12 research outputs found

    持続可能な発展と環境問題-環境クズネッツ曲線の例証

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    学位記号番号 : 博理工乙第186号博士の専攻分野の名称 : 博士(学術) 学位授与年月日 : 平成22年3月24日textapplication/pdfthesi

    「追い追いに」の表す時間関係 : 類義語との比較を通して

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    2002-12-15departmental bulletin pape

    Report of Educational Activity for Distinctive Human Resource Development in Community Planning Working Group of COC+ Program (PART 3)

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    MEXT (Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology) is being conducted program for promoting regional revitalization by universities as centers of community (COC+ program) at present. The purpose of COC+ is to make a flow to the regional of "core person "for the regional revitalization. This program is supporting the distinctive university. It was also adopted by COC+ in Fukui prefecture. All four-year university in Fukui prefecture have been tackling COC+ program. Therefore, We'll make a report of its past activities in the community planning working group for fiscal year 2018.Especially introduce the practical workshop worked especially in Takahama town, Fukui Prefecture.departmental bulletin pape

    Post-fracture Rehabilitation Effects on Brain Function in Older People

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    [Background] Deterioration of cognitive function is an underlying cause of older people’s fractures. The purpose of this study was to evaluate electroencephalogram and cognitive function in patients hospitalized with fractures, both at admission (before intervention) and at the time of discharge (after intervention), to investigate the effects of rehabilitation on brain function. [Methods] A total of 24 patients hospitalized with fracture due to a fall were enrolled in this study. All the subjects received 140 minutes of rehabilitation every day during hospitalization. Touch Panel-type Dementia Assessment Scale (TDAS) was used to test their cognitive function. In electroencephalography (EEG), the Neuronal Activity Topography (NAT) system was used to calculate the “Alzheimer’s disease (AD) - normal controls (NLc) differential similarity” in sNAT, ie, a numerical index to show the proximity to AD or normal NLc. [Results] There was no significant difference in the total TDAS score among subjects who were examined before and after intervention, but 12 subjects who were observed with deterioration of cognitive functionat at before intervention had a significant improvement in “word-recognition,” a sub-item in TDAS (P < 0.05). In addition, the NAT analysis findings showed that the differential similarity in sNAT significantly approached the NLc pattern (P < 0.05). [Conclusion] EEGs in patients with fractures resulting from a fall became more similar to NL patterns at the time of discharge. In addition, recent-memory function of patients who had decline in cognitive function improved.journal articl

    Study of time-dependent CP-violating asymmetries in b→sq̅q decays

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    journal articl

    ヨーロッパの噴水思想

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    application/pdf三重大学教育学研究科博士前期課程教科教育専攻44thesi

    A Transdiagnostic Self-management Web-Based App for Sleep Disturbance in Adolescents and Young Adults: Feasibility and Acceptability Study

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    Background: Sleep disturbance and its daytime sequelae, which comprise complex, transdiagnostic sleep problems, are pervasive problems in adolescents and young adults (AYAs) and are associated with negative outcomes. Effective interventions must be both evidence based and individually tailored. Some AYAs prefer self-management and digital approaches. Leveraging these preferences is helpful, given the dearth of AYA treatment providers trained in behavioral sleep medicine. We involved AYAs in the co-design of a behavioral, self-management, transdiagnostic sleep app called DOZE (Delivering Online Zzz's with Empirical Support). Objective: This study tests the feasibility and acceptability of DOZE in a community AYA sample aged 15-24 years. The secondary objective is to evaluate sleep and related outcomes in this nonclinical sample. Methods: Participants used DOZE for 4 weeks (2 periods of 2 weeks). They completed sleep diaries, received feedback on their sleep, set goals in identified target areas, and accessed tips to help them achieve their goals. Measures of acceptability and credibility were completed at baseline and end point. Google Analytics was used to understand the patterns of app use to assess feasibility. Participants completed questionnaires assessing fatigue, sleepiness, chronotype, depression, anxiety, and quality of life at baseline and end point. Results: In total, 83 participants created a DOZE account, and 51 completed the study. During the study, 2659 app sessions took place with an average duration of 3:02 minutes. AYAs tracked most days in period 1 (mean 10.52, SD 4.87) and period 2 (mean 9.81, SD 6.65), with a modal time of 9 AM (within 2 hours of waking). DOZE was appraised as highly acceptable (mode≥4) on the items "easy to use," "easy to understand," "time commitment," and "overall satisfaction" and was rated as credible (mode≥4) at baseline and end point across all items (logic, confident it would work, confident recommending it to a friend, willingness to undergo, and perceived success in treating others). The most common goals set were decreasing schedule variability (34/83, 41% of participants), naps (17/83, 20%), and morning lingering in bed (16/83, 19%). AYAs accessed tips on difficulty winding down (24/83, 29% of participants), being a night owl (17/83, 20%), difficulty getting up (13/83, 16%), and fatigue (13/83, 16%). There were significant improvements in morning lingering in bed (P=.03); total wake time (P=.02); sleep efficiency (P=.002); total sleep time (P=.03); and self-reported insomnia severity (P=.001), anxiety (P=.002), depression (P=.004), and energy (P=.01). Conclusions: Our results support the feasibility, acceptability, credibility, and preliminary efficacy of DOZE. AYAs are able to set and achieve goals based on tailored feedback on their sleep habits, which is consistent with research suggesting that AYAs prefer autonomy in their health care choices and produce good results when given tools that support their autonomy. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03960294; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03960294.</p
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