ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. , *CHURCH management , *CITIZENSHIP - Abstract
This paper, based on dissertation fieldwork among Mexican migrant organizations in New York, examines differing modes of mobilization in two Bronx parish-based voluntary associations. Even though the Mexican community in New York is consistently described as “new”, “young” and its migration as “recent”, there are some migrants who arrived decades ago, in the early 1980s, whose children and grandchildren have been born in the United States and whose experiences are quite different than those of newer migrants. Nonetheless, the network of fraternal societies founded on Guadalupan devotion which together comprises the largest and most visible Mexican organization in the city assumes commonalty of experiences, identity, faith and needs, based on the premise, “We are all undocumented”. In this paper I will unpack that “we” using ethnographic data from two Bronx parish Guadalupan committees to examine how a collective we is produced, contested, and complicated through time. What are the implications for the organizational strategies of the city-wide association if some of the most established activists are no longer undocumented? What kinds of tensions exist within a community imagined to be unified but constantly faced with class and ethnic differences? These organizations posit a “citizenship” premised on all human beings sharing the same mother, the Virgin of Guadalupe, and ensuring the dignity and rights of all, irrespective of migratory status or nationality. What does it mean when some involved in the production of this discourse “regularize” their migratory status and are no longer in need of an alternative mode of citizenship? How effective will assertions of Mexican national identity linked to Guadalupan devotion be among second-generation youths who are US citizens and have possibly never seen Mexico? What happens when activists begin to say “I was an immigrant”? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Rebuilding Ground Zero. The Politics of Performance.
- Author
-
Hajer, Maarten A.
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL planning , *DECISION making , *DISCOURSE , *DRAMATURGICAL approach , *SEPTEMBER 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001 , *TERRORISM ,WORLD Trade Center Site (New York, N.Y.) - Abstract
Some events have such an impact on society that it is unclear whether the standard rules of political decision making still apply. This paper analyses the planning process of rebuilding Ground Zero as a case in which politics was unhinged and new procedures were invented on the spot. The politics of planning was not only about what should be done on the site, but also about the sort of procedure that should be followed to take a legitimate decision. The paper conceives of the political process as a sequence of staged performances and introduces a model that analyses policy processes in terms of discourse, dramaturgy and deliberation. It describes the rebuilding of Ground Zero as a case of an ‘unhappy performance’ in which, as the process continued, the wider publicly-shared determination to create a bold symbolic response to terrorism lost out to uninspired political-economic reasoning. It argues that this analysis of policy processes as performance deserves a much wider application as today's world is full of situations in which decisions are made in networks marked by unclear rules as to how to arrive at a legitimate decision. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The Elusive Goal of School Spirit in the Comprehensive High School: A Case History, 1916-1941.
- Author
-
Terzian, Sevan G.
- Subjects
- *
HIGH schools , *SOCIAL alienation , *HIGH school student attitudes , *PSYCHOLOGICAL disengagement - Abstract
Scholars and practitioners have recently asked whether large comprehensive high schools contribute to student alienation. At the same time, some school administrators have stressed the importance of school spirit to create a powerful sense of community and as a way to mitigate feelings of student detachment and anonymity. This paper considers a historical case from 1916-1941 at Ithaca High School, in Ithaca New York, to see how students and administrators defined school spirit. Using an underutilized artifact--school newspapers--it uncovers the social dynamics within the school. Select students writing in the school newspaper articulated three dimensions of school spirit: participation, loyalty, and pride. Their views reflected those of the administration. Frequent complaints about the perceived absence of school spirit, however, indicate that not all students at I.H.S. embraced this seemingly elusive ideal. This paper suggests that the ideal of school spirit never came to full fruition at I.H.S., because its very definition was undemocratic and static. It concludes that in order for current and future attempts to establish and nurture school spirit in comprehensive high schools to succeed, they must include all members, and that its definition must be open to revision. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Feminism in the city: diverse cultural exchanges of feminist knowledge in a New York City high school.
- Author
-
Gutierrez, Nova
- Subjects
- *
FEMINISM , *CULTURAL relations , *HIGH schools , *SECONDARY education , *MEXICAN American women - Abstract
This paper examines the ongoing challenge faced by the Chicana author in developing and implementing a feminist of colour curriculum for an after-school women group in a large New York City high school. The focus of this paper is to explore the challenges of diverse cultural exchanges of feminist knowledge, even within the same geographical location and especially where there exists unequal institutional, political or social power among and between group members and facilitators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Historical Archaeology and the Recent Urban Past.
- Author
-
Symonds, James
- Subjects
- *
HISTORICAL archaeology , *GROUP identity , *CASE studies , *URBAN life , *SOCIAL science research - Abstract
This paper examines the ways in which international historical archaeologists have explored the recent past, in an effort to inform and contribute to contemporary debates about social identity and social inclusion. It is argued that the archaeology of the mundane and everyday can contribute to contemporary culture by creating a sense of community and developing social cohesion. Emphasis is placed upon the archaeology of the recent urban past and case studies are presented from New York, Sydney and Cape Town. The paper concludes that the study of the materiality of urban social life offers a powerful research tool for social scientists, and that archaeologists and heritage interpreters should make greater use of this form of evidence within the context of early 21st-century urban regeneration schemes in the UK. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Kitsch taste and the consumption of Jackie ‘O’.
- Author
-
Parish, Jane
- Subjects
- *
AUCTIONS , *GAY men , *CULTURAL capital , *VOCABULARY , *KITSCH - Abstract
In 1996, Sotheby's in New York held a four-day auction of many of the possessions Jackie Onassis purchased during her lifetime. This paper is an ethnography of a loose social circle of gay men, some of whom attended the pre-auction display of these objects and who regularly hold their own informal Jackie ‘O’ celebrations. It looks at what their worshipping of a female figure, Jackie ‘O’, means and how a distinctive cultural capital is espoused by gay men which differentiates them from other Jackie collectors. To this end, the paper also focuses on ‘vocabularies of appreciation’ ( ), or kitsch consumption among this loose social circle and, in this process, categories of ‘us’ and ‘them’ are performed (see ; ; ). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. What′s in a name? Biomedical photographic communications?
- Author
-
Peres, Michael R.
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL communication , *PHOTOGRAPHY , *GRADUATE medical education , *BIOMEDICAL engineering , *RESEARCH institutes - Abstract
The Biomedical Photographic Communications Department at the Rochester Institute of Technology currently offers the only university-based degree programme in this field in the United States. With an enrolment of more than eighty students, the curriculum and its delivery are continually challenged by the 'new world' of imaging and the needs of the increasingly diversified industry where its graduates are finding employment. This paper reports on a recent self-study of the programme and examines the future directions for educating tomorrow's information imaging professionals. In particular, the paper evaluates the name of the department, which has become both an asset and liability in describing the programme to perspective students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Assessing the Cluster Correspondence between Paired Point Locations.
- Author
-
Yongmei Lu and Thill, Jean-Claude
- Subjects
- *
CORRESPONDENCE analysis (Statistics) , *ALGORITHMS , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *THEFT - Abstract
Some complex geographic events are associated with multiple point locations. Such events include, but are not limited to, those describing linkages between and among places. The term multi-location event is used in the paper to refer to these geographical phenomena. Through formalization of the multi-location event problem, this paper situates the analysis of multi-location events within the broad context of point pattern analysis techniques. Two alternative approaches (vector autocorrelation analysis and cluster correspondence analysis) to the spatial dependence of paired-location events (i.e., two-location events) are explored, with a discussion of their appropriateness to general multi-location event problems. The research proposes a framework of cluster correspondence analysis for the detection of local non-stationarities in the spatial process generating multi-location events. A new algorithm for local analysis of cluster correspondence is proposed. It is implemented on a large-scale dataset of vehicle theft and recovery location pairs in Buffalo, New York. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Using cultural consensus analysis to study sexual risk perception: a report on a pilot study.
- Author
-
SWORA, MARIA GABRIELLE
- Subjects
- *
RISK perception , *COLLEGE students , *HUMAN sexuality - Abstract
Recent research indicates that risk perceptions are shaped by social and cultural factors, and therefore it is important to study the cultural aspects of sexual risk understandings. This paper reports on a pilot study using consensus analysis to study the content and distribution of knowledge of sexual risk among a small sample of college students at a private university in western New York. Twenty men and 20 women were surveyed. The results of the subsequent consensus analysis suggest that the men, the women, and all the respondents combined share a model of what constitutes risky sex. The women showed a greater level of consensus and average competence than men. There were important differences between men and women in some aspects of the content of knowledge. In particular, men perceived sexual desire as more likely to prevent the practice of safe sex, whereas women saw alcohol in that role. One issue raised in this paper is the problematic assumption that culture as knowledge determines behaviour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The Webs They Weave: Malaysia's Multumedia Super-corridor and New York City's Silicon Alley.
- Author
-
Indergaard, Michael
- Subjects
- *
INFORMATION technology , *MULTIMEDIA systems - Abstract
This paper compares Malaysia's Multimedia Super-corridor (MSC) and New York's Silicon Alley to assess whether state-led development of digital districts is a viable alternative to neo-liberal approaches. The changing nature of east Asia's developmental states as they adopt neo-liberal elements (such as venture capital) casts doubt on the idea that east Asian cities are 'embedded' in developmental frameworks. Using actor-network theory to conceptualise the nesting of cities as processes of 'translation', the paper examines how state frameworks in the US and Malaysia shaped the respective efforts of district entrepreneurs to weave together ideas, resources and relationships. The findings confirm actor-network theory's claim that the significance of a particular element depends on the network it becomes enmeshed in. In the case of Silicon Alley, neo-liberal regimes did not directly participate but promoted devices (such as venture capital, options) that enabled venture capitalists to bring together myriad enterpreneurs. In contrast, the Malaysian state, which is deemed a 'developmental hybrid', devised a comprehensive plan for the MSC and itself used devices such as venture capital to enrol participants. While Silicon Alley was a temporary base for circulating capital, the MSC effort is creating an enduring foundation for digital industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. THE BIBLIOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA.
- Subjects
- *
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL societies , *CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
Highlights the 28th annual meeting of the Bibliographical Society of America (BSA), which was held in New York City in January 2002. Papers presented; Reports presented by BSA officials; Statement of financial position.
- Published
- 2002
43. Strengthening of a bridge pier capbeam using bonded FRP composite plates
- Author
-
Hag-Elsafi, Osman, Lund, Ryan, and Alampalli, Sreenivas
- Subjects
- *
FIBROUS composites , *STRUCTURAL plates , *DEAD loads (Mechanics) , *BRIDGES - Abstract
Application of fiber reinforced polymer (FRP) composite plates to strengthen the capbeam of Pier 3 of East Church Street Bridge in Chemung County, New York, is discussed in this paper. Addition of a concrete wearing surface and a median barrier to the bridge superstructure increased dead load, contributing to deficiencies in moment and shear capacities of the capbeam structure. As a result, the concrete capbeam suffered flexural and shear cracking, and was considered for strengthening using bonded FRP composite plates. Service load tests were performed before and after the plates were installed, to investigate effectiveness of the strengthening system. Installation of the plates and results from the performed load tests related to flexural behavior of the beam are discussed in the paper. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The Success of the Battered Woman Syndrome: An Analysis of How Cultural Arguments Succeed.
- Author
-
Rothenberg, Bess
- Subjects
- *
CULTURE , *SOCIAL problems , *DOMESTIC violence , *WOMEN , *JUDICIAL process - Abstract
This paper examines how certain cultural arguments gain the authority necessary to explain the social problem of domestic violence. I begin by demonstrating the existence of competing explanations for the question of why abusive relationships continue. I find that a certain kind of explanation, multiple victimization arguments that emphasize the numerous ways battered women are victimized, are most common. Through an analysis of social science citations, news papers, and legislative and judicial decisions, I conclude that one multiple victimization argument in particular, Lenore Walker's battered woman syndrome (Walker, 1979, The Battered Woman. New York: Harper & Row; Walker, 1984, The Battered Woman Syndrome. New York: Springer), has become the most recognized explanation for why abusive relationships continue. The syndrome was best able to meet the criteria necessary for gaining cultural authority put forth by Schudson (1989, Theory and Society 18:153–180): retrievability, rhetorical force, resonance, resolution, and institutional retention. In recent years, however, this authority has been threatened as social and cultural conditions have changed, leaving competing understandings of the domestic violence issue to challenge Walker's claims. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Error Patterns of 3rd-Year Medical Students on the Cardiovascular Physical Examination.
- Author
-
Ortiz-Neu, Carmen, Walters, Cheryl A., Tenenbaum, Joseph, Colliver, Jerry A., and Schmidt, Hilary J.
- Subjects
- *
PERIODIC health examinations , *PHYSICAL diagnosis , *MEDICAL students , *DIAGNOSTIC errors - Abstract
Background: Recent research documents widespread deficits in the physical examination skills of practicing physicians. Purpose: This study explored physical examination skills of 3rd-year medical students after completion of a course in physical diagnosis. Methods: Standardized patient physical examination checklist data were analyzed for a cohort of 2,038 medical students for a patient presenting with classic signs and symptoms of an acute myocardial infarction. A follow-up paper case and survey explored reasons underlying omissions. Results: Students systematically omitted 3 of 10 component maneuvers critical to the evaluation of a patient with shortness of breath and chest pain. The same pattern of omissions was observed across 8 medical schools and over 2 successive years. The paper case follow-up study ruled out time constraints and performance anxiety as the cause. Survey data revealed that students may omit a maneuver due to inability to recall pertinence (blood pressure in both arms) or difficulty discriminating findings (heart sounds at different locations), or because of inadequate technical mastery (percussion of the lungs). Conclusions: These data suggest fundamental inadequacies in the current paradigm for teaching physical examination skills. Standardized patient checklist data can provide an informative window into the efficacy of teaching practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Embedded Systems: The Case of HIV/AIDS Nonprofit Organizations in New York City.
- Author
-
Lune, Howard and Oberstein, Hillary
- Subjects
- *
EMBEDDED computer systems , *NONPROFIT organizations , *HUMAN services , *SOCIAL services - Abstract
In this paper the notion of an embedded system is developed as an analytic model to examine how state–nonprofit relations develop and become differentiated, using the case of HIV/AIDS nonprofit organizations. Drawing on extensive fieldwork among three prominent HIV/AIDS nonprofit organizations in New York City, this paper shows how the kinds of relationships these nonprofit organizations are likely to form with state agencies are based on their embeddedness in the state–nonprofit system of relations. Three forms of embeddedness are distinguished according to the type and regularity of state–nonprofit contact—direct, outsider, and mediating. Importantly, it is shown how the configuration of relations within which an organization is embedded determines many of the organization's constraints and opportunities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Exit, voice, constrained loyalty, and entrapment: migrant farmworkers and the expression of discontent on New York dairy farms.
- Author
-
Sexsmith, Kathleen
- Subjects
- *
ENTRAPMENT (Psychology) , *MIGRANT labor , *DISCONTENT , *DAIRY industry , *GRIEVANCE procedures , *UNDOCUMENTED immigrants , *WORK environment , *EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
This paper analyzes how undocumented migrant farmworkers on New York dairies respond to workplace grievances. In the absence of meaningful recourse to formal labor protections, undocumented Mexican and Guatemalan farmworkers express their dissatisfaction on a moral terrain. Building on Hirschman’s “Exit, Voice, and Loyalty” framework, I argue that their responses reveal a gradation of agency, fromentrapmenton farms with unsupportive employers,constrained loyaltyto paternalistic farmers,exitfrom farms and the dairy sector, to the private and public use ofvoice. Immigration enforcement pressures, farmer paternalism, and transnational economic obligations to their families at home limit the use of exit and voice. Nevertheless, some farmworkers are re-scaling their use of voice beyond the farm, calling on the public and policy-makers to implement systemic changes that improve their precarious conditions of work and life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Picking fruit from our backyard's trees: The meaning of nostalgia in shaping Latinas' eating practices in the United States.
- Author
-
Viladrich, Anahí and Tagliaferro, Barbara
- Subjects
- *
NOSTALGIA , *FOOD habits , *FOOD consumption , *PHYSIOLOGICAL stress , *OBESITY & psychology , *BODY image , *FOCUS groups , *FOOD preferences , *FRUIT , *HEALTH attitudes , *PSYCHOLOGY of Hispanic Americans , *MEMORY , *OBESITY , *ORGANIC foods , *PLANTS , *PUBLIC health , *WEIGHT gain , *EVALUATION research , *LIFESTYLES - Abstract
Based on a focus group study conducted in New York City (NYC), this paper examines the traditional staples (i.e., nostalgic foods) that Latinas regularly consume in the U.S., along with their beliefs regarding the impact of such foods on weight gain and related body image. Our research findings highlight the "double-bind" of nostalgic foods, defined by Latinas' retention of highly caloric familiar items along with their progressive abandonment of fresh produce and fruits. Despite participants' efforts to eat healthy staples from their homelands, they mostly kept foods perceived as unhealthy (e.g., fatty meats, fried foods). This phenomenon was informed by the "same-food paradox," represented by Latinas' beliefs that the same traditional foods that would make them lose weight in their native countries would lead them to gain weight in the U.S. Our qualitative data show that participants' concerns about their weight gain in the U.S. is in tune with their general body dissatisfaction, as indicated by our quantitative results. Finally, our findings reveal the role of stress in promoting Latinas' deleterious daily habits, including their consumption of fat-saturated snacks. Overall, these results speak to the cultural and structural barriers to healthy eating that financially strapped study participants experienced in NYC. In order to design successful public health interventions targeting Latinas, the nostalgic aspects of food preferences should be considered in conjunction with the barriers that keep them from engaging with healthier lifestyles in the U.S. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Teaching biomedical photographic communications into the next century.
- Author
-
Peres, Michael R.
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL photography , *CURRICULUM , *STRATEGIC planning - Abstract
The Biomedical Photographic Communications Department of the Rochester Institute of Technology, offers the only Bachelor's Degree in this field in the USA. With over 80 students, the curriculum and its delivery have been continually challenged by the 'New World' of imaging and the demands from the industry where the graduates will work. This paper will examine the programme's recent strategic decisions about curriculum and the future directions for educating tomorrow's professionals. The paper specifically assesses aspects of what is taught, how it is taught, and other relevant issues specific to equipment, networks, ethics, expansion, and extracurricular activities that have been put in place. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Informed Consent to Septoplasty: An Anecdote from the Field.
- Author
-
Erde, Edmund L.
- Subjects
- *
INFORMED consent (Medical law) , *NASAL surgery , *PHYSICIAN-patient relations - Abstract
This paper tells the story of events that led up to a septoplasty and the consequences that followed it. The patient is a medical ethicist. After scratching the inside of a nostril in 1976, he suffered with occasional bleeding and irritation for almost two decades. He tried topical treatment. As this failed, he sought help from an ENT specialist. The paper relates the conduct of the patient and others (friends in the medical field, the patient's spouse, nurses and anesthesiologists) vis-à-vis informed consent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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