1,781 research outputs found
Mothers and fathers with Binge Eating Disorder and their 18-36 months old children: a longitudinal study on parent-infant interactions and offspring\u2019s emotional-behavioral profiles
Maternal Binge Eating Disorder (BED) has been suggested to be associated with poor parent\u2013infant interactions during feeding and with children\u2019s emotional and behavioral problems during infancy (Blissett and Haycraft, 2011). The role of fathers has received increasing consideration in recent years, yet the research has not focused on interactional patterns between fathers with BED and their children. The present study aimed to longitudinally investigate the in\ufb02uence of BED diagnosis, in one or both parents, on parent\u2013infant feeding interactions and on children\u2019s emotional\u2013behavioral functioning. 612 subjects (408 parents; 204 children), recruited in mental health services and pre-schools in Central Italy, were divided into four groups: Group 1 included families with both parents diagnosed with BED, Group 2 and 3 included families with one parent diagnosed with BED, Group 0 was a healthy control. The assessment took place at T1 (18 months of age of children) and T2 (36 months of age of children):
feeding interactions were assessed through the Scale for the Assessment of Feeding Interactions (SVIA) while child emotional\u2013behavioral functioning was evaluated with the Child Behavior Check-List (CBCL). When compared to healthy controls, the groups with one or both parents diagnosed with BED showed higher scores on the SVIA and on the CBCL internalizing and externalizing scales, indicating poorer adult\u2013child feeding interactions and higher emotional\u2013behavioral dif\ufb01culties. A direct in\ufb02uence of parental psychiatric diagnosis on the quality of mother\u2013infant and father\u2013infant interactions was also found, both at T1 and T2. Moreover, dyadic feeding interactions mediated the in\ufb02uence of parental diagnosis on children\u2019s psychological functioning. The presence of BED diagnosis in one or both parents seems to in\ufb02uence the severity of maladaptive
parent\u2013infant exchanges during feeding and offspring\u2019s emotional\u2013behavioral problems over time, consequently affecting different areas of children\u2019s psychological functioning. This is the \ufb01rst study to demonstrate the speci\ufb01c effects of maternal and paternal BED on infant development. These results could inform prevention and intervention programs in families with one or both parents diagnosed with BED
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The Consumption Response to Liquidity-Enhancing Transfers: Evidence from Italian Earthquakes
Exploiting three Italian earthquakes as quasi-experiments, we analyze the response of homeowners' consumption to targeted transfers, financing housing reconstruction over time. Like loans, these transfers mainly affect the liquidity of households' wealth in the short run: we show that they have no effect on consumption over a multi-year horizon. Yet, the access to reconstruction funds has significantly heterogeneous effects on impact: it strongly raises non-durable consumption by households with low liquidity and bank debt (the 'wealthy-hand-to-mouth'); it makes no difference for liquid households. Consistently, in either group, consumption is insensitive to transfer funds that accrue directly to firms
Mafia and public spending: Evidence on the fiscal multiplier from a quasi-experiment
A law issued to combat political corruption and Mafia infiltration of city councils in Italy has resulted in episodes of large, unanticipated, temporary contractions in local public spending. Using these episodes as instruments, we estimate the output multiplier of spending cuts at provincial level—controlling for national monetary and fiscal policy, and holding the tax burden of local residents constant—to be 1.5. Assuming that lagged spending is exogenous to current output brings the estimate of the overall multiplier up to 1.9. These results suggest that local spending adjustment may be quite consequential for local activity. (JEL D72, E62, H71, K42) The work on this paper is part of PEGGED (Politics,
Economics and Global Governance: The European Dimensions), Contract no. SSH7-CT-2008-217559 within the
seventh Framework Programme for Research and Technological Development. Support from the Pierre Werner
Chair Programme at the European University Institute is also gratefully acknowledged.This is the version of record, which can also be found on the publisher's website at: http://pubs.aeaweb.org/doi/pdfplus/10.1257/aer.104.7.2185 © American Economic Associatio
5d-5f Electric-multipole Transitions in Uranium Dioxide Probed by Non-resonant Inelastic X-ray Scattering
Non-resonant inelastic x ray scattering (NIXS) experiments have been
performed to probe the 5d-5f electronic transitions at the uranium O(4,5)
absorption edges in uranium dioxide. For small values of the scattering vector
q, the spectra are dominated by dipole-allowed transitions encapsulated within
the giant resonance, whereas for higher values of q the multipolar transitions
of rank 3 and 5 give rise to strong and well-defined multiplet structure in the
pre-edge region. The origin of the observed non-dipole multiplet structures is
explained on the basis of many-electron atomic spectral calculations. The
results obtained demonstrate the high potential of NIXS as a bulk-sensitive
technique for the characterization of the electronic properties of actinide
materials.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review Letters on 31 December 200
Temperature dependence of iron local magnetic moment in phase-separated superconducting chalcogenide
We have studied local magnetic moment and electronic phase separation in
superconducting KFeSe by x-ray emission and absorption
spectroscopy. Detailed temperature dependent measurements at the Fe K-edge have
revealed coexisting electronic phases and their correlation with the transport
properties. By cooling down, the local magnetic moment of Fe shows a sharp drop
across the superconducting transition temperature (T) and the coexisting
phases exchange spectral weights with the low spin state gaining intensity at
the expense of the higher spin state. After annealing the sample across the
iron-vacancy order temperature, the system does not recover the initial state
and the spectral weight anomaly at T as well as superconductivity
disappear. The results clearly underline that the coexistence of the low spin
and high spin phases and the transitions between them provide unusual magnetic
fluctuations and have a fundamental role in the superconducting mechanism of
electronically inhomogeneous KFeSe system.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
De-excitation spectroscopy of strongly interacting Rydberg gases
We present experimental results on the controlled de-excitation of Rydberg
states in a cold gas of Rb atoms. The effect of the van der Waals interactions
between the Rydberg atoms is clearly seen in the de-excitation spectrum and
dynamics. Our observations are confirmed by numerical simulations. In
particular, for off-resonant (facilitated) excitation we find that the
de-excitation spectrum reflects the spatial arrangement of the atoms in the
quasi one-dimensional geometry of our experiment. We discuss future
applications of this technique and implications for detection and controlled
dissipation schemes.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Sc substitution for Mg in MgB2: effects on Tc and Kohn anomaly
Here we report synthesis and characterization of Mg_{1-x}Sc_{x}B_{2}
(0.12T_{c}>6 K.
We find that the Sc doping moves the chemical potential through the 2D/3D
electronic topological transition (ETT) in the sigma band where the ``shape
resonance" of interband pairing occurs. In the 3D regime beyond the ETT we
observe a hardening of the E_{2g} Raman mode with a significant line-width
narrowing due to suppression of the Kohn anomaly over the range 0<q<2k_{F}.Comment: 8 pages, 4 EPS figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Electronic Structure of CeFeAsO1-xFx (x=0, 0.11/x=0.12) compounds
We report an extensive study on the intrinsic bulk electronic structure of
the high-temperature superconductor CeFeAsO0.89F0.11 and its parent compound
CeFeAsO by soft and hard x-ray photoemission, x-ray absorption and soft-x-ray
emission spectroscopies. The complementary surface/bulk probing depth, and the
elemental and chemical sensitivity of these techniques allows resolving the
intrinsic electronic structure of each element and correlating it with the
local structure, which has been probed by extended-x-ray absorption fine
structure spectroscopy. The measurements indicate a predominant 4f1 (i.e. Ce3+)
initial state configuration for Cerium and an effective valence-band-to-4f
charge-transfer screening of the core hole. The spectra also reveal the
presence of a small Ce f0 initial state configuration, which we assign to the
occurrence of an intermediate valence state. The data reveal a reasonably good
agreement with the partial density of states as obtained in standard density
functional calculations over a large energy range. Implications for the
electronic structure of these materials are discussed.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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