Adjustment

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences

Kinds of Adjustment

  • additional adjustment
  • adolescent adjustment
  • age adjustment
  • appropriate adjustment
  • asymmetric adjustment
  • behavioral adjustment
  • behavioural adjustment
  • bonferroni adjustment
  • cardiovascular adjustment
  • child adjustment
  • children adjustment
  • covariate adjustment
  • dosage adjustment
  • dose adjustment
  • dynamic adjustment
  • emotional adjustment
  • employment adjustment
  • family adjustment
  • fine adjustment
  • good adjustment
  • interpersonal adjustment
  • labour market adjustment
  • long-term adjustment
  • marital adjustment
  • market adjustment
  • maternal adjustment
  • mental adjustment
  • metabolic adjustment
  • minor adjustment
  • multiple adjustment
  • multivariable adjustment
  • multivariate adjustment
  • mutual adjustment
  • occlusal adjustment
  • osmotic adjustment
  • personal adjustment
  • ph adjustment
  • physiological adjustment
  • poor psychological adjustment
  • positive adjustment
  • price adjustment
  • psycho-social adjustment
  • psychological adjustment
  • psychosocial adjustment
  • rate adjustment
  • risk adjustment
  • school adjustment
  • social adjustment
  • socioemotional adjustment
  • statistical adjustment
  • structural adjustment
  • subsequent adjustment
  • wage adjustment
  • work adjustment

  • Terms modified by Adjustment

  • adjustment behavior
  • adjustment cost
  • adjustment difficulty
  • adjustment disorder
  • adjustment disorders
  • adjustment dynamics
  • adjustment factor
  • adjustment hypothesis
  • adjustment measure
  • adjustment mechanism
  • adjustment method
  • adjustment model
  • adjustment models
  • adjustment period
  • adjustment policy
  • adjustment problem
  • adjustment process
  • adjustment scale
  • adjustment speed
  • adjustment variable

  • Selected Abstracts


    THE DIVIDED WORLD OF THE CHILD: DIVORCE AND LONG-TERM PSYCHOSOCIAL ADJUSTMENT

    FAMILY COURT REVIEW, Issue 3 2010
    Gordon E. Finley
    This study evaluated the extent to which divorce creates the "divided world of the child," as well as consequences of this "divided world" for long-term adjustment. An ethnically diverse sample of 1,375 young-adult university students completed retrospective measures of parental nurturance and involvement, and current measures of psychosocial adjustment and troubled ruminations about parents. Results indicated that reports of maternal and paternal nurturance and involvement were closely related in intact families but uncorrelated in divorced families. Across family forms, the total amount of nurturance or involvement received was positively associated with self-esteem, purpose in life, life satisfaction, friendship quality and satisfaction, and academic performance; and negatively related to distress, romantic relationship problems, and troubled ruminations about parents. Mother-father differences in nurturance and involvement showed a largely opposite set of relationships. Implications for family court practices are discussed. [source]


    LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, UNEXPECTED DEPRECIATION AND FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE ADJUSTMENT

    FINANCIAL ACCOUNTABILITY & MANAGEMENT, Issue 3 2010
    Robyn Pilcher
    Prior management and manipulation of financial accounting information research has overwhelmingly been focused within a private sector setting. This study adopts a public sector focus in empirically examining the use of a specific discretionary accrual (i.e., depreciation) to adjust the financial performance of New South Wales (Australia) local governments. Findings indicate a significant positive association between absolute unexpected depreciation and absolute local government income before capital contributions, and a significant positive association between absolute unexpected depreciation and capital contributions. Overall, the results make significant contributions to various literature streams with implications for various stakeholders interested in local governmental financial performance. [source]


    MARKET POWER, PRICE ADJUSTMENT, AND INFLATION,

    INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC REVIEW, Issue 1 2010
    Allen Head
    We study a monetary search economy in which endogenous fluctuations in market power driven by changes in consumers' search intensity determine the extent of price adjustment to movements in productivity and the money growth rate. A calibrated version of the economy exhibits countercyclical fluctuations in markups and is consistent with the observed incomplete response of nominal prices to cost movements associated with productivity fluctuations and to changes in the money growth rate. Furthermore, a higher average rate of inflation results in a lower average markup and increases the sensitivity of prices to fluctuations in either productivity or money growth. [source]


    PSYCHOSOCIAL ADJUSTMENT OF TWO BOYS WITH GYNECOMASTIA

    JOURNAL OF PAEDIATRICS AND CHILD HEALTH, Issue 5-6 2004
    Eric A Storch Dr
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    ACCLIMATION TO VARYING LIGHT QUALITIES: TOWARD THE FUNCTIONAL RELATIONSHIP OF STATE TRANSITIONS AND ADJUSTMENT OF PHOTOSYSTEM STOICHIOMETRY

    JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY, Issue 4 2005
    Thomas PfannschmidtArticle first published online: 31 AUG 200
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    ADJUSTMENT OF STREAM CHANNEL CAPACITY FOLLOWING DAM CLOSURE, YEGUA CREEK, TEXAS,

    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION, Issue 6 2002
    Anne Chin
    ABSTRACT: In Yegua Creek, a principal tributary of the Brazos River in Texas, surveys of a 19 km channel reach downstream of Somerville Dam show that channel capacity decreased by an average of 65 percent in a 34 year period following dam closure. The decrease corresponds with an approximately 85 percent reduction in annual flood peaks. Channel depth has changed the most, decreasing by an average of 61 percent. Channel width remained stable with an average decrease of only 9 percent, reflecting cohesive bank materials along with the growth of riparian vegetation resulting from increased low flows during dry summer months. Although large changes in stream channel geometry are not uncommon downstream of dams, such pronounced reductions in channel capacity could have long-term implications for sediment delivery through the system. [source]


    SOURCES OF SUPPORT AND EXPATRIATE PERFORMANCE: THE MEDIATING ROLE OF EXPATRIATE ADJUSTMENT

    PERSONNEL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 1 2001
    MARIA L. KRAIMER
    This study examined the role of 3 sources of support in facilitating expatriate adjustment and performance. A model was developed that examined the effects of perceived organizational support (POS), leader-member exchange (LMX), and spousal support on expatriates' adjustment to work, the country, and interacting with foreign nationals. In turn, it was expected that expatriate adjustment would influence expatriate task performance and contextual performance. The model was tested using a sample of 213 expatriate-supervisor dyads via structural equation modeling. The results indicated that POS had direct effects on expatriate adjustment, which in turn had direct effects on both dimensions of performance. Although LMX did not influence adjustment, it did have direct effects on expatriate task and contextual performance. Spousal support did not relate to adjustment or performance. Practical implications for facilitating expatriate adjustment and performance are discussed. [source]


    OUTPUT ADJUSTMENT IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: A STRUCTURAL VAR APPROACH

    THE DEVELOPING ECONOMIES, Issue 1 2002
    Steven MORLING
    First page of article [source]


    LEVERAGE ADJUSTMENTS FOR DISPERSION MODELLING IN GENERALIZED NONLINEAR MODELS

    AUSTRALIAN & NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF STATISTICS, Issue 4 2009
    Gordon K. Smyth
    Summary For normal linear models, it is generally accepted that residual maximum likelihood estimation is appropriate when covariance components require estimation. This paper considers generalized linear models in which both the mean and the dispersion are allowed to depend on unknown parameters and on covariates. For these models there is no closed form equivalent to residual maximum likelihood except in very special cases. Using a modified profile likelihood for the dispersion parameters, an adjusted score vector and adjusted information matrix are found under an asymptotic development that holds as the leverages in the mean model become small. Subsequently, the expectation of the fitted deviances is obtained directly to show that the adjusted score vector is unbiased at least to,O(1/n). Exact results are obtained in the single-sample case. The results reduce to residual maximum likelihood estimation in the normal linear case. [source]


    The current status of urban-rural differences in psychiatric disorders

    ACTA PSYCHIATRICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 2 2010
    J. Peen
    Peen J, Schoevers RA, Beekman AT, Dekker J. The current status of urban,rural differences in psychiatric disorders. Objective:, Reviews of urban,rural differences in psychiatric disorders conclude that urban rates may be marginally higher and, specifically, somewhat higher for depression. However, pooled results are not available. Method:, A meta-analysis of urban,rural differences in prevalence was conducted on data taken from 20 population survey studies published since 1985. Pooled urban,rural odds ratios (OR) were calculated for the total prevalence of psychiatric disorders, and specifically for mood, anxiety and substance use disorders. Results:, Significant pooled urban,rural OR were found for the total prevalence of psychiatric disorders, and for mood disorders and anxiety disorders. No significant association with urbanization was found for substance use disorders. Adjustment for various confounders had a limited impact on the urban,rural OR. Conclusion:, Urbanization may be taken into account in the allocation of mental health services. [source]


    Elites, Rent-Cycling and Development: Adjustment to Land Scarcity in Mauritius, Kenya and Côte d'Ivoire

    DEVELOPMENT POLICY REVIEW, Issue 4 2010
    Richard M. Auty
    According to rent-cycling theory, low rent aligns the interests of the elite and the majority in providing public goods and efficiency incentives to promote economic growth, while high rent risks deflecting the elite into self-enriching rent deployment, which distorts the economy and triggers a collapse from which recovery is protracted because rent recipients resist reform. The theory also predicts, however, that this collapse will self-correct by shrinking per capita rent, which strengthens incentives for wealth creation. This article tests the prediction in Mauritius, Kenya and Côte d'Ivoire where intensifying land scarcity has shrunk per capita rent; Mauritius meets the prediction, but Kenya and Côte d'Ivoire do not. [source]


    Misclassification and the use of register-based indicators for depression

    ACTA PSYCHIATRICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 4 2009
    K. Thielen
    Objective:, To study the degree to which depression indicators based on register data on hospital and antidepressant treatment suffer from differential misclassification with respect to gender, age and social group. Method:, Data on 7378 persons were obtained by linking a cross-sectional survey of Danish adults aged 40 and 50 years with population-based registers. Misclassification was analysed by comparing survey data to register data on major depression using the method proposed by Rothman and Greenland. Results:, Differential misclassification was found. Adjustment for misclassification reduced women's odds ratios from 2.18 to 1.00 for hospital treatment and from 1.70 to 1.10 for antidepressants. For the lower social group, the corresponding odds ratios increased from 1.18 to 3.52, and from 1.35 to 2.32 respectively, whereas odds ratios with respect to age remained almost unchanged. Conclusion:, Differential misclassification should be considered when register-based information about hospital and antidepressant treatment are used as depression indicators. [source]


    Baseline serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations in the Tromsø Study 1994,95 and risk of developing type 2 diabetes mellitus during 11 years of follow-up

    DIABETIC MEDICINE, Issue 10 2010
    G. Grimnes
    Diabet. Med. 27, 1107,1115 (2010) Abstract Aims, We wanted to test the hypothesis that low serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) concentrations are associated with increased risk of developing Type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) in a population-based cohort during 11 years of follow-up. Methods, The analyses included 4157 non-smokers and 1962 smokers from the Tromsø Study 1994,95 without diabetes at baseline. Subsequent Type 2 DM was defined using a hospital journal-based end-point registry, completed through the year 2005. Participants were allocated into quartiles of serum 25(OH)D within each month to account for seasonal variation, and serum 25(OH)D values both as a continuous variable and in quartiles were used in Cox regression models. The analyses were stratified by smoking. Adjustments were made for age, sex, body mass index (BMI), physical activity and, in non-smokers, former smoking. Results, Type 2 DM was registered in 183 non-smoking and 64 smoking participants. Using the fourth (highest) quartile of serum 25(OH)D as the reference, non-smoking participants in the third, second and first quartiles had age- and sex-adjusted hazard ratios (95% confidence intervals) of incident Type 2 DM of 1.00 (0.62,1.61), 1.50 (0.97,2.31) and 1.89 (1.25,2.88), respectively, whereas the corresponding values for smokers were 1.79 (0.77,4.19), 2.33 (1.02,5.35) and 2.68 (1.18,6.08). Adjustment for BMI attenuated the hazard ratios, and they were no longer significant. Conclusions, Baseline serum 25(OH)D was inversely associated with subsequent Type 2 DM in a population-based 11 year follow-up study, but not after adjustment for BMI. Randomized trials are needed to define the possible role of serum 25(OH)D status, and thereby the role of supplementation, in the prevention of Type 2 DM. [source]


    Long-term effects of leisure time physical activity on risk of insulin resistance and impaired glucose tolerance, allowing for body weight history, in Danish men

    DIABETIC MEDICINE, Issue 1 2007
    T. Berentzen
    Abstract Aims To determine if the level of leisure time physical activity (LTPA) in young adulthood in obese and non-obese men reduces the risk of insulin resistance (IR) and impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) in middle age, and if such an effect is explained by the current level of LTPA, or by the body mass index (BMI) history preceding and subsequent to the assessment of LTPA. Methods Longitudinal study of groups of obese and randomly selected non-obese men identified at around age 19, and re-examined at mean ages of 32, 44 and 51. BMI was measured at all four examinations. LTPA was assessed by self-administrated questionnaires at the last three examinations. IR and the presence of IGT was determined by an oral glucose tolerance test at the last examination. Results LTPA in young adulthood reduced the risk of IR and IGT in middle age throughout the range of BMI. Adjustment for the BMI history preceding and subsequent to the assessment of LTPA attenuated the association with IR and IGT, but active men remained at low risk of IR and IGT. Adjustment for subsequent and current levels of LTPA, smoking habits, alcohol intake, educational level and family history of diabetes had no notable influence on the results. Conclusion LTPA appears to reduce the risk of IR and IGT, an effect which is not explained by the current level of physical activity, and only partially explained by the BMI history preceding and subsequent to the assessment of LTPA. [source]


    Restoring satisfactory status in ThinPrep Pap test specimens with too few squamous cells and containing microscopic red blood cells

    DIAGNOSTIC CYTOPATHOLOGY, Issue 10 2008
    Ph.D., Yijun Pang M.D.
    Abstract Treatment of specimens that contain excessive blood can effectively reduce the unsatisfactory rate; however, a considerable number of unsatisfactory specimens remain. We evaluated the effectiveness of reprocessing unsatisfactory specimens that had too few squamous cells and contained microscopic red blood cells (TFSQRBC). Out of the 688 unsatisfactory specimens at microscopic screening, 197 (28.63%) were TFSQRBC that were reprocessed by treatment of glacial acetic acid (GAA). Red blood cells were observed clogging the pores in the filter of the ThinPrep device. After reprocessing, 129 (68.48%) yielded a satisfactory diagnosis, which accounted for a reduction of the unsatisfactory rate by 18.25%. In the restored satisfactory specimens, abnormal diagnoses of 1 high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (HSIL) (0.78%), 3 atypical glandular cells (AGC) (2.33%), and 13 atypical squamous cells of undetermined significance (ASCUS) (10.08%) were made. The abnormal diagnoses in this group of patients were significantly higher than that in the general population screened. Reprocessing unsatisfactory ThinPrep® (TP) specimens of TFSQRBC can reduce the unsatisfactory rate of the TP Pap test significantly and is a cost-effective measure. The initially unsatisfactory specimens are more likely to represent cases with an abnormal diagnosis, which also justifies the effort of reprocessing this group of specimens. Adjustment of the pore size on the ThinPrep filter device may reduce the interference of red blood cells. Diagn. Cytopathol. 2008;36:696,700. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


    Binge drinking and depressive symptoms: a 5-year population-based cohort study

    ADDICTION, Issue 7 2009
    Tapio Paljärvi
    ABSTRACT Background Only few prospective population studies have been able so far to investigate depression and drinking patterns in detail. Therefore, little is known about what aspect of alcohol consumption best predicts symptoms of depression in the general population. Participants and design In this prospective population-based two-wave cohort study, a cohort of alcohol-drinking men and women (n = 15 926) were followed-up after 5 years. A postal questionnaire was sent in 1998 (response proportion 40%) and again in 2003 (response proportion 80% of the baseline participants) to Finnish adults aged 20,54 years at baseline. Measurements Alcohol consumption was measured by average intake (g/week) and by measures of binge drinking (intoxications, hangovers and alcohol-induced pass-outs). Depressive symptoms were assessed with the 21-item Beck Depression Inventory. In addition, information from hospital discharge register for depression and alcohol abuse were linked to the data. Findings This study found a positive association between baseline binge drinking and depressive symptoms 5 years later. Adjustment for several possible confounders attenuated the observed relationships only slightly, suggesting that binge drinking contributes independently to the occurrence of depressive symptoms. Binge drinking was related to symptoms of depression independently of average intake. Conclusions This study supports the hypothesis that heavy drinking, and in particular a binge pattern involving intoxications, hangovers or pass-outs, produces depressive symptoms in the general population. The frequency of hangovers was the best predictor for depressive symptoms. [source]


    Trace metal distribution in soluble organic matter from municipal solid waste compost determined by size-exclusion chromatography

    ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 9 2002
    Arno Kaschl
    Abstract Municipal solid waste (MSW) composts carry high amounts of trace metals and organic complexing agents that may influence metal bioavailability and mobility after application to soils. In order to assess the degree of organic complexation of trace metals in the solution phase of MSW compost and the relevance of organic ligand type, size exclusion chromatography (SEC) was applied to compost-extracted organic ligands. Adjustment of the elution conditions minimized the interaction with the gel matrix for compost humic substances and dissolved organic matter (DOM) fractions. The SEC was then used to separate the aqueous compost extract into samples with distinct differences in chemical constituents. The highest quantities of Cu, Zn, Ni, Mn, and Cd were found to coelute with the main peak of the SEC elution curve, which, as observed by Fourier-transformed infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy, also had the highest density of carboxyl groups. The ratio of aromatic to aliphatic structures was higher for eluates with low retention times, and cations such as Al, Cr, and Fe were preferably associated with these larger organic molecules. All trace metals in the compost solution phase were bound mostly to DOM rather than forming inorganic complexes. [source]


    Psychosocial Adjustment of People with Epilepsy in Hong Kong

    EPILEPSIA, Issue 9 2001
    Vanessa W. Y. Lau
    Summary: ,Purpose: In light of the issues associated with the psychosocial adjustment of people with epilepsy that have been widely reported, this study examined these issues within a Chinese cultural context. Methods: Fifty patients with epilepsy completed The Washington Psychosocial Inventory, the Coping Inventory for Stressful Situations, and a questionnaire that assessed their psychosocial difficulties and coping styles. Multiple regression procedure was used to examine the strength of various medical and social factors in predicting the psychosocial adjustment problems of these participants. Results: Social factors, such as self-perception and coping strategies, were more powerful predictors of psychosocial adjustment in people with epilepsy than the medical factors associated with epilepsy. Conclusions: These findings showed that psychosocial maladjustment is a significant issue for people with epilepsy in Hong Kong. The emerging importance of social factors as predictors of psychosocial adjustment in epilepsy, as compared with medical factors, highlights the need for developing tailored counseling therapy and social support groups for people with epilepsy. [source]


    Adjustment of Temporal Call Usage During Vocal Exchange of Coo Calls in Japanese Macaques

    ETHOLOGY, Issue 6 2007
    Hideki Sugiura
    Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata) exchange coo calls with group members to maintain contact. I examined the relationship between the distance between group members and (1) the latency of vocal responses to spontaneous calls, and (2) the latency of spontaneous call repetition in the absence of vocal responses. After a subject monkey's spontaneous call, the latency of vocal response by another group member was longer when the subject was farther from the group members than when the subject was near the group members. Furthermore, subject repeated calls with longer intervals in the absence of vocal response, which suggests that they wait longer for the vocal responses of other group members when the expected response latency is longer. These results reveal that Japanese macaques flexibly alter the timing of their calls based on others' vocal responses. [source]


    Adjustment of Parental Investment in the Dung Beetle Onthophagus atripennis (Col., Scarabaeidae)

    ETHOLOGY, Issue 12 2006
    Shigeki Kishi
    If parents can invest resources optimally per offspring, they should adjust the amount of investment in an offspring according to environmental heterogeneity. Many studies have demonstrated changes in egg size or the amount of resource supplied in response to environmental heterogeneity. However, it remains unclear whether parents simply know the resource type a priori or can assess resource quality and adjust the quantity of investment accordingly. We examined the parental capability to adjust the amount of investment per offspring by providing Onthophagus atripennis dung beetle parents with one of three dung types of different quality: monkey dung (high quality), cow dung (low quality), or a mixture of monkey and cow dung (medium quality). The beetle parents cooperatively produce dung brood masses each with one egg under the ground. The size of a brood mass, on which a larva can only feed until adult, represents a large part of the amount of investment. Parents produced a greater number of smaller brood masses given high-quality resource, while they compensated for low quality of the resource by providing a larger amount of the resource, at the cost of offspring number. However, despite this compensation in the amount of food, offspring raised on low-quality food was still smaller than offspring raised on high-quality food. Thus, O. atripennis parents assessed resource quality partly and adjusted the amount of resource provided for their offspring. [source]


    Genetic Probes of Three Theories of Maternal Adjustment: I. Recent Evidence and a Model,

    FAMILY PROCESS, Issue 3 2001
    David Reiss M.D.
    Studies focusing on genetic and social influences on maternal adjustment will illumine mother's marriage, parenting, and the development of psychopathology in her children. Recent behavioral genetic research suggests mechanisms by which genetic and social influences determine psychological development and adjustment. First, heritable, personal attributes may influence individuals' relationships with their family members. These genetically influenced family patterns may amplify the effects of adverse, heritable personal attributes on adjustment. Second, influences unique to siblings may be the most important environmental determinants of adjustment. We derive three hypotheses on maternal adjustment from integrating these findings from genetic studies with other contemporary research on maternal adjustment. First, mother's marriage mediates the influence of her heritable, personal attributes on her adjustment. Second, mother's recall of how she was parented is partially genetically influenced, and both her relationships with her spouse and her child mediate the impact of these genetically influenced representations on her current adjustment. Third, characteristics of mother's spouse are important influences on difference between her adjustment and that of her sister's These sibling-specific influences are unrelated to mother's heritable attributes. The current article develops this model, and the companion article describes the Twin Mom Study that was designed to test it as well, as its first findings. Data from this study can illumine the role of family process in the expression of genetic influence and lead to specific family interventions designed to offset adverse genetic influences. [source]


    Genetic Probes of Three Theories of Maternal Adjustment: II.

    FAMILY PROCESS, Issue 3 2001
    Environmental Influences, Genetic
    This is the first report of the Twin Mom Study, an investigation of three hypotheses concerning influences on maternal adjustment. These hypotheses concern the role of the marital and parent-child relationships in mediating genetic influences on maternal adjustment and on the importance of the mothers' marital partners as a specifiable source of influences on their adjustment not shared with their sisters. The study's sample of 150 monozygotic (MZ) twins and 176 dizygotic (DZ) twins was drawn randomly from the Swedish Twin Registry and is, with some small exceptions, likely to be representative of women in the Swedish population. The sample included the marital partners of these twins and their adolescent children. Self-report and coded videotapes were a source of information about family process. Results reported in this first report focus on comparability of American and Swedish samples on scales measuring psychiatric symptoms, and on an analysis of genetic and environmental influences on nine measures of mothers' adjustment. Results suggest comparability between the US and Sweden. Genetic influences were found for all measures of adjustment, particularly in the psychological manifestations of anxiety and for smoking. The pattern of findings also underscored the importance of influences unique to each sibling within the twin pair, thus focusing attention on the potential role of marital partners in maternal adjustment. Results also suggested that experiences shared by the twin sisters, experiences unrelated to their genetic similarity, may influence their fearfulness and alcohol consumption. Our model did not include these influences and thus must be amended. [source]


    Soil and atmospheric water deficits and the distribution of New Zealand's indigenous tree species

    FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, Issue 2 2001
    Leathwick J. R.
    Summary 1.,An extensive data set describing the composition of New Zealand's remaining indigenous forests was used to estimate the degree of correlation between measures of both soil and atmospheric water deficit and the distribution of common tree species. 2.,For most species, regression models incorporating measures of air saturation deficit in early autumn, as well as an annual integral of root zone water deficit, provided the best explanation of spatial distribution. This accords strongly with the mechanistic effects of air saturation deficits on transpiration from trees, and the hydraulic risks experienced by trees under high evaporative demand. 3.,Adjustment of root zone water deficits to account for reductions in rainfall in dry years substantially improved model predictions. This suggests that extreme climatic events, such as the El Niño phase of the Southern Oscillation, are likely to have strongly influenced the historic composition of forests in New Zealand's drier eastern lowlands. [source]


    Perpendicularly Aligned, Size-and Spacing-Controlled Nanocylinders by Molecular-Weight Adjustment of a Homopolymer Blended in an Asymmetric Triblock Copolymer

    ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 15 2006
    U. Ahn
    Abstract Perpendicularly arrayed and size-controlled nanocylinders have been prepared by simply blending an asymmetric polystyrene- block -polyisoprene- block -polystyrene triblock copolymer with polystyrene (the minority component) homopolymers of different molecular weights. The preference for perpendicular orientation or hexagonal ordering of the nanocylinders over a large area in the asymmetric block copolymer can be controlled by adjusting the molecular weight of the blended homopolymer, and the perfection of hexagonal ordering of the perpendicular cylinders can be tuned by using a substrate whose surface tension is much different from that of the majority component of the block copolymer. Such highly controlled nanostructured block-copolymer materials, which have been obtained by a simple method independent of film thickness and interfacial tension between the blocks and the substrates, have wide-ranging commercial potential, e.g., for use in membranes and nanotemplates with size-tunable pores, bandgap-controlled photonic crystals, and other nanotechnological fields demanding a specific nanosize and nanomorphology. [source]


    Case-Mix Adjustment of the CAHPS® Hospital Survey

    HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, Issue 6p2 2005
    A. James O'Malley
    Objectives: To develop a model for case-mix adjustment of Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS®) Hospital survey responses, and to assess the impact of adjustment on comparisons of hospital quality. Data Sources: Survey of 19,720 patients discharged from 132 hospitals. Methods: We analyzed CAHPS Hospital survey data to assess the extent to which patient characteristics predict patient ratings ("predictive power") and the heterogeneity of the characteristics across hospitals. We combined the measures to estimate the impact of each predictor ("impact factor") and selected high impact variables for adjusting ratings from the CAHPS Hospital survey. Principle Findings: The most important case-mix variables are: hospital service (surgery, obstetric, medical), age, race (non-Hispanic black), education, general health status (GHS), speaking Spanish at home, having a circulatory disorder, and interactions of each of these variables with service. Adjustment for GHS and education affected scores in each of the three services, while age and being non-Hispanic black had important impacts for those receiving surgery or medical services. Circulatory disorder, Spanish language, and Hispanic affected scores for those treated on surgery, obstetrics, and medical services, respectively. Of the 20 medical conditions we tested, only circulatory problems had an important impact within any of the services. Results were consistent for the overall ratings of nurse, doctor, and hospital. Although the overall impact of case-mix adjustment is modest, the rankings of some hospitals may be substantially affected. Conclusions: Case-mix adjustment has a small impact on hospital ratings, but can lead to important reductions in the bias in comparisons between hospitals. [source]


    Mood Adjustment to Social Situations Through Mass Media Use: How Men Ruminate and Women Dissipate Angry Moods

    HUMAN COMMUNICATION RESEARCH, Issue 1 2006
    Silvia Knobloch-Westerwick
    Mood adjustment goals served to explain gender differences regarding media preferences. Before reacting to antagonism, females are likely to prevent aggression by dissolving aversive states through media consumption, whereas males could preserve aggression by choosing negative content. In a computerized procedure, participants (N = 86) were provoked by supervisor feedback to instigate angry moods. Half of the sample was led to anticipate a retaliation opportunity. In a purportedly separate study, participants were free to choose from online news while software unobtrusively logged their selective news exposure. The articles had been classified as positive or negative news in a pretest. When anticipating a retaliation opportunity, females spent more time reading positive news to dissipate their anger. Males expecting a retaliation opportunity spent more time on negative news to sustain their anger. Males' generally lower news consumption, especially when anticipating a chance to retaliate, indicated anger rumination through news avoidance altogether. [source]


    Nanoscale Logic Circuits: Hybrid Complementary Logic Circuits of One-Dimensional Nanomaterials with Adjustment of Operation Voltage (Adv. Mater.

    ADVANCED MATERIALS, Issue 21 2009
    21/2009)
    A new layout of complementary logic circuits based on p-channel carbon nanotube and n-channel zinc oxide nanowire transistors is presented by Takhee Lee and co-workers on p. 2156. The processing is a hybrid approach, combining advantageous characteristic functions for the modulation of the current and operating voltage in transistors through proton radiation-generated charges, allowing a simple method of designing favorable logic circuits. [source]


    Hybrid Complementary Logic Circuits of One-Dimensional Nanomaterials with Adjustment of Operation Voltage

    ADVANCED MATERIALS, Issue 21 2009
    Gunho Jo
    A new layout of complementary logic circuits based on p-channel carbon nanotube and n-channel zinc oxide nanowire transistors is presented, providing a hybrid approach to combine advantageous characteristic functions for the modulation of the current and operating voltage in transistors through proton radiation-generated charges, which allow a simple way to design favorable logic circuits. [source]


    Preliminary evidence supporting a framework of psychological adjustment to inflammatory bowel disease,

    INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASES, Issue 10 2010
    Jennifer L. Kiebles PhD
    Abstract Background: Adjustment to chronic disease is a multidimensional construct described as successful adaptation to disease-specific demands, preservation of psychological well-being, functional status, and quality of life. Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) can be particularly challenging due to the unpredictable, relapsing and remitting course of the disease. Methods: All participants were patients being treated in an outpatient gastroenterology clinic at a university medical center. Participants completed a survey of questionnaires assessing illness perceptions, stress, emotional functioning, disease acceptance, coping, disease impact, and disease-specific and health-related quality of life. Adjustment was measured as a composite of perceived disability, psychological functioning, and disease-specific and health-related quality of life. Results: Participants were 38 adults with a diagnosis of either Crohn's disease (45%) or ulcerative colitis (55%). We observed that our defined adjustment variables were strongly correlated with disease characteristics (r = 0.33,0.80, all P < 0.05), an emotional representation of illness (r = 0.44,0.58, P < 0.01), disease acceptance (r = 0.34,0.74, P < 0.05), coping (r = 0.33,0.60, P < 0.05), and frequency of gastroenterologist visits (r = 0.39,0.70, P < 0.05). Better adjustment was associated with greater bowel and systemic health, increased activities engagement and symptom tolerance, less pain, less perceived stress, and fewer gastroenterologist visits. All adjustment variables were highly correlated (r = 0.40,0.84, P < 0.05) and demonstrated a cohesive composite. Conclusions: The framework presented and results of this study underscore the importance of considering complementary pathways of disease management including cognitive, emotional, and behavioral factors beyond the traditional medical and psychological (depression and anxiety) components. (Inflamm Bowel Dis 2010) [source]


    A parallel cell-based DSMC method on unstructured adaptive meshes

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR NUMERICAL METHODS IN FLUIDS, Issue 12 2004
    Min Gyu Kim
    Abstract A parallel DSMC method based on a cell-based data structure is developed for the efficient simulation of rarefied gas flows on PC-clusters. Parallel computation is made by decomposing the computational domain into several subdomains. Dynamic load balancing between processors is achieved based on the number of simulation particles and the number of cells allocated in each subdomain. Adjustment of cell size is also made through mesh adaptation for the improvement of solution accuracy and the efficient usage of meshes. Applications were made for a two-dimensional supersonic leading-edge flow, the axi-symmetric Rothe's nozzle, and the open hollow cylinder flare flow for validation. It was found that the present method is an efficient tool for the simulation of rarefied gas flows on PC-based parallel machines. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]