85 research outputs found

    Challenging notions of gendered game play: teenagers playing `The Sims`

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    This paper challenges notions of gendered game playing practice implicit in much research into young women\u27s involvement with the computer gaming culture. It draws on a study of Australian teenagers playing The Sims Deluxe as part of an English curriculum unit and insights from feminist media studies to explore relationships between gender and game playing practices. Departing from a reliance on predetermined notions of &ldquo;gender&rdquo;, &ldquo;domestic space&rdquo;, and &ldquo;successful game play&rdquo;, it conceptualizes The Sims as a game in which the boundaries between gender and domestic space are disturbed. It argues that observing students\u27 constructions of gender and domestic space through the act of game play itself provides a more productive insight into the gendered dimensions of game play for educators wishing to work computer games such as The Sims into curriculum development.<br /

    A cognitive science analysis of the Quaker Business Method: is how it works why it works?

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    The Quaker Business Method (QBM) has been in development for over 300 years. Quakers believe that the QBM is an effective means for making decisions. This paper develops a tripartite theoretical framework to analyze the QBM in order to examine its efficacy, both in terms of the quality of its processes and the morality of its decisions. The framework encompasses: (1) a decomposition of the QBM as a set of tools; (2) a selection of theories and models from cognitive science that explain how humans think; (3) a set of relational models that can be used to objectively judge the morality of different forms of human behavioural interactions. Overall, it appears that QBM tools may counter the deficits in natural human abilities to reason and solve problems, and that they may promote decision making practices that are moral and that the resulting decisions, themselves, may be moral

    Nurses' perceptions of aids and obstacles to the provision of optimal end of life care in ICU

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    Contains fulltext : 172380.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access

    Iron deficiency and risk factors for lower iron stores in 6-24-month-old New Zealanders.

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    OBJECTIVES: To determine the prevalence of biochemical iron deficiency and identify factors associated with ferritin levels among 6-24-month-old urban South Island New Zealand children. DESIGN: Cross-sectional survey conducted from May 1998 to March 1999. SETTING: The cities of Christchurch, Dunedin and Invercargill. SUBJECTS: A total of 323 randomly selected 6-24-month-old children participated (response rate 61%) of which 263 provided a blood sample. METHODS: A complete blood cell count, zinc protoporphyrin, serum ferritin and C-reactive protein were measured on nonfasting venipuncture blood samples, 3-day weighed food records and general questionnaire data were collected. RESULTS: Among children with C-reactive proteinboys), ethnicity (Caucasian>non-Caucasian), weight-for-age percentiles (negative) and birth weight (positive) were associated with ferritin after adjusting for infection and socioeconomic status. When current consumption of iron fortified formula and >500 ml of cows' milk per day were included, these were associated with a 22% increase and 25% decrease in ferritin, respectively (R2=0.28). CONCLUSIONS: The presence of suboptimal iron status (29%) among young New Zealand children is cause for concern, even though severe iron deficiency is rare, because children with marginal iron status are at risk of developing severe iron deficiency if exposed to a physiological challenge

    Demonstrating the value of cross-ecosystem syntheses and comparisons in animal movement and acoustic telemetry research

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    Ecological and fisheries research continues to shift emphasis from single isolated studies, to studies focused on understanding more regional and global processes. At the same time, the growing and wide-spread use of acoustic telemetry has inspired the formation of telemetry networks. A potential way to increase the impact of acoustic telemetry networks, and answer broad scale ecological questions is the promotion of cross-site ecosystem studies, or the comparison and synthesis of animal behavior among spatially distinct units. In this introduction paper we 1) Overview papers featured in the special issue, ‘Using telemetry for cross-ecosystem comparisons of animal behaviors’ 2) provide a summary of one network that has integrated cross-site research into their mission, the National Science Foundation’s Long Term Ecological Research network (LTER, U.S.) And, 3) offer suggestions on ways telemetry researchers and networks can facilitate cross-ecosystem study using the LTER network as a model. Understanding processes related to global change, better defining stock structure, and other larger spatial scale questions are at the forefront of conservation and science. Pairing telemetry networks with cross-site initiatives provides a great venue to facilitate these broad scale science questions
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