Search results for "Psychomotor learning"

showing 10 items of 95 documents

Consistencies of psychomotor styles in interpersonal tasks

1975

Abstract.— Interpersonal behaviour of individuals in five tasks (individual performance, two dyadic tasks, two small-group tasks) was videotaped and coded on 11 psychomotor categories concerning (a) movements regulating interaction, (b) indications of tension, and (c) temperamental acts. The individual consistencies were examined on the basis of correlational analyses and task similarities. The consistency of individual psychomotor behaviour across all the tasks was highest in the number of selfinitiated acts (psychomotor activeness). Consistency was also found in the total tension score and the utilization of large/narrow space, while the effect of the particular tasks was clearly demonstr…

Psychomotor learningTask (computing)Consistency (negotiation)Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Developmental and Educational PsychologyGeneral MedicineInterpersonal communicationDispositionPsychologyGeneral PsychologyDevelopmental psychologyStyle (sociolinguistics)Scandinavian Journal of Psychology
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Psychotropic drugs and driving: prevalence and types

2013

Background Some psychotropic medications (e.g., benzodiazepines, sedative antidepressants, etc.) may impair cognitive and psychomotor functions and, therefore, endanger traffic safety (Ravera, Br J Clin Pharmacol, 72(3):505–513, 2011). They affect detection, registration, and information processing, problem solving, and decision-making processes, and they also affect emotional and social aspects. The objective of this research was to clarify three closely related issues that are significant for traffic safety: the prevalence of psychotropic drugs on driving, the most frequently used psychotropic drugs to treat depression, anxiety, insomnia, or any tranquilizers (whether it is a medical pres…

Psychomotor learningPublic healthmedicine.medical_specialtyPsychotropic drugsDriversEpidemiologybusiness.industryPoison controlAffect (psychology)MedicinesPsychiatry and Mental healthInjury preventionRoad safetyMedicineAnxietyPsychopharmacologyMedical prescriptionmedicine.symptomPrimary ResearchbusinessPsychiatryPsychotropic AgentAnnals of General Psychiatry
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Broad disruption of brain white matter microstructure and relationship with neuropsychological performance in male patients with severe alcohol depen…

2012

Aims In the last years, refined magnetic resonance diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) methods have become available to study microstructural alterations in the human brain. We investigated to what extent white matter tissue abnormalities are present in male patients after chronic, excessive alcohol consumption and if these alterations are correlated with measures of alcohol consumption and neuropsychological performance. Methods Twenty-four detoxified adult male patients with severe alcohol dependence and 23 healthy male control subjects were included in the study. Neuropsychological tests were assessed for executive function, attention, memory and visuospatial function. DTI was acquired and pr…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAlcohol DrinkingAudiologyNeuropsychological TestsCorpus callosumWhite matterExecutive FunctionFractional anisotropyNeural PathwaysmedicineHumansPsychiatryPsychomotor learningNerve Fibers UnmyelinatedAlcohol dependenceNeuropsychologyBrainGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedAlcoholismmedicine.anatomical_structureDiffusion Tensor ImagingCase-Control StudiesAnisotropyPsychologyNeurocognitivePsychomotor PerformanceDiffusion MRIAlcohol and alcoholism (Oxford, Oxfordshire)
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Computer Games and Fine Motor Skills

2012

The study seeks to determine the influence of computer games on fine motor skills in young adults, an area of incomplete understanding and verification. We hypothesized that computer gaming could have a positive influence on basic motor skills, such as precision, aiming, speed, dexterity, or tremor. We examined 30 habitual game users (F/M – 3/27; age range 20–25 years) of the highly interactive game Counter Strike, in which players impersonate soldiers on a battlefield, and 30 age- and gender-matched subjects who declared never to play games. Selected tests from the Vienna Test System were used to assess fine motor skills and tremor. The results demonstrate that the game users scored apprec…

Psychomotor learningmedicine.medical_specialtyPhysical medicine and rehabilitationBattlefieldComputer gamingmedicinePsychologyControl subjectshuman activitiesMotor skillTask (project management)Fine motorTest (assessment)
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Digital recording as a teaching and learning method in the skills laboratory.

2017

Aim and objectives To obtain information on how nursing students react to, think about and learn from digital recording as a learning and teaching method over time. Background Based on the teaching and learning philosophy of the university college, we used digital recording as a tool in our daily sessions in skills laboratory. However, most of the studies referred to in the background review had a duration of from only a few hours to a number of days. We found it valuable to design a study with a duration of two academic semesters. Design A descriptive and interpretative design was used. Method First-year bachelor-level students at the department of nursing participated in the study. Data c…

Self-AssessmentFormative Feedbackmedia_common.quotation_subjectTeaching methodVideo RecordingComputer-assisted web interviewing03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSurveys and QuestionnairesPedagogyComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATIONHumansLearningRelevance (information retrieval)030212 general & internal medicinePeer learningDiscovery learningGeneral Nursingmedia_commonDigital recordingPsychomotor learningMedical education030504 nursingTeachingEducation Nursing BaccalaureateGeneral MedicineFeelingStudents Nursing0305 other medical sciencePsychologyJournal of clinical nursing
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Learning Surgical Skills with Simulator Training: Residents’ Experiences and Perceptions

2011

Simulator training is becoming a more integral part of surgical psychomotor skills training for video-assisted operating techniques, which need to be practiced repeatedly and systematically. Studies concerning the implementation, realization, and potentiality of simulator training programs for hospital surgeons are needed. Also, trainees’ expectations of training, and the feasibility of combining such training with their hospital work, remain rather unknown. This paper presents important theoretical factors that influence surgical skills learning through computer-based simulator training. The curriculum and the study of learners’ training experiences are presented. Statistical analysis on p…

Psychomotor learningMedical educationbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjecteducationTraining (civil)Schedule (workplace)Work (electrical)PerceptionComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATIONSurgical skillsMedicinebusinessCurriculumSimulationmedia_commonTraining periodInSITE Conference
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Infantile spasms—A multidisciplinary challenge

1987

Is it not surpnsmg that we are unaware of an earlier description of infantile spasms (IS) than that of Dr West from 1841 [1] , though this is hardly a new disease? May be, it needed an experienced observer to delineate these paroxysmal behavioral patterns against the background of abnormal psychomotor development. Up to now , we are by no means less puzzled by this manifestation of seizures than our professional forefather. It was only recently that we realized that the West syndrome consists not only of more or less typical serial seizures, usually a pathognomonic EEG pattern, and developmental arrest [2] , but has to be regarded as an encephalopathy [3-5] interfering with virtually all hi…

Psychomotor learningPediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryEncephalopathyInfantWest SyndromeGeneral MedicineDiseasemedicine.diseaseDevelopmental NeuroscienceNeuroimagingPathognomonicPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthEtiologyHumansMedicineNeurology (clinical)businessSpasms InfantileSubclinical infectionBrain and Development
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A systematic review of neurodevelopmental effects of prenatal and postnatal organophosphate pesticide exposure

2014

Agricultural and residential use of organophosphate (OP) pesticides has increased in recent decades after banning some persistent pesticides. Although there is evidence of the effects of OPs on neurodevelopment and behaviour in adults, limited information is available about their effects in children, who might be more vulnerable to neurotoxic compounds. This paper was aimed at analysing the scientific evidence published to date on potential neurodevelopmental and behavioural effects of prenatal and postnatal exposure to OPs. A systematic review was undertaken to identify original articles published up to December 2012 evaluating prenatal or postnatal exposure to OPs in children and effects …

Mental developmentMalemedicine.medical_specialtyChild Behaviorprenatal exposureToxicologyToxicologychemistry.chemical_compoundAttention ProblemsChild DevelopmentFetusPregnancyEnvironmental healthEpidemiologyGenetic predispositionMedicineHumansPesticidesAdverse effectChildPrenatal exposurePsychomotor learningorganophosphorus pesticidesneurodevelopmentbusiness.industryOrganophosphateBrainGeneral MedicineEnvironmental ExposureOrganophosphateschemistryFemalepostnatal exposurebusiness
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Long-Term Outcome of Cognitive Impairment in Bipolar Disorder

2011

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the longitudinal course and outcome of cognitive deficits and their clinical correlates in bipolar disorder. METHOD: One hundred thirteen participants (68 patients and 45 healthy controls) were assessed by the means of a neuropsychological battery targeting attention, psychomotor speed, verbal memory, and executive functions at baseline: 68 euthymic outpatients with a DSM-IV diagnosis of bipolar disorder (53 bipolar I and 15 bipolar II) were enrolled at the Bipolar Disorder Unit of the Hospital Clinic of Barcelona. Forty-five patients completed the follow-up. The assessments started in February 1999 and finished in July 2010. The primary outcome of the study was the c…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyBipolar DisorderPsychometricsPsychometricsNeuropsychological TestsExecutive FunctionmedicineHumansBipolar disorderPsychomotor learningWechsler ScalesNeuropsychologyWechsler Adult Intelligence ScaleCognitionMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseExecutive functionsPsychiatry and Mental healthDisease ProgressionPhysical therapyFemaleVerbal memoryCognition DisordersPsychologyFollow-Up StudiesClinical psychologyThe Journal of Clinical Psychiatry
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A New Score Unveils a High Prevalence of Mild Cognitive Impairment in Patients with Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease

2021

Patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) may show mild cognitive impairment (MCI). The neurological functions affected remain unclear. The aims were to: (1) Characterize the neuropsychological alterations in NAFLD patients; (2) assess the prevalence of impairment of neurological functions evaluated; (3) develop a new score for sensitive and rapid MCI detection in NAFLD; (4) assess differences in MCI features between patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver (NAFL) and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH); and (5) compare neuropsychological alterations in NAFLD patients with cirrhotic patients with MCI. Fifty-nine NAFLD patients and 53 controls performed psychometric tests assessin…

medicine.medical_specialtyCirrhosisneurological impairmentpsychometric scoreGastroenterologybehavioral disciplines and activitiesdigestive systemArticle03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal medicineNAFLDNonalcoholic fatty liver diseasemedicineMemory spanHepatic encephalopathyPsychomotor learningbusiness.industryFatty liverRNeuropsychologyNASHnutritional and metabolic diseasesGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseasepsychometric score; NAFLD; NAFL; NASH; neurological impairmentdigestive system diseasesNAFLMedicine030211 gastroenterology & hepatologybusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryStroop effectJournal of Clinical Medicine
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