Search results for " social factors"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Bridging the gap between research into biological and psychosocial models of psychosis.

2015

Paul Bebbington's recent Special Article provides an excellent synthesis of recent advances in psychosocial research on psychosis. However, we doubt that a model based solely on social epidemiology and cognitive theory can totally describe psychosis, and to be fair, Bebbington does not suggest that it does. A complete model must also incorporate what we have learned from non-social epidemiology, neuroscience, and genetics. Evidence indicates that both the social risk factors that interest Bebbington and biological risk factors, such as abuse of stimulants and cannabis, can provoke psychotic symptoms by dysregulating striatal dopamine. The role of neurodevelopmental deviance also needs to be…

schizophrenianeurodevelopmentSettore M-PSI/08 - Psicologia ClinicaCommentarydopamine; genetics; neurodevelopment; psychosis; schizophrenia; social factorsgeneticspsychosisgeneticdopaminepsychosiSettore MED/25 - Psichiatriasocial factorsShanghai archives of psychiatry
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Speaker variables and their relation to language change

2018

The aim of this chapter is to discuss the relationship between variation processes and linguistic change and the speaker variables identified by Romance sociolinguistic studies. In particular, Romance sociolinguistics focuses on three different points of view: the socio-biographical characteristics of the speaker; the varieties related to social differences, and the relation between social groups and linguistic repertoire. In our work, we will study the socio-biographical characteristics, that Anglo-American linguistics defines as “speaker variables”, analyzing those variables more closely related in Romance studies to the diastratic vari-ation (age, sex/gender, social class). In certain ca…

Settore L-FIL-LET/12 - Linguistica Italianaspeaker variables social factors variation and change
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Human-to-Human Interaction: The Killer Application of Ubiquitous Computing?

2017

Twenty-five years past the Weiser’s vision of Ubiquitous Computing, and there is not a clear understanding of what is or is not a pervasive system. Due to the loose boundaries of such paradigm, almost any kind of remotely ac-cessible networked system is classified as a pervasive system. We think that that is mainly due to the lack of killer applications that could make this vi-sion clearer. Actually, we think that the most promising killer application is already here, but we are so used to it that we do not see it, as a perfect fitting of the Weiser’s vision: the Human-to-Human Interaction mediated by com-puters.

Settore ING-INF/05 - Sistemi Di Elaborazione Delle Informazioni020203 distributed computingUbiquitous computingSettore INF/01 - InformaticaComputer scienceSocial Factor02 engineering and technologyComputer-Mediated Communicationcomputer.software_genreUbiquitous Computing; Social Factors; Computer-Mediated CommunicationUbiquitous ComputingHuman interactionHuman–computer interaction020204 information systems0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringOperating systemcomputer
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