Search results for "health professions"

showing 10 items of 307 documents

Executive functions in kindergarten children at risk for developmental coordination disorder

2018

Executive functioning (EF) is a key cognitive process for development. Little is known about EF in Kindergarten children at risk for developmental coordination disorder (DCD), despite this age being one of the most critical and intensive period of motor and cognitive development. In our investigation we compared EF in kindergarten children at risk for DCD with Typically Developing (TD) children. Participants were 36 Italian children, 18 at risk for DCD (9 boys and 9 girls) who had a mean age of 4.6 years and 18 TD (9 boys and 9 girls) who had a mean age of 4.6. Executive functions were measured by tasks targeting cold executive functioning (working memory, fluency, inhibitory control) and t…

3304media_common.quotation_subjecteducationShort-term memoryDevelopmental Coordination Disorder; executive functioning; fluency; inhibitory Control; kindergarten; working memory; 3304; Health Professions (miscellaneous); Developmental and Educational PsychologyDevelopmental Coordination DisorderHealth Professions (miscellaneous)working memoryEducationDevelopmental psychologySettore M-PSI/04 - Psicologia Dello Sviluppo E Psicologia Dell'EducazioneDevelopmental and Educational Psychologykindergarten0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesfluencyAt-risk studentsmedia_commonPsychomotor learningWorking memory05 social sciences050301 educationCognitionSelf-controlinhibitory ControlExecutive functionsChild developmentPsychologyexecutive functioning0503 education050104 developmental & child psychologyEuropean Journal of Special Needs Education
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Frequency of co‐teaching in different teacher categories

2010

Co‐teaching – or the use of more than one teacher in a classroom – has been commonly recommended as a means to promote inclusive education. The aim of the present study was to survey the actual frequency of co‐teaching among different teacher categories in the comprehensive school level in one Finnish city. The data were collected through a questionnaire answered by two representative samples of teachers including 117 resource room teachers in the first survey, and 317 teachers of various teacher categories in the second. The results showed that co‐teaching was a widespread phenomenon among resource room teachers and special class teachers but less frequent among other teacher groups. Overa…

4. Education05 social sciences050301 educationSpecial educationSpecial classHealth Professions (miscellaneous)PopularityEducationLikert scaleComprehensive schoolDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyMathematics educationResource room0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesCo-teachingPsychology0503 educationInclusion (education)050104 developmental & child psychologyEuropean Journal of Special Needs Education
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A New Bloody Pulp Selection of Myrobalan (Prunus cerasifera L.): Pomological Traits, Chemical Composition, and Nutraceutical Properties

2023

A new accession of myrobalan (Prunus cerasifera L.) from Sicily (Italy) was studied for the first time for its chemical and nutraceutical properties. A description of the main morphological and pomological traits was created as a tool for characterization for consumers. For this purpose, three different extracts of fresh myrobalan fruits were subjected to different analyses, including the evaluation of total phenol (TPC), flavonoid (TFC), and anthocyanin (TAC) contents. The extracts exhibited a TPC in the range 34.52–97.63 mg gallic acid equivalent (GAE)/100 g fresh weight (FW), a TFC of 0.23–0.96 mg quercetin equivalent (QE)/100 g FW, and a TAC of 20.24–55.33 cyanidine-3-…

<i>Prunus cerasifera</i>; myrobalan; LC-MS analysis; antioxidant activity; lipase and carbohydrate hydrolyzing enzymes inhibitory effectsSettore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale E Coltivazioni ArboreePrunus cerasiferaHealth (social science)LC-MS analysilipase and carbohydrate hydrolyzing enzymes inhibitory effectsantioxidant activitySettore CHIM/06 - Chimica OrganicaPlant ScienceHealth Professions (miscellaneous)MicrobiologymyrobalanFood ScienceFoods
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EMBEDDING CONTEXT IN INVESTIGATIONS OF AFFECTIVE VARIABILITY: AGE DIFFERENCES IN AFFECT-HEALTH LINKS

2017

Context plays a potentially important role in explaining variability in affective experiences and yet, has often been overlooked in this line of research. The current study used data from a lifespan sample of 398 German participants ranging between 12–88 years of age (M = 40, SD = 20). Participants completed computer assisted personal interviews regarding health and well-being measures, as well as experience sampling assessments of daily affective experiences and events (e.g., uplifts). Three indices of positive affect (PA) were created: mean PA, PA reactivity to uplifts, and PA variability. In general, greater mean PA and lower PA reactivity and variability were associated with better heal…

AbstractsCommunicationHealth (social science)Age differencesbusiness.industryEmbeddingContext (language use)Life-span and Life-course StudiesAffect (psychology)PsychologybusinessHealth Professions (miscellaneous)Cognitive psychologyInnovation in Aging
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IN THE EYE OF THE BEHOLDER: NEGATIVE AFFECT VALUATION IN LATER ADULTHOOD

2018

Affective values may shape how affect is linked to health and well-being. Much of the work to date, however, has focused mostly on younger, European American adult samples. Yet, emotional experiences are known to take on greater importance in later life. In the current study, 313 participants (65+ years old) from the Daily Experiences and Well-Being Study (DEWS) completed baseline interviews, questionnaires, and 4–5 days of ecological momentary assessments (EMA). The baseline EMA surveys assessed momentary affect whereas the questionnaires assessed negative affect valuation (NAV): the extent to which people recognize value in negative emotional experiences in terms of their pleasantness, ap…

AbstractsHealth (social science)Actuarial scienceEconomicsLife-span and Life-course StudiesHealth Professions (miscellaneous)Valuation (finance)Innovation in Aging
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FREE RADICAL THEORY OF FRAILTY: MOLECULAR MECHANISMS OF FRAILTY RESULTING FROM OXIDATIVE STRESS

2018

The free radical theory of ageing provided an intellectual framework for many laboratories working on ageing. However, experimental and clinical evidence showing that high doses of antioxidants did not have an effect on ageing or on age-associated diseases, cast doubts on the validity of this theory. Data from our own laboratory showed that oxidative stress does not correlate with age, especially in the geriatric population, but rather with the frailty state. This has led us to postulate the free radical theory of frailty in which frailty is associated with oxidative stress, but age itself is not. Superoxide dismutase deficient mice are more frail than controls. But more importantly, we obs…

AbstractsHealth (social science)ChemistrymedicineComputational biologyLife-span and Life-course Studiesmedicine.disease_causeHealth Professions (miscellaneous)Oxidative stressFree-radical theory of agingInnovation in Aging
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INVESTIGATING OLDER ADULTS’ INTENTION TO USE SMARTPHONES WITH A STRUCTURAL EQUATION MODELING APPROACH

2018

Although the uptake of smartphones amongst older adults has recently taken off, the proportion of feature phone users in this population group is still prevailing. Thus, drawing on the senior technology acceptance model (STAM) and the diffusion of innovation theory (DIT) this study aimed to investigate what personal and contextual factors affect the adoption of smartphones among older adults. A telephone survey on a nation-wide representative sample of older adults aged 55+ (n = 1581) was conducted, measuring eight STAM and DIT factors (e.g., perceived usefulness, resistance to change, mobile phone anxiety) of behavioral intention to use smartphones. Using confirmatory factor analysis and s…

AbstractsHealth (social science)Computer scienceIntention to useLife-span and Life-course StudiesHealth Professions (miscellaneous)Data scienceStructural equation modeling
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WHY CENTENARIANS ARE SO OPTIMISTIC ABOUT THE FUTURE?

2018

People living longer lives report that they are “making the most of it” reflecting a realistic and optimistic approach to life. This adaptive attitude among the oldest-old challenges the model of inevitable health and functional limitations expected at the end of life. However, researchers find that centenarians report good health, gratitude, enjoyment of life and feel optimistic about the future. Using data from a sample of 68 urban nonagenarians and centenarians in the city of Valencia in Spain (Age range 90–105, Mean= 96; SD= 3.93), we report on the associations between the participants’ cognitive dispositions and their level of life satisfaction while controlling by predisposing factors…

AbstractsHealth (social science)Computer scienceLife-span and Life-course StudiesHealth Professions (miscellaneous)Data scienceInnovation in Aging
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LEISURE TIME PHYSICAL ACTIVITY, LEISURE SATISFACTION AND SUBJECTIVE WELL-BEING: CAUSAL RELATIONSHIPS IN MIDLIFE

2018

Participation in leisure time physical activity (LTPA) in midlife is linked to both current well-being and many future benefits in older age. However, longitudinal analyses of the causal links between LTPA and well-being are lacking. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate longitudinal associations between LTPA and subjective well-being in middle adulthood. In addition, the role of leisure satisfaction in these relationships were investigated. The data gathered at ages 42 and 50 for the Finnish Jyväskylä Longitudinal Study of Personality and Social Development were used (present N=303). LTPA was asked as frequency of participation and leisure satisfaction as general satisfaction…

AbstractsHealth (social science)Leisure timePhysical activitySubjective well-beingLife-span and Life-course StudiesPsychologyHealth Professions (miscellaneous)human activitiesLeisure satisfactionDevelopmental psychology
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TENACIOUS GOAL PURSUIT AND LIFE-SPACE MOBILITY AMONG OLDER PEOPLE WITH WALKING DIFFICULTIES

2017

Life-space mobility, defined as the spatial extent of movement in daily life, is strongly dependent on functional ability. However, active striving to reach one’s goals might inspire older people to move in a larger life-space regardless of their physical abilities. We aimed to study whether tenacious goal pursuit differs according to walking difficulties and whether it is associated with life-space mobility in old age.

AbstractsHealth (social science)Life spaceApplied psychologyGoal pursuitLife-span and Life-course StudiesPsychologyOlder peopleHealth Professions (miscellaneous)Developmental psychology
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