1,880 research outputs found
Moral Values and Family in Middle School Students of the Concepción Province
Se presenta un aspecto de la moralidad juvenil, medido por la aceptación de conductas morales cuestionables (Escala de Harding y Phillips, 1986), y sus relaciones con variables familiares, en una muestra aleatoria de 296 estudiantes de enseñanza media, de la provincia de Concepción, Chile.El funcionamiento psicométrico de la escala de Harding y Phillips fue adecuado.En general, la permisividad moral fue baja, con una más alta permisividad sexual yuna más baja legal y personal.Hubo correlación entre las variables funcionamiento familiar y los niveles de permisividad. A mayor familismo e interacción familiar, menor permisividad moral y a mayorinsatisfacción con el funcionamiento familiar, mayor permisividad moral.This study presents an aspect of youth morality, especifically acceptance ofquestionable moral behaviors and its relation to familiy structure and functioning instudents of secundary education at the Province of Concepción, Chile. For this purpose a random sample of 296 students was surveyed.The Harding and Phillips Scale (1986) showed adequate psicometrical functioning.In general, the moral permissiveness detected may be considered low, but higherlevels of permissivenes were observed in sexuality dimention and lower levels weremeasured on personal and legal permissiveness.A correlation was found between family and permissiveness. The greater familismand family interaction in secondary educational-level students, the lesser moralpermissiviness; and the greater dissatisfaction with familiy functioning, the greatermoral permissiveness
Emergence of diversity in a model ecosystem
The biological requirements for an ecosystem to develop and maintain species
diversity are in general unknown. Here we consider a model ecosystem of sessile
and mutually excluding organisms competing for space [Mathiesen et al. Phys.
Rev. Lett. 107, 188101 (2011)]. The competition is controlled by an interaction
network with fixed links chosen by a Bernoulli process. New species are
introduced in the system at a predefined rate. In the limit of small
introduction rates, the system becomes bistable and can undergo a phase
transition from a state of low diversity to high diversity. We suggest that
patches of isolated meta-populations formed by the collapse of cyclic relations
are essential for the transition to the state of high diversity.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in PRE. Typos corrected,
Fig.3A and Fig.6 update
Ecosystems with mutually exclusive interactions self-organize to a state of high diversity
Ecological systems comprise an astonishing diversity of species that
cooperate or compete with each other forming complex mutual dependencies. The
minimum requirements to maintain a large species diversity on long time scales
are in general unknown. Using lichen communities as an example, we propose a
model for the evolution of mutually excluding organisms that compete for space.
We suggest that chain-like or cyclic invasions involving three or more species
open for creation of spatially separated sub-populations that subsequently can
lead to increased diversity. In contrast to its non-spatial counterpart, our
model predicts robust co-existence of a large number of species, in accordance
with observations on lichen growth. It is demonstrated that large species
diversity can be obtained on evolutionary timescales, provided that
interactions between species have spatial constraints. In particular, a phase
transition to a sustainable state of high diversity is identified.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Adapting to Climate Change in Reindeer Herding: The Nation-State as Problem and Solution.
This paper discusses the role of nation-states and their systems of gover- nance as sources of barriers and solutions to adaptation to climate change from the point of view of Saami reindeer herders. The Saami, inhabiting the northernmost areas of Fennoscandia, is one of more than twenty ethnic groups in the circumpolar Arctic that base their traditional living on reindeer herding. Climate change is likely to affect the Saami regions severely, with winter temperatures predicted to increase by up to 7 centigrade. We argue that the pastoral practices of the Saami herders are inherently better suited to handle huge natural variation in climatic con- ditions than most other cultures. Indeed, the core of their pastoral practices and herding knowledge is skillful adaptation to unusually frequent and rapid change and variability. This paper argues that the key to handle permanent changes successfully is that herders themselves have sufficient degrees of freedom to act. Considering the similarities in herding practices in the fours nation-states between which Saami culture is now divided . Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Russia . the systems of governance are surprisingly different. Indeed, the very definition of what is required to be defined as an ethnic Saami is very different in the three Nordic countries. We argue that timely adjust- ments modifying the structures of governance will be key to the survival of the Saami reindeer herding culture. Since the differences in governance regimes . and the need to change national governance structures . are so central to our argument, we spend some time tracing the origins of these systems.
Comparing the temperatures of galaxy clusters from hydro-N-body simulations to Chandra and XMM-Newton observations
Theoretical studies of the physical processes guiding the formation and
evolution of galaxies and galaxy clusters in the X-ray are mainly based on the
results of numerical hydrodynamical N-body simulations, which in turn are often
directly compared to X-ray observations. Although trivial in principle, these
comparisons are not always simple. We demonstrate that the projected
spectroscopic temperature of thermally complex clusters obtained from X-ray
observations is always lower than the emission-weighed temperature, which is
widely used in the analysis of numerical simulations. We show that this
temperature bias is mainly related to the fact that the emission-weighted
temperature does not reflect the actual spectral properties of the observed
source. This has important implications for the study of thermal structures in
clusters, especially when strong temperature gradients, like shock fronts, are
present. Because of this bias, in real observations shock fronts appear much
weaker than what is predicted by emission-weighted temperature maps, and may
even not be detected. This may explain why, although numerical simulations
predict that shock fronts are a quite common feature in clusters of galaxies,
to date there are very few observations of objects in which they are clearly
seen. To fix this problem we propose a new formula, the spectroscopic-like
temperature function, and show that, for temperature larger than 3 keV, it
approximates the spectroscopic temperature better than few per cent, making
simulations more directly comparable to observations.Comment: Submitted for publication in MNRAS; 15 pages, 10 color figures and 13
BW figures,mn2e.cls. High resolution figures available here:
http://people.roma2.infn.it/~mazzotta/preprints/mazzotta.pd
Competition between Diffusion and Fragmentation: An Important Evolutionary Process of Nature
We investigate systems of nature where the common physical processes
diffusion and fragmentation compete. We derive a rate equation for the size
distribution of fragments. The equation leads to a third order differential
equation which we solve exactly in terms of Bessel functions. The stationary
state is a universal Bessel distribution described by one parameter, which fits
perfectly experimental data from two very different system of nature, namely,
the distribution of ice crystal sizes from the Greenland ice sheet and the
length distribution of alpha-helices in proteins.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, (minor changes
Persistent punishment : users views of short prison sentences
Semi-structured interviews were conducted of 22 prisoners to gather information about the characteristic features of short prison sentences. Themes raised in comments included: the frequency and quality of sentences, addiction, family, and penal legitimacy. Most of the participants had extensive experience of prison, and the effects of this played out across sentences and years, accumulating and amplifying impacts. And, despite expressions of guilt and remorse, most participants saw their sentence as unjust, and mainly a reaction to offending history. We conclude by suggesting the need for research to shift focus from evaluating individual penal interventions towards more holistic and narrative accounts that cut across sentences
Diffusion, Fragmentation and Coagulation Processes: Analytical and Numerical Results
We formulate dynamical rate equations for physical processes driven by a
combination of diffusive growth, size fragmentation and fragment coagulation.
Initially, we consider processes where coagulation is absent. In this case we
solve the rate equation exactly leading to size distributions of Bessel type
which fall off as for large -values. Moreover, we provide
explicit formulas for the expansion coefficients in terms of Airy functions.
Introducing the coagulation term, the full non-linear model is mapped exactly
onto a Riccati equation that enables us to derive various asymptotic solutions
for the distribution function. In particular, we find a standard exponential
decay, , for large , and observe a crossover from the Bessel
function for intermediate values of . These findings are checked by
numerical simulations and we find perfect agreement between the theoretical
predictions and numerical results.Comment: (28 pages, 6 figures, v2+v3 minor corrections
Impacts of a Changing Climate and Land Use on Reindeer Pastoralism: Indigenous Knowledge and Remote Sensing
The Arctic is home to many indigenous peoples, including those who depend on reindeer herding for their livelihood, in one of the harshest environments in the world. For the largely nomadic peoples, reindeer not only form a substantial part of the Arctic food base and economy, but they are also culturally important, shaping their way of life, mythologies, festivals and ceremonies. Reindeer pastoralism or husbandry has been practiced by numerous peoples all across Eurasia for thousands of years and involves moving herds of reindeer, which are very docile animals, from pasture to pasture depending on the season. Thus, herders must adapt on a daily basis to find optimal conditions for their herds according to the constantly changing conditions. Climate change and variability plus rapid development are increasingly creating major changes in the physical environment, ecology, and cultures of these indigenous reindeer herder communities in the North, and climate changes are occurring significantly faster in the Arctic than the rest of the globe, with correspondingly dramatic impacts (Oskal, 2008). In response to these changes, Eurasian reindeer herders have created the EALAT project, a comprehensive new initiative to study these impacts and to develop local adaptation strategies based upon their traditional knowledge of the land and its uses - in targeted partnership with the science and remote sensing community - involving extensive collaborations and coproduction of knowledge to minimize the impacts of the various changes. This chapter provides background on climate and development challenges to reindeer husbandry across the Arctic and an overview of the EALAT initiative, with an emphasis on indigenous knowledge, remote sensing, Geographic Information Systems (GIS), and other scientific data to 'co-produce' datasets for use by herders for improved decision-making and herd management. It also provides a description of the EALAT monitoring data integration and sharing system and portal being developed for reindeer pastoralism. In addition, the chapter provides some preliminary results from the EALAT Project, including some early remote sensing research results
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