Academic literature on the topic 'Feeling of control'

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Journal articles on the topic "Feeling of control"

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Barker, Penny. "Feeling in control." Veterinary Record 183, no. 15 (October 19, 2018): 482. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/vr.k4405.

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Lloyd, Joanne, Sally Frost, Ignas Kuliesius, and Claire Jones. "Locus of control and involvement in videogaming." New Media & Society 21, no. 7 (February 13, 2019): 1613–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1461444819828308.

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An external locus of control (feeling low personal control over one’s life) has been linked with excessive/addictive behaviours, including problematic videogaming. The current study sought to determine whether this is driven by the opportunity for greater control over one’s environment within a videogame. Participants ( n = 252, 59% males) completed a traditional locus of control scale, alongside a modified version assessing in-game feelings of control. Multiple linear regression analyses indicated that feeling less under the control of powerful others in-game than in the real world was a significant predictor of gaming frequency (standardised β = .31, p < .0005), while feeling comparatively more internal control in-game than in real life significantly predicted problematic gaming (standardised β = .17, p = .02). This demonstrates that locus of control in-game can diverge from that experienced in the real world, and the degree of divergence could be a risk factor for frequent and/or problematic gaming in some individuals.
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Mulley-Goodbarne, Elliot. "Feeling The Future of Robotic Control." New Electronics 53, no. 4 (February 25, 2020): 17–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.12968/s0047-9624(22)61140-4.

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Scult, Matthew A., Annchen R. Knodt, Johnna R. Swartz, Bartholomew D. Brigidi, and Ahmad R. Hariri. "Thinking and Feeling." Clinical Psychological Science 5, no. 1 (October 7, 2016): 150–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2167702616654688.

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Calculating math problems from memory may seem unrelated to everyday processing of emotions, but they have more in common than one might think. Prior research highlights the importance of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) in executive control, intentional emotion regulation, and experience of dysfunctional mood and anxiety. Although it has been hypothesized that emotion regulation may be related to “cold” (i.e., not emotion-related) executive control, this assertion has not been tested. We address this gap by providing evidence that greater dlPFC activity during cold executive control is associated with increased use of cognitive reappraisal to regulate emotions in everyday life. We then demonstrate that in the presence of increased life stress, increased dlPFC activity is associated with lower mood and anxiety symptoms and clinical diagnoses. Collectively, our results encourage ongoing efforts to understand prefrontal executive control as a possible intervention target for improving emotion regulation in mood and anxiety disorders.
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Giurlando, Philip. "“This Was Not Supposed to Happen!”." Populism 3, no. 1 (March 4, 2020): 65–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/25888072-02021041.

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Abstract This paper argues that the “feeling of betrayal” thoroughly entangles feeling and narration into a single subjective impression. When felt by large numbers of citizens in the political realm, it motivates the desire to reassert national control over a realm where such control is perceived to have been lost. Expressions of “feeling betrayed” can be observed in the aftermath of the Great Recession and the consequent populist insurgencies impacting many Western countries, suggesting links between economic insecurity, feelings of betrayal, and the willingness to support non-mainstream political movements which demand a reassertion of national control. The paper attempts to demonstrate these links by analyzing Italy and Greece, two countries which saw a surge in support for populist groups after the Eurozone’s debt crisis.
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Larson, Reed. "Is Feeling “in Control” Related to Happiness in Daily Life?" Psychological Reports 64, no. 3 (June 1989): 775–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.1989.64.3.775.

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This research concerns the relation of subjective control and happiness within normal daily experience. Respondents from several nonclinical samples rated their feelings of control at randomly-selected moments during a week in their lives, following the procedures of the Experience Sampling Method. Analyses consider the relation of these ratings to similar ratings of affective states, first, within persons and, second, between persons. The within-person analyses show relatively little moment-to-moment correlation of subjective control and affective states. For many persons there is no correlation at all and on the average people report feeling only slightly more happy at times when feeling in control. The between-persons analyses yield findings that are more in line with explanations of subject control, showing that individuals reporting higher average daily control also experience greater average happiness. The results confirm that a generalized sense of control is important to well being in daily life, but for nondisturbed individuals short-term experiences of discontrol are not accompanied by substantial distress.
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DEORARI, MANJU, MRIGNAYANI AGRAWAL, and PRATIMA SHUKLA. "Efficacy of Meditative Prayer on Guilt Feelings, Inferiority & Insecurity." Dev Sanskriti Interdisciplinary International Journal 3 (July 25, 2019): 37–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.36018/dsiij.v3i0.35.

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Aim of the present study was to examine the efficacy of Meditative-Prayer on the feelings of Guilt, Inferiority and Insecurity among college going students. Experimental and control group design was used. Sixty sample were collected through accidental sampling (30 in control group and 30 in experimental group) from M.B.P.G College, Haldwani (Nainital). The students who had high levels of guilt, inferiority and insecurity feelings were selected. The age of the subjects ranged from 18-26 years. The students in the experimental group were made to do Meditative Prayer regularly for 30 days. Bhramavarchas Guilt Feeling Test and the Inferiority-Insecurity Scale were used. The obtained value of x2 for Guilt and Inferiority feelings is significant at 0.01 level and Insecurity feeling is significant at 0.05 level of confidence. The result of the study shows that Meditative Prayer is significantly effective in reducing the levels of Guilt, Inferiority and Insecurity Feelings.
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Wen, Wen, Atsushi Yamashita, and Hajime Asama. "The Subjective Feeling in Human-machine Joint-control." Journal of the Robotics Society of Japan 40, no. 7 (2022): 589–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.7210/jrsj.40.589.

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Oryshchyn-Buzhdyhan, L. S. "OPTIMISTIC FUTURE VISION THROUGH THE FEELING OF CONTROL." Habitus, no. 14 (2020): 255–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.32843/2663-5208.2020.14.43.

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Ristiana, Evi, and Galih Fajar Fadilah. "PENGARUH BIMBINGAN ISLAMI TERHADAP INFERIORITY FEELING ANAK PINGGIRAN DI LSM PEMBERDAYAAN PEREMPUAN DAN ANAK PINGGIRAN (PPAP) SEROJA." Transformatif : Jurnal Pengabdian Masyarakat 1, no. 1 (June 29, 2020): 21–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.22515/tranformatif.v1i1.2710.

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Islamic guidance based on the Al-Qur'an and Hadith can make a person control inferiority feelings in order to accept himself completely, have confidence in his abilities, and be confident in the work he does. Islamic guidance makes humans behave healthy and can control their deviant behavior. Because with religion and faith make a better person. The purpose of this devotion is to find out whether Islamic guidance has an effect on the inferiority feeling of marginal children in the NGO PPAP Seroja Jebres Surakarta. The population in this study were the peripheral children in the PPAP Seroja Jebres NGO Surakarta. The sample in this study amounted to 15 people with random sampling technique. The results show that there is a significant influence between Islamic guidance variables and inferiority feeling. The contribution of the influence of Islamic guidance on inferiority feeling is quite large
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Feeling of control"

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Hibbeln, Martin, Jeffrey L. Jenkins, Christoph Schneider, Joseph S. Valacich, and Markus Weinmann. "HOW IS YOUR USER FEELING? INFERRING EMOTION THROUGH HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION DEVICES." SOC INFORM MANAGE-MIS RES CENT, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/625245.

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Emotion can influence important user behaviors, including purchasing decisions, technology use, and customer loyalty. The ability to easily assess users' emotion during live system use therefore has practical significance for the design and improvement of information systems. In this paper, we discuss using human-computer interaction input devices to infer emotion. Specifically, we utilize attentional control theory to explain how movement captured via a computer mouse (i.e., mouse cursor movements) can be a real-time indicator of negative emotion. We report three studies. In Study 1, an experiment with 65 participants from Amazon's Mechanical Turk, we randomly manipulated negative emotion and then monitored participants' mouse cursor movements as they completed a number-ordering task. We found that negative emotion increases the distance and reduces the speed of mouse cursor movements during the task. In Study 2, an experiment with 126 participants from a U.S. university, we randomly manipulated negative emotion and then monitored participants' mouse cursor movements while they interacted with a mock e-commerce site. We found that mouse cursor distance and speed can be used to infer the presence of negative emotion with an overall accuracy rate of 81.7 percent. In Study 3, an observational study with 80 participants from universities in Germany and Hong Kong, we monitored mouse cursor movements while participants interacted with an online product configurator. Participants reported their level of emotion after each step in the configuration process. We found that mouse cursor distance and speed can be used to infer the level of negative emotion with an out-of-sample R-2 of 0.17. The results enable researchers to assess negative emotional reactions during live system use, examine emotional reactions with more temporal precision, conduct multimethod emotion research, and create more unobtrusive affective and adaptive systems.
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Kazemekaityte, Austeja. "Socioeconomic Status and Individual Decision Making." Doctoral thesis, Università degli studi di Trento, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/11572/321234.

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Socioeconomic disparities in life outcomes is a widely observed occurrence. In particular, low socioeconomic status (SES) has been related to a variety of behaviours that tend to perpetuate or even exacerbate the conditions that individuals of such social standing are already facing. The last two decades have been marked by a growing number of studies seeking to disentangle behavioural differences associated with one’s socioeconomic status that fuel the persistence of these differences. This Doctoral thesis joins the discussion by investigating a subset of behaviours associated with low SES. Three empirical chapters and one literature review seeks to answer the following questions: first, what are the consumer behaviour patterns exhibited by low SES individuals? Second, how do poverty-related thoughts influence consumption of (un)taxed temptation goods? Third, what is the effect of perceived individual control on intertemporal preferences? And fourth, how does salient socioeconomic status affect intertemporal choices regarding effort? Chapter 1 overviews literature on socioeconomic status and consumer happiness. We discuss channels through which low SES can impact consumption decisions and present main behavioural patterns of low SES consumers. Low SES has been found to have a significant impact on dietary patterns that include consumption of fruits and vegetables, foods with high calorie content, as well as consumption of temptation goods like alcohol, tobacco, and sugar-sweetened beverages. Moreover, low SES individuals also tend to engage in status-signalling behaviours, despite the scarcity of financial resources. We discuss how SES can delineate consumer happiness, in particular, regarding experiential and material goods. Finally, we review evidence on socioeconomic disparities in satisfaction with product-specific characteristics and health care as well as consumer loyalty. Chapter 2 presents an empirical investigation of the intersection between socioeconomic status and consumer behavior. In particular, we study demand for temptation goods such as alcohol, tobacco or high-calorie foods. One of the most conventional ways that governments control the consumption of these products is through taxes; however, a growing body of research shows the presence of numerous behavioral biases that might prove such fiscal policies less effective. One of these biases is related to financial worries - a concept familiar to deprived individuals. Previous studies have shown that increasing worries shift attention towards pressing needs, potentially at the cost of forward-looking decisions. We run an online experiment in which we manipulate financial worries and ask participants to choose between necessities and temptation goods in the experimental market. We also randomly impose taxes on temptation goods for a subset of participants. Results suggest that under financial worries and no taxes participants demand less temptation goods and this effect is stronger for lower income individuals. However, when taxes are introduced and financial concerns are salient, lower income participants do not react to taxes. This suggests that, on the one hand, financial worries can protect against over-consumption of temptation goods when there are no tax changes; however, low income consumers can be hurt the most when additional taxes are implemented. Chapter 3 investigates another psychological occurrence - a feeling of control - and its impact on intertemporal preferences. Generally, low SES individuals have less chances to exert control in their lives compared with high SES people. If perceived control has a substantial impact on the intertemporal choice, these disparities may have a long lasting impact that might make it harder to move up in terms of social status. In an online experiment we manipulate the feeling of control by asking participants to remember a certain situation. We vary control in terms of level - not having control vs being in full control – and type – being in a situation involving other people or a non-social situation. Afterwards, we ask participants to make intertemporal allocation decisions - either regarding a monetary experimental budget or a number of real effort tasks. We find no evidence of present bias in monetary discounting for either of the control treatments. Results are different for effort discounting: on aggregate level, participants in this condition reverse their preferences more often as they choose to perform more tasks sooner when the decision involves only future points in time, but less when the decision involves also present. Moreover, we find evidence of significant present bias in the low control condition. Allocation decisions are mediated by emotional states activated in the feeling of control manipulation: for money condition, the strongest mediator is the feeling of fear, while for effort discounting it is sadness. Overall, the results suggest that although recalling a situation of (no) control does not influence intertemporal allocation decisions regarding windfall money, it can impact decisions about the allocation of effort. Chapter 4 continues the discussion on intertemporal preferences and socioeconomic status. It is a well established that low SES is related to impatient behaviours. While many works have analyzed psychological channels which mediate this effect, such as cognitive load, stress, emotional affects, and self-control issues, this work seeks to test whether the mere salience of one’s subjective SES has an impact on intertemporal preferences regarding effort. In an online experiment, I prime participants on their SES and ask to make effort allocation decisions. I find that priming affects only low status participants: this group made more present-biased choices by postponing effort to the future even if it mean higher workload. No effect was found for nonprimed low SES participants or higher status individuals in both treatment and control groups. I conclude that even a mere act of making SES salient in your mind can have an adverse effect to low SES individuals by pushing them to postpone work to the future.
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Lamotte, Mathilde. "Conscience du temps, sentiment de passage du temps : une approche métacognitive de la perception du temps." Thesis, Clermont-Ferrand 2, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016CLF20001/document.

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La métacognition concerne à la fois les connaissances des individus sur leur fonctionnement cognitif et les processus qui permettent de les réguler (Koriat, 2007). Or, l’étude de la perception du temps a mis en évidence que de nombreux éléments peuvent provoquer des distorsions temporelles, notamment, par exemple, l’attention ou les feedbacks. L’objectif de ce travail est donc de proposer un modèle intégratif de la métacognition de la perception du temps ; autrement dit d’intégrer les données issues des recherches classiques sur la perception du temps au sein d’un modèle métacognitif (Nelson et Narens, 1990).Notre première question était de vérifier l’existence de connaissances sur la perception du temps, et en particulier sur les facteurs à l’origine de distorsions temporelles. Les 3 expériences de notre première étude nous ont conduit à créer et valider le Questionnaire Métacognitif sur le Temps (MQT). Ce dernier, constitué de 24 items, met en évidence l’existence de connaissances plus fiables pour soi (sous-échelle Soi, 12 items) que pour autrui (sous-échelle Autrui, 12 items), sur deux facteurs connus pour affecter la perception du temps : le facteur Emotion (4 items) et le facteur Attention (8 items).Dans un deuxième temps, nous avons étudié l’influence des processus métacognitifs sur les jugements temporels. Ainsi, nous nous sommes intéressées à l’influence du processus de Contrôle métacognitif sur la performance à deux tâches temporelles. Notre hypothèse était que les connaissances sur le temps permettaient de réguler les jugements temporels. Les résultats de nos deux études (Etude 2 et 3, respectivement composées de une et deux expériences) ont confirmé l’importance du processus de Contrôle dans le jugement temporel. Ainsi, la simple conscience du rôle de l’attention sur la perception du temps provoque une réduction de l’effet attentionnel généralement observé (Etude 2). De plus, les connaissances explicites, erronées, données aux individus, provoquent une réduction voire une disparition de l’effet émotionnel automatique de la colère sur les jugements temporels (Etude 3). Enfin, nous avons exploré le lien entre processus de Monitoring et jugements temporels. Notre quatrième étude a mis en évidence la capacité des individus à estimer précisément la justesse de leurs jugements temporels sous certaines conditions. En effet, il apparaît que les individus sont sensibles à la difficulté de la tâche et à la gamme de durée. Ces deux dimensions affectent à la fois les jugements temporels et les jugements de certitude.Dans l’ensemble, les résultats de ce travail soulignent l’importance qu’il y a à tenir compte des processus métacognitifs dans l’étude de la perception du temps
Metacognition concerns both individuals' knowledge about their cognitive functioning and the processes that regulate them (Koriat, 2007). The study of the perception of time showed that many factors cause temporal distortions, including, for example, attention or feedback. The purpose of this work is thus to propose an integrative model of metacognition of time perception; i.e. to integrate data based on conventional research on the perception of time in a metacognitive model (Nelson and Narens 1990).Our first question was to verify the existence of knowledge about the perception of time, especially on the factors responsible for temporal distortions. The three experiments of our first study led us to create and validate the Metacognitive Questionnaire on Time (MQT). The latter consists of 24 items that highlights the existence of knowledge, more reliable for oneself (subscale Self, 12 items) than for others (subscale Others, 12 items), on two factors known to affect time perception: an Emotion Factor (4 items) and an Attention factor (8 items).Secondly, we studied the influence of metacognitive processes on temporal judgments. Thus, we are interested in the influence of metacognitive Control process on performances in two temporal tasks. Our hypothesis was that knowledge about time allowed regulating the temporal judgments. The results of our studies (Study 2 and 3, respectively composed of one and two experiments) confirmed the importance of the Control process on temporal judgments. Thus, mere awareness of the role of attention on perception of time causes a reduction of the attentional effect generally observed (Study 2). Moreover, explicit erroneous knowledge given to participants causes a reduction or even disappearance of automatic emotional effect of anger on the temporal judgments (Study 3). Finally, we have explored the link between Monitoring process and temporal judgments. Our fourth study demonstrated the ability of individuals to accurately estimate the accuracy of their temporal judgments under certain conditions. Indeed, it appears that individuals are sensitive to task difficulty and duration range. These two dimensions affect both temporal judgments and confidence level estimates.Overall, the results of this study emphasize the importance to take account of metacognitive processes in the study of the perception of time
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Kakihara, Fumiko. "Incorporating adolescents' interpretations and feelings about parents into models of parental control /." Örebro : Örebro University, 2010. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-10272.

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Tong, Ying, and 唐瑩. "Unpacking Chinese parenting paradox : a cross-cultural inquiry of children's affective feelings towards maternal involvement." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10722/211135.

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The effects of parental control on Chinese children’s academic functioning have presented a paradox to the parenting literature (Chao, 1994). Chinese parents were empirically found to be controlling and restrictive, and yet their children often managed to perform well academically. Viewing the limit of Western parenting theories in explaining the findings on Chinese parenting, some researchers have turned to study the differences between the Eastern and Western cultures in perceiving parental control. However, the emphasis on what is different between cultures (i.e. the emic) might result in overlooking what is common across cultures (i.e. the etic). The present research put a parallel focus on the emic and the etic processes pertaining to the paradox. It compared how Chinese and American children felt affectively towards their mothers' involvement in an academically related task. Mothers' controlling behaviors could elicit different feelings among children across cultures, and thus result in varied motivational outcomes. This could be the key to resolve the paradox. The present research also examined the role of mother-child socio-emotional relatedness in affecting children’s feelings towards mothers' involvement in the task session as well as task motivation among the two cultures. A total of 142 mothers and their 5th graders were invited to participate in a laboratory activity which resembled everyday homework task. About half of the mother-child dyads (n = 73) were Caucasian Americans recruited in Urbana-Champaign and the other half (n = 69) were Chinese recruited in Hong Kong. The children were asked to work on three similar digit-search tasks. They were joined by their mothers for the second task, during which the mother-child interactions were videotaped. Mothers’ controlling behaviors were operationalized as mothers’ provision of unsolicited interventions during the second task session. Children’s feelings towards mothers' involvement in the task session (i.e. felt anger/hurt, felt loved/cared for), task motivation as well as their social-emotional relatedness with mothers were assessed by self-report measures.    Similar across cultures, children’s feelings instead of the actual unsolicited interventions from mothers were found to be the significant predictors for children’s task motivation. Nevertheless, Chinese and American children differed in how they felt affectively towards maternal control. Heightened unsolicited interventions from mothers were associated with elevated feelings of anger/hurt among the American children but not the Chinese children. Similar across cultures, children were more likely to report elevated feelings of being loved/cared as well as higher task motivation when they reported higher level of socio-emotional relatedness with their mothers. Nevertheless, the mechanisms underlying the effects of socio-emotional relatedness on motivation were different across cultures.    Overall, the findings revealed both the eitc and the emic aspects in how maternal control is associated with children’s feelings, motivational outcomes, and mother-child socio-emotional relatedness. The present research provides a solution to the Chinese parenting paradox through adopting a globally applicable framework that can accommodate both the universality and the cultural specificity pertaining to the effects of parental control. It also makes contribution to the development of global psychology that integrates both emic and etic approaches.
published_or_final_version
Psychology
Doctoral
Doctor of Philosophy
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Myronidi, Despoina. "LIGHT-BEAT: REACTIVE LIGHT FOR THE EMOTIONAL COMFORT OF NEWBORN BABIES." Thesis, KTH, Ljusdesign, 2021. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-297961.

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This is a project-based thesis focusing on the investigation of topics related to human newborns and the factors found in their surrounding environment that need to be assessed so as to provide them with a feeling comfort. The objective is to boost their emotional development by the means of light in a close relation to sound so as to provide them with a type of intelligence allowing them to normally interact within a society during their adult life, reassuring social equality and eliminating potential social exclusion due to unexpected behaviours. After researching topics to have a better understanding of the newborn baby and its enclosing environment, a luminaire design solution -functioning with a reactive scheme performed with integrated sound sensors- provided further results to the main topic investigation. The conceptual scheme for the product development was inspired by the connection between the newborn and their life-giver, closely linked to the cross-modality of sensory development before and after birth. Additional results were obtained with light measurement assessments and a parent survey targeting both the intended light quality subjective evaluations and the marketing strength of the designed product. This survey was used -along with other means- as a design evaluation tool at the final stage of the design process. Potential further improvements as well as considerations for a distinct spatial application are discussed in the final part of the thesis. The sustainability aspect covered within this degree project is closely linked to good physical and mental health aspects, clean energy use and efficiency achieved by the integration of input sound sensors and controls, and conscious production and consumption by the proposal of low global footprint materials for the luminaire design. In the conclusions, an overall summary of the thesis outcomes is presented and further research is proposed regarding both the main topic investigation as well as a greater user category that can be related to the light metric assessments that were carried out for this research.
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Fragnon, Julien. "Le discours antiterroriste : la gestion politique du 11 septembre en France." Thesis, Lyon 2, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009LYO22006/document.

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Les discours politiques sur le terrorisme sont avant tout des discours contre le terrorisme. Pour répondre aux incertitudes produites par un attentat, les responsables politiques poursuivent trois objectifs : mobiliser la population, la rassurer et lui expliquer le problème social en le politisant. La visée mobilisatrice s’effectue à l’aide d’un partage de sentiments et de valeurs communes et de la réprobation de l’ennemi terroriste. Ce discours émotionnel se conjugue à un discours décisionnel qui vise à rassurer la population. Celui-ci s’illustre par la diffusion d’un ethos de maitrise et par la légitimation de la judiciarisation présentée comme une approche équilibrée de la lutte contre le terrorisme. Enfin, les dirigeants intègrent le terrorisme dans un méta-récit susceptible d’expliquer la continuité des réponses politiques depuis les années 1980 et le rattache aux désordres du monde
Discourse on terrorism is above all discourse against terrorism. To respond to the uncertainties produced by an attack, the politicians pursue three objectives: to mobilize the population, to reassure it and to explain the social problem to it by politicizing the issue. The mobilizing aim is achieved by the public sharing of feelings and common values and the reproof of the terrorist enemy. This emotional discourse is used in combination with a decision-making discourse which aims to reassure the citizenry. This materializes through the transmission of an ethos of having mastered the problem and on the legitimization of the judiciarisation presented as a well-balanced approach to the fight against the terrorism. Finally, the leaders integrate the terrorism into a meta-narrative capable of explaining the continuity of political responses to terrorism since the 1980s and of connecting it with global disorder
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Shinohara, Junji. "Effects of Five-Toed Socks with Grippers and Ankle Bracing on Dynamic Postural Control and Subjective Feelings During a Jump-Landing Task in Individuals with Chronic Ankle Instability." University of Toledo / OhioLINK, 2011. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=toledo1323353599.

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Spong, Amanda J. "Are children's thoughts and feelings about illness related to medication use and symptom control? : an examination of the self regulatory model." Thesis, University of East Anglia, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.327135.

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O'Connor, Maureen. "PROMOTING THE EMERGENCE OF EQUIVALENCE RELATIONS UNDER MULTIPLE CONTEXTUAL CONTROL WITH CHILDREN WITH AUTISM USING THE PEAK – E CURRICULUM: FEELINGS IN CONTEXT." OpenSIUC, 2016. https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/theses/1933.

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Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) language repertoire development varies greatly amongst each individual especially in one’s ability to understand emotions. One way to increase language development and further understand emotions is through stimulus equivalence. Theis present study examined the effefficacy of a stimulus equivalence training procedure in bringing the recognition of others’ emotions under multiple contextual control, and also evaluated co-occurring changes in the flexibility of participant responses to common questions requiring emotional recognition that is multiply controlled. The procedures were taken from the Promoting the Emergence of Advanced Knowledge Equivalence Module (PEAK-E) to aid in replication both clinically and in research. The results suggest that each of the three participants, all with an autism diagnosis, were able to identify the facial expressions of others when provided with a person and a context (i.e., What face does Person A feel at Location B?). In addition, two of the three participants were able to correctly identify an individual when provided with a context and an emotion (i.e., Who feels Emotion A at Location C?). Results from the flexibility probes throughout the study however indicate that the participants did not demonstrate an increase vin flexible responding following equivalence training. ectiveness of stimulus equivalence under multiple control to promote the emergence of an untrained relation via the PEAK – E Curriculum: Feelings in Context. Three participants diagnosed with autism, between the ages 12 and 17, were directly trained nine relations that established under a specific context a person will make a certain facial expression. Results indicate that all three participants demonstrated mastery in the training condition; however, when tested for equivalence only two of three participants were able to do so.
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Books on the topic "Feeling of control"

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Feeling Strong. New York: HarperCollins, 2007.

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Clare, Elsom, ed. Dealing with feeling ...: Angry. London: Raintree, 2013.

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Corporation, Minolta, ed. Precise color communication: Color control from feeling to instrumentation. [Osaka]: [Minolta], 1994.

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Illinois. Dept. of Human Services. Diabetes Control Program. Control your diabetes for life: Tips for feeling better and staying healthy. Springfield, Ill: Diabetes Control Program, Illinois Dept. of Human Services, 2000.

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Gullo, Stephen. Thin tastes better: Control your food triggers and lose weight without feeling deprived. London: Vermilion, 1996.

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Kunzmann, Ute. Being and feeling in control: Two sources of older people's emotional well-being. Berlin: Max-Planck-Institut für Bildungsforschung, 1999.

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Paul, Wilson. Calm at work: Breeze through your day feeling calm, relaxed, and in control. New York: Plume, 1999.

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Calm at work: Breeze through your day feeling calm, relaxed and in control. Ringwood, Victoria: Penguin Books, 1997.

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Thin tastes better: Control your food triggers and lose weight without feeling deprived. New York: C. Southern Books, 1995.

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Braiker, Harriet B. Getting up when you're feeling down: A woman's guide to overcoming and preventing depression. New York, NY: Pocket Books, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "Feeling of control"

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Malone, Hannah. "Feeling Political in Military Cemeteries: Commemoration Politics in Fascist Italy." In Feeling Political, 219–48. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-89858-8_8.

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AbstractThis chapter explores how Mussolini’s Fascist regime politicized the remembrance of the First World War by linking a narrative of heroism to specific notions of grief. It reveals that, given the scale of Italy’s losses in the war, commemoration of the fallen was a highly emotional issue, which provided the regime with a powerful means of political communication. As the Fascist authorities sought to exploit feelings towards the dead for the purpose of mobilizing the Italian population, emotions came to define the political agenda. In seeking a high degree of emotional control, the Italian dictatorship elaborated strategies of manipulation that were later imitated by other authoritarian powers, including Hitler’s Germany and Franco’s Spain. Ossuaries from the time offer evidence of the political intentions of the Fascist regime and the emotional responses that visitors were meant to feel. Architecture and its surrounding discourse thus acted as carriers of emotional messages with political intent.
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Kemper, Chris, and Ian Oxley. "I’m Feeling Brave; Can I Do This With Terminal?" In Foundation Version Control for Web Developers, 243–77. Berkeley, CA: Apress, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4302-3973-4_9.

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Misri, Shaila Kulkarni. "Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders in New Fathers: Feeling Out of Control." In Paternal Postnatal Psychiatric Illnesses, 81–99. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-68249-5_5.

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Nakanishi, Miwa, Yusaku Okada, and Sakae Yamamoto. "A Study on Effective Tactile Feeling of Control Panels for Electrical Appliances." In Human-Computer Interaction. Novel Interaction Methods and Techniques, 486–95. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-02577-8_53.

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Tsujichi, Nobutaka, Takayuki Koizumi, and Takuya Tonomura. "Examination of a Feeling of Pulse Control Method for Cruiser-type Motorcycle." In Rotating Machinery, Structural Health Monitoring, Shock and Vibration, Volume 5, 341–47. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-9428-8_28.

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Ushiba, Junichi, Shotaro Miyashita, Takashi Ono, Koji Aono, Mitsuhiko Kodama, and Yoshihisa Masakado. "Feeling of Bodily Congruence to Visual Stimuli Improves Motor Imagery Based Brain-Computer Interface Control." In Converging Clinical and Engineering Research on Neurorehabilitation II, 907–11. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-46669-9_147.

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Lunt, Peter, and Mervi Pantti. "Popular Culture and the Public Sphere: Currents of Feeling and Social Control in Talk Shows and Reality TV." In Media and Public Spheres, 162–74. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230206359_13.

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Zampati, Foteini. "Ethical and Legal Considerations in Smart Farming: A Farmer’s Perspective." In Towards Responsible Plant Data Linkage: Data Challenges for Agricultural Research and Development, 257–72. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-13276-6_13.

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AbstractSmart farming contributes to exponential income growth, enhanced decision making, better services and products, as well as productivity and profitability. Nowadays, numerous agricultural technology providers are entering the market, focusing on aggregating farmers’ data. But many farmers, especially smallholders, do not benefit from the sharing and exchange of this data, which leaves them feeling disempowered. Until today, ethical considerations were often side-lined because gathering more data was seen as necessary, and concerns about how data might be abused or misused were only subsequently considered. However, with the increase of big data in smart farming, it is more essential than ever to focus on the ethical aspects of data governance (access, control, consent) and practices. Therefore, these ethical questions will provide valuable insights into how data is being collected and used, for what purposes, how to bridge the digital divide, and how to create transparency and build trust between stakeholders. This chapter will focus on farmers’ perspectives and how they could actively participate in a more equitable data sharing and exchange in the agri-food value chain by contributing to the design of a fairer data governance framework. The adoption of agricultural codes of conduct is the example that will be explored.
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Horowitz, Mardi J. "Working Through Ideas, Feelings, and Modifying Controls." In States of Mind, 115–41. Boston, MA: Springer US, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4899-7087-9_8.

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Spanos, Nicholas P., T. X. Barber, and Gerald Lang. "Cognition and Self-Control." In Thought and Feeling, 141–58. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315135656-16.

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Conference papers on the topic "Feeling of control"

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Nishio, Ken, and Atsushi Sakuma. "Computational Design Method to Control Touch Feeling of Mattress With Geometric Surface-Shape." In ASME 2020 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2020-24655.

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Abstract Foam material is one of the ingredients that are frequently used for controlling of touch feeling on the contacting part of various products like bed mattresses. For better sleep, it is necessary to design to control the touch feeling of the mattresses. Touch feeling depends on various properties of the foam material, and the shape characteristics of the contact part also give humans various and complicated feelings. According to previous studies, it was possible to easily quantify the physical properties of foam materials by using indentation test. Furthermore, it is necessary to analyze the change in touch feeling due to the shape of contact part of foams for better mattress design. Therefore, in this report, the purpose is to analyze the contact problem including the material property and the shape property of the foam material. A new softness parameter was created by analyzing the contact problem using FEM analysis. Specifically, it is report a design technology based on multiple parameters of tactile sensation that change depending on the shape of the contact part of the foam material.
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Jokinen, Jussi P. P. "Emotional user experience and feeling of control." In AcademicMindTrek'15: Academic Mindtrek Conference 2015. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2818187.2818284.

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Takashi Kuremoto, Tomoe Hano, Kunikazu Kobayashi, and Masanao Obayashi. "Robot feeling formation based on image features." In 2007 International Conference on Control, Automation and Systems. IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iccas.2007.4407000.

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Bolognesi Prado, Wesley, Silvia Faria Iombriller, Marco André Rodrigues da Silva, and Lázaro Renato Oliveira. "Commercial vehicle pedal feeling comfort ranges definition." In 2019 SAE Brasil International Brake and Motion Control Colloquium and Exhibit. 400 Commonwealth Drive, Warrendale, PA, United States: SAE International, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4271/2019-36-0016.

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Lederman, Susan J., and Roberta L. Klatzky. "Feeling Through a Probe." In ASME 1998 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece1998-0243.

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Abstract Subjects performed a series of haptic perceptual tasks using rigid probes or the bare finger (control). In Part I, they made roughness judgments of raised-dot textured surfaces using small or large rigid probes or the bare finger. Performance was compared using two different psychophysical tasks: magnitude-estimation (Experiment 1: “how rough?”) and roughness comparison (Experiment 2: “which is rougher?”). In Part II, performance with a small probe versus the bare linger was compared in a haptic object identification task (Experiment 3). In Part III, we discuss the applied implications of this work. Overall, our findings indicate the viability of vibratory-based coding of roughness through a rigid link and have implications for designing haptic interfaces for teleoperator and virtual-environment systems. In contrast, a substantial decline in haptic object identification highlights one limitation of using haptic interfaces that effect single-point contact. The research reported in this paper is drawn from a comprehensive research program that focuses on feeling the world with a probe, (see also Lederman & Klatzky, 1997; in press; in preparation; Klatzky & Lederman, in press). The work addresses fundamental research on psychophysical issues concerning how human roughness perception and common object identification work when the hand contacts the external world via an intermediary link. Such questions are important to address inasmuch as tool use is such a common aspect of our manual interactions with the world. We also explore the implications of this research for the development of haptic interfaces for teleoperator and VE systems that employ point contact.
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Yohei Tomita, Shin-ichi Ito, and Yasue Mitsukura. "The EEG analysis method for obtaining the feeling." In 2008 International Conference on Control, Automation and Systems (ICCAS). IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iccas.2008.4694286.

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Yoshimura, Takashi, and Ryuichi Oguro. "The Control Method of A Virtual Contact Feeling System." In 2006 SICE-ICASE International Joint Conference. IEEE, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/sice.2006.314624.

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Shengbing, Yang, Den Chunan, Ji Xuewu, and Chen Kuiyuan. "Research on Road Feeling Control Strategy of Steer-by-Wire." In Asia Pacific Automotive Engineering Conference. 400 Commonwealth Drive, Warrendale, PA, United States: SAE International, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.4271/2007-01-3652.

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Tian Jie, Wu Jin, Chen Ning, and Luo Shi. "Research on road feeling control of Steer-by-wire System." In 2011 Second International Conference on Mechanic Automation and Control Engineering (MACE). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/mace.2011.5987967.

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Shirokaya, M. Yr. "Self-organization and feeling of time freelancers." In INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC AND PRACTICAL ONLINE CONFERENCE. Знание-М, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.38006/907345-50-8.2020.724.739.

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The article presents the results of studying the features of self-organization of activities and the experience of time by freelancers. The sample of freelancers was 96 people, the average age was 33.4 years, the sample of office employees (control group) was 69 people, the average age was 33.8. The samples were made up of professionals from different fields of activity with work experience from 1 year to 22. Methods were used: 1. Questionnaire of self-organization of activity (Mandrikova, 2010), 2. Manager’s Time syndrome (Vodopyanova, 2018). Time perspective (Zimbardo, svord, svord, 2017). To obtain the results, the SPSS statistical package, version 22, used the Kolmogorov test for testing the normality of the distribution, nonparametric descriptive statistics, comparison of averages (Z-test), and Spearman correlation analysis. As a result of the study, freelancers were identified: conscious self-organization of activities; purposefulness and perseverance; orientation to the future, which contributes to high purposefulness and self-organization; temporary tension in activities and the severity of time syndrome; the problem of balancing life and activity time, which is aggravated by increasing dependence on work; the dominance of” Mature “ freelancers of various forms of time deficit experience; different effects of control / lack of control over work on the development of time syndrome in freelancers and office employees.
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Reports on the topic "Feeling of control"

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Basu, Sayani. Gut Feeling: The Microbiome and Mental Health. Nature Library, October 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.47496/nl.blog.08.

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The gut microbiome appears to play a significant role in our mental health. The modification of gut microbiome has a potential to control our health and well-being and holds promising clinical applications
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Swannack, Robyn, Alys Young, and Claudine Storbeck. A scoping review of deaf sign language users’ perceptions and experiences of well-being in South Africa. INPLASY - International Platform of Registered Systematic Review and Meta-analysis Protocols, November 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37766/inplasy2022.11.0082.

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Background: This scoping review concerns deaf adult sign language users from any country (e.g. users of South African Sign Language (SASL), British Sign Language (BSL), American Sign Language (ASL) and so forth). It concerns well-being understood to include subjective well-being and following the WHO’s (2001) definition of well-being as “mental health as a state of well-being in which every individual realises his or her own potential, can cope with the normal stresses of life, can work productively and fruitfully and is able to make a contribution to his or her community.” Well-being has three components (Steptoe, Deaton, and Stone, 2015; Stewart-Brown, Tennant, Tennant, Platt, Parkinson and Weich, 2009): (i) Live evaluation, also referred to life satisfaction, which concerns an individual’s evaluation of their life and their satisfaction with its quality and how good they feel about it; (ii) hedonic well-being which refers to everyday feelings or moods and focuses on affective components (feeling happy); (iii) eudaimonic well-being, which emphasises action, agency and self-actualisation (e.g. sense of control, personal growth, feelings of purpose and belonging) that includes judgments about the meaning of one’s life. Well-being is not defined as the absence of mental illness but rather as a positive state of flourishing that encompasses these three components. The review is not concerned with evidence concerning mental illness or psychiatric conditions amongst deaf signers. A specific concern is deaf sign language users’ perceptions and experiences of well-being.
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Ni, Jiachun, Qiong Jiang, Gang Mao, Yi Yang, Qin Wei, Changcheng Hou, Xiangdong Yang, Wenbin Fan, and Zengjin Cai. The effectiveness and safety of acupuncture for constipation associated with Parkinson’s disease: Protocol for a systematic review and meta-analysis. INPLASY - International Platform of Registered Systematic Review and Meta-analysis Protocols, February 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37766/inplasy2022.2.0091.

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Review question / Objective: Is acupuncture a safe and effective therapy for constipation associated with Parkinson’s disease? Our aim is to assess the effectiveness and safety of acupuncture for constipation associated with PD and give guidance to future research direction. Condition being studied: Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a prevalent degenerative disease of nervous system characterized mainly by static tremor, bradykinesia, myotonia, postural gait disorders and other non-motor symptoms. According to variations on race, ethnicity, age and sex, the incidence of PD ranges from 8 to 20.5 per 100, 000 individuals annually. One global research shows that there were 6.1 million individuals suffer from PD in 2016 and will be 12 million patients around the world. According to several outcomes of case-control studies, the prevalence of constipation in PD varies from 28% to 61%. Constipation, as a common gastrointestinal disease which refers to the clinical presentation of reduced spontaneous complete bowel movement, dyschezia, feeling of incomplete defecation and outlet obstruction, is demonstrated to antedate the motor symptom and it's severity is related to the progression of PD. Acupuncture has been proved to act on the pathogenesis of constipation associated with PD. The proposed systematic review we're about to present is the first advanced evidence-based medical evidence in this area.
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Boruchowicz, Cynthia, Florencia López Bóo, Benjamin Roseth, and Luis Tejerina. Default Options: A Powerful Behavioral Tool to Increase COVID-19 Contact Tracing App Acceptance in Latin America? Inter-American Development Bank, December 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0002983.

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Being able to follow the chain of contagion of COVID-19 is important to help save lives and control the epidemic without sustained costly lockdowns. This is especially relevant in Latin America, where economic contractions have already been the largest in the regions history. Given the high rates of transmission of COVID-19, relying only in manual contact tracing might be infeasible. Acceptability and uptake of contact tracing apps with exposure notifications is key for the implementation the “test, trace and treat” triad. In the first study of its kind in Latin America, we find that for a nationally representative sample of 10 countries, an opt-out regime with automatic installation significantly increases the probability of acceptance of such apps in almost 22 p.p. compared to an opt-in regime with voluntary installation. This triples the size and is of opposite sign of the effect found in Europe and the United States. We see that an opt-out regime is more effective in increasing acceptability in South America compared to Central America and Mexico; for those who claim not to trust the national government; and for those who do not use their smartphones for financial transactions. The severity of the pandemic at the place of residence does not seem to affect the effectiveness of the opt-out regime versus an opt-in one, but feeling personally at risk does increase the willingness to accept contact tracing apps with exposure notifications in general. These results can shed light on the use of default options in public health in the context of a pandemic in Latin America.
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Bolstad, Rachel. Opportunities for education in a changing climate: Themes from key informant interviews. New Zealand Council for Educational Research, October 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18296/rep.0006.

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How can education in Aotearoa New Zealand respond to climate change? This report, part of our wider education and climate change project, outlines findings from 17 in-depth interviews with individuals with a range of viewpoints about climate change and the role of education. Five priority perspectives are covered: youth (aged 16–25); educators; Māori; Pacific New Zealanders; and people with an academic, education system, or policy perspective. Key findings are: Education offers an important opportunity for diverse children and young people to engage in positive, solutions-focused climate learning and action. Interviewees shared local examples of effective climate change educational practice, but said it was often down to individual teachers, students, and schools choosing to make it a focus. Most interviewees said that climate change needs to be a more visible priority across the education system. The perspectives and examples shared suggest there is scope for growth and development in the way that schools and the wider education system in Aotearoa New Zealand respond to climate change. Interviewees’ experiences suggest that localised innovation and change is possible, particularly when young people and communities are informed about the causes and consequences of climate change, and are engaged with what they can do to make a difference. However, effective responses to climate change are affected by wider systems, societal and political structures, norms, and mindsets. Interviewee recommendations for schools, kura, and other learning settings include: Supporting diverse children and young people to develop their ideas and visions for a sustainable future, and to identify actions they can take to realise that future. Involving children and young people in collective and local approaches, and community-wide responses to climate change. Scaffolding learners to ensure that they were building key knowledge, as well as developing ethical thinking, systems thinking, and critical thinking. Focusing on new career opportunities and pathways in an economic transition to a low-carbon, changed climate future. Getting children and young people engaged and excited about what they can do, rather than disengaged, depressed, or feeling like they have no control of their future.
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TABUNOV, I. A., A. P. LAPINA, M. M. KOSTYCHEV, P. S. BEREZINA, and A. V. NIKIFOROVA. METHODOLOGICAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR COACHES WORKING WITH CHILD ATHLETES ENGAGED IN ROCK CLIMBING. SIB-Expertise, December 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.12731/er0621.06122022.

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The methodological guide will present aspects that will be useful for coaches in working with their students, in particular psychological work with athletes during the training process and during the competition, and specifically in the pre-start period. It is important for the coach to teach the athlete the techniques of psychological protection, including restoring the stability control system, reducing feelings of anxiety and countering it. It is important to carry out special psychological training. Including effective preparation for competition, based on: social values; formation of mental "internal support"; overcoming psychological barriers. Every day the degree of development and influence of sports reaches a new level. Also, the requirements for athletes in technical, physical and tactical readiness are increasing, respectively, the result of competitive activity will already be determined by readiness and psychological attitude. Psychological preparation is a process aimed at creating a state of mental readiness for competition in athletes. This should be considered the subject of psychological preparation for competitions in sports.
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