27 research outputs found

    CREATING A NETWORK FOR ALTERNATIVES IN EDUCATIONAL PRACTICE

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    application/pdfThe 5th Comparative Education Society of Asia Biennial Conference 2005 (Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, SKUM & CESA. 30-31 May 2005)conference pape

    Feasibility and Effectiveness of Group Telemusic Therapy with Adult Survivors of Acquired Brain Injury (ABI): A Retrospective Pilot Trial

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    Music therapists have utilized technology in their clinical work for decades. Yet music therapy delivered in a telehealth model – telemusic therapy – has rarely been described in the literature until recently. This study stems from telemusic therapy services the researcher-interventionist was contracted to provide to adult acquired brain injury (ABI) survivors. The existing literature has primarily reported on synchronous telemusic therapy conducted via internet-based videoconference platforms with individual clients or groups who were colocated but not face-to-face with the clinician. Technological issues were cited as limitations. Only one article described small group telemusic therapy where participants were each located at their individual homes; no literature was found for large groups of non-colocated participants. Further, the telemusic therapy literature very rarely reports empirical data. This thesis presents the results of a pilot study exploring the feasibility and effectiveness of telemusic therapy on well-being for adult brain injury survivors who participate independently from their homes. This retrospective study utilized a quasi-experimental, pre/post-session repeated measures design to examine data from a 20-session, 10-week, group telemusic therapy program (N = 15). Clinician-developed pre/post measures of well-being were administered each session. A Qualtrics Likert scale survey exploring audiovisual quality, emotional support, the therapeutic relationship, and social-emotional connection between participants was issued during the 5th and 10th weeks. Results: Mean and median difference of pre/post measures were significant for increasing well-being at α = 0.5. Frequency distributions of the survey ratings of more than or very much adequate for quality of audio and video: 78.6% – 85.7%; ratings of more than or very much adequate for emotional support, formation of a therapeutic relationship and creating connections with other participants, respectively: 85.7%, 78.6%, 92.9 %. The results support the feasibility and effectiveness of group telemusic therapy for increasing well-being in adult ABI survivors who attend from their individual homes. Study limitations include small N, low return rate for surveys, and unvalidated measures.It is noteworthy that in each session, the music therapy group successfully engaged in real-time active music making with all members playing and all microphones on. No audio delay was detected. This phenomenon has been described in the literature as improbable. The cause of such low latency is unknown. These findings demonstrate that participants using personal computers or laptops and residential broadband Internet experience the audio and visual components of synchronous music therapy as more than adequate. A real-time telehealth model is a viable means for providing group music therapy.Music Therap

    THE DEMISE OF THE LONE STAR RAIL DISTRICT: A CASE STUDY IN THE FAILURE TO EXPAND PASSENGER RAIL SERVICE IN TEXAS

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    While passenger rail service has significantly grown in some parts of the United States, as evidenced by the new Brightline / Virgin Rail USA service in Florida and the expansion of passenger rail service in the State of Virginia, there has been significant resistance to the growth of passenger rail service in Texas, as evidenced by the demise of the Lone Star Rail District (LSRD) in 2016. Why the resistance? This exploratory research provides insights that address that question by identifying the contributing factors that led to the LSRD’s failure. A political economy framework incorporated a stakeholders’ perspective in an analysis of LSRD’s termination. An archival document study was used to identify key stakeholders and to then inform the design of, and the questions used in, an interview study of those key stakeholders. This research identified eight factors that contributed to the demise of the LSRD; 1) prior rail / transit failures in Texas; 2) structure of the Texas legislation; 3) inadequate political support; 4) organizational paralysis; 5) resistance from the Texas Department of Transportation; 6) flawed strategy; 7) disruptive technology; and 8) the Bexar County (Texas) Judge and the president of the Union Pacific Railroad. Although hundreds of individuals were involved during the LSRD’s nineteen-year history, in the end, three key decision makers and one key staff person were attributed with ending the organization’s existence. By identifying and analyzing the constellation of forces that were at play in the Lone Star Rail District, lessons were learned that could be applied (or avoided) across an array of similar rail initiatives, not only in Texas, but throughout the United States. A clear and identifiable political champion; adequate funding; competent project management; a clear project design and budget; a cooperating Class-1 freight railroad partner; adequate property ownership or right-of-way access; and an economically competitive alternative to automated highway vehicle technology; should all be considered necessary elements for the success of future passenger rail expansion projects.Business Administration/Interdisciplinar

    <論説>天皇の象徴性の再認識

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    application/pdf大阪府立大學經濟研究. 1968, 13(6), p.27-35departmental bulletin pape

    業界団体の制度への適応活動と制度多元性の影響 : 日本動物園水族館協会と日本水族館協会の事例

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    組織は,複数の制度ロジックから影響を受けているが,こうした制度多元性によって,関係する組織間でコンフリクトが発生することがある。本研究では,業界団体とその所属組織の事例をもとに,業界団体が正統性獲得のために特定の制度ロジックを受け入れることで,団体内部でコンフリクトが発生しうること,またその現実的な解決策として組織分離という方法が採られることを明らかにした。Organizations are influenced by multiple institutional logics, and this institutional pluralism can cause conflicts among related organizations. Based on the case of an association and its affiliated organizations, this study clarifies that conflicts occur within an association when it accepts a particular institutional logic in order to gain legitimacy, and that organizational separation is adopted as a practical solution to this problem.departmental bulletin pape

    Labor and Democracy

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    The Crosscultural Manager and the Japanese Way of Management in South China(9)‐2a

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    障害者雇用とダイバーシティ・マネジメント -特例子会社スミセイハーモニーを事例として-

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    Articledepartmental bulletin pape

    New in vivo approach to broaden the thioredoxin family interactome in chloroplasts

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    Post-translational redox modifications provide an important mechanism for the control of major cellular processes. Thioredoxins (Trxs), which are key actors in this regulatory mechanism, are ubiquitous proteins that catalyse thiol-disulfide exchange reactions. In chloroplasts, Trx f, Trx m and NADPH-dependent Trx reductase C (NTRC) have been identified as transmitters of the redox signal by transferring electrons to downstream target enzymes. The number of characterised Trx targets has greatly increased in the last few years, but most of them were determined using in vitro procedures lacking isoform specificity. With this background, we have developed a new in vivo approach based on the overexpression of His-tagged single-cysteine mutants of Trx f, Trx m or NTRC into Nicotiana benthamiana plants. The over-expressed mutated Trxs, capable of forming a stable mixed disulfide bond with target proteins in plants, were immobilised on affinity columns packed with Ni-NTA agarose, and the covalently linked targets were eluted with dithiothreitol and identified by mass spectrometry-based proteomics. The in vivo approach allowed identification of 6, 9 and 42 new potential targets for Trx f, Trx m and NTRC, respectively, and an apparent specificity between NTRC and Trxs was achieved. Functional analysis showed that these targets are involved in several cellular processes.M.A. was supported by the “Juan de la Cierva-formación” postdoctoral fellowship from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation MCIN/AEI/ 10.13039/501100011033 and the European Union “Next Generation EU/PRTR”

    Optimal stomatal behaviour around the world

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    © 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved. Stomatal conductance (g s) is a key land-surface attribute as it links transpiration, the dominant component of global land evapotranspiration, and photosynthesis, the driving force of the global carbon cycle. Despite the pivotal role of g s in predictions of global water and carbon cycle changes, a global-scale database and an associated globally applicable model of g s that allow predictions of stomatal behaviour are lacking. Here, we present a database of globally distributed g s obtained in the field for a wide range of plant functional types (PFTs) and biomes. We find that stomatal behaviour differs among PFTs according to their marginal carbon cost of water use, as predicted by the theory underpinning the optimal stomatal model and the leaf and wood economics spectrum. We also demonstrate a global relationship with climate. These findings provide a robust theoretical framework for understanding and predicting the behaviour of g s across biomes and across PFTs that can be applied to regional, continental and global-scale modelling of ecosystem productivity, energy balance and ecohydrological processes in a future changing climate
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