9,329 research outputs found
The peacebuilding potential of healthcare training programs.
Global health professionals regularly conduct healthcare trainings, such as first aid courses, in disadvantaged communities across the world. Many of these communities lack healthcare infrastructure because of war and political conflict. The authors draw on their experience conducting a first aid course in South Sudan to provide a perspective on how healthcare trainings for people with no medical background can be used to bridge ethnic, political, and religious differences. They argue that a necessary step for turning a healthcare training into a vehicle for peacebuilding is to bring people from different communities to the same physical space to learn the course material together. Importantly, simply encouraging contact between communities is unlikely to improve intergroup relations and could be detrimental if the following features are not incorporated. Buy-in from respected community leaders is essential to ensure that training participants trust that their safety during the training sessions is not at risk. Trainers should also create a supportive environment by conferring equal status and respect on all trainees. Finally, hands-on training exercises allow for positive interactions between trainees from different groups, which in turn can challenge stereotypes and facilitate cross-group friendships. These features map onto social psychological principles that have been shown to improve intergroup relations and are consistent with lessons learned from peace through health initiatives in public health and medicine. By adopting peacebuilding features, healthcare trainings can serve their primary goal of medical education and provide the added benefit of strengthening social relations
Association of fried food consumption with all cause, cardiovascular, and cancer mortality: Prospective cohort study
On a conjecture about Dirac's delta representation using q-exponentials
A new representation of Dirac's delta-distribution, based on the so-called
q-exponentials, has been recently conjectured. We prove here that this
conjecture is indeed valid
Visual Motion Area MT+/V5 Responds to Auditory Motion in Human Sight-Recovery Subjects
Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we found that cortical visual motion area MT+/V5 responded to auditory motion in two rare subjects who had been blind since early childhood and whose vision was partially recovered in adulthood. Visually normal control subjects did not show similar auditory responses. These auditory responses in MT+ were specific to motion compared with other complex auditory stimuli including frequency sweeps and speech. Thus, MT+ developed motion-specific responses to nonvisual input, suggesting that cross-modal plasticity can be influenced by the normal functional specialization of a cortical region. Regarding sight recovery after early blindness, our results further demonstate that cross-modal responses coexist with regained visual responses within the visual cortex
Melting-freezing cycles in a relatively sheared pair of crystalline monolayers
The nonequilibrium dynamical behaviour that arises when two ordered
two-dimensional monolayers of particles are sheared over each other is studied
in Brownian dynamics simulations. A curious sequence of nonequilibrium states
is observed as the driving rate is increased, the most striking of which is a
sliding state with irregular alternation between disordered and ordered states.
We comment on possible mechanisms underlying these cycles, and experiments that
could observe them.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, minor changes in text and figures, references
adde
Double-heterostructure cavities: from theory to design
We derive a frequency-domain-based approach for radiation (FAR) from
double-heterostructure cavity (DHC) modes. We use this to compute the quality
factors and radiation patterns of DHC modes. The semi-analytic nature of our
method enables us to provide a general relationship between the radiation
pattern of the cavity and its geometry. We use this to provide general designs
for ultrahigh quality factor DHCs with radiation patterns that are engineered
to emit vertically
vbyCaHbeta CCD Photometry of Clusters. VIII. The Super-Metal Rich, Old Open Cluster NGC 6791
CCD photometry on the intermediate-band vbyCaHbeta system is presented for
the metal-rich, old open cluster, NGC 6791. Preliminary analysis led to [Fe/H]
above +0.4 with an anomalously high reddening and an age below 5 Gyr. A revised
calibration between (b-y)_0 and [Fe/H] at a given temperature shows that the
traditional color-metallicity relations underestimate the color of the turnoff
stars at high metallicity. With the revised relation, the metallicity from hk
and the reddening for NGC 6791 become [Fe/H] = +0.45 +/- 0.04 and E(b-y) =
0.113 +/- 0.012 or E(B-V) = 0.155 +/- 0.016. Using the same technique,
reanalysis of the photometry for NGC 6253 produces [Fe/H] = +0.58 +/-0.04 and
E(b-y) = 0.120 +/- 0.018 or E(B-V) = 0.160 +/- 0.025. The errors quoted include
both the internal and external errors. For NGC 6791, the metallicity from m_1
is a factor of two below that from hk, a result that may be coupled to the
consistently low metal abundance from DDO photometry of the cluster and the
C-deficiency found from high dispersion spectroscopy. E(B-V) is the same value
predicted from Galactic reddening maps. With E(B-V) = 0.15 and [Fe/H] = +0.45,
the available isochrones predict an age of 7.0 +/- 1.0 Gyr and an apparent
modulus of (m-M) = 13.60 +/- 0.15, with the dominant source of the uncertainty
arising from inconsistencies among the isochrones. The reanalysis of NGC 6253
with the revised lower reddening confirms that on both the hk and m_1
metallicity scales, NGC 6253, while less than half the age of NGC 6791, remains
at least as metal-rich as NGC 6791, if not richer.Comment: Accepted for Astronomical Journal. 42 p. latex file includes 11
figures and 3 tables, one of which is a short version of a data table to
appear in online AJ in its entiret
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