716 research outputs found
sj-docx-1-spp-10.1177_19485506221079947 – Supplemental material for Negative Affect, Affect Regulation, and Food Choice: A Value-Based Decision-Making Analysis
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-spp-10.1177_19485506221079947 for Negative Affect, Affect Regulation, and Food Choice: A Value-Based Decision-Making Analysis by Daniel O’Leary, Angela Smith, Elaheh Salehi and James J. Gross in Social Psychological and Personality Science</p
Prevalence, Gender and Age Differences of Dating Aggression Among Italian Adolescents
The present study represents an effort to expand and deepen the scant literature on Adolescent Dating Aggression (ADA) within the Italian context; adolescent dating aggression is a public health issue of interest due to its increasing frequency among adolescents. The prevalence of verbal-emotional and physical ADA was examined as well as gender and age differences in a sample of Italian adolescents. Participants included 436 adolescents (47.7% males; 52.3% females) living in northern Italy, aged 16 to 18 years (M = 17.11). Participants completed the Conflict in Adolescent Dating Relationships Inventory measuring abusive behaviors between adolescent dating partners. Non-parametric analyses were computed. Verbal-emotional ADA perpetration and victimization were much more common than physical ADA perpetration and victimization. Females reported higher levels of verbal-emotional and physical ADA perpetration than males. To fully investigate gender differences single behaviors were analyzed and described. Finally, age differences emerged only for perpetrated verbal-emotional abuse with such aggression being highest at age 18. This research suggests that in order to prevent the onset of dating aggression in teens in northern Italy, prevention programs may need to begin earlier than previously provided in junior high school. Another core conclusion is that physical aggression against partners is a problem for both males and females, thus intervention for the empowerment of interpersonal skills are needed
On the Sherlocks, Jane Coleman and County Kildare in the Eighteen Forties
In the late 1980s and early 1990s the author acquired about 30,000 letters written mainly in the 1840s. These pertained to estates throughout Ireland managed by the firm of James Robert Stewart and Joseph Kincaid, hereafter denoted SK. Until the letters – called the SK correspondence in what follows – became the author’s property, they had not seen light of day since the 1840s. Addressed mainly to the firm’s office in Dublin, they were written by landlords, tenants, the partners in SK, local agents, etc. After about 200 years in operation as a land agency, the firm in which members of the Stewart family were the principal partners – Messrs J. R. Stewart & Son(s) from the mid- 1880s onwards – ceased operations in the mid-1980s. Since 1994 the author has been researching the SK correspondence of the 1840s. It gives many new insights into economic and social conditions in Ireland during the decade of the great famine, and into the operation of Ireland’s most important land agency during those years. It is intended ultimately to publish details on several of the estates managed by SK in a study more comprehensive than the present article, in book form. The proposed title is Landlords, tenants, famine: business of an Irish land agency in the 1840s, a draft of which has now been completed. A majority of the letters in that study are on themes some of which one might expect - rents, distraint (seizure of assets in lieu of rent); ‘voluntary’ surrender of land in return for ‘compensation’ upon quitting quietly; formal ejectment (a matter of last resort on estates managed by SK); landlordassisted emigration (on a scale much more extensive than most historians of Ireland in the 1840s appear to believe); petitions from tenants; complaints by tenants, both about other tenants and about local agents; landlord-financed and other relief of distress both before and during the great famine; major works of improvement (on almost all of the estates managed by SK which have been investigated in detail in the draft book); applications by SK, on behalf of landlords, for government loans to finance improvements; recommendations of agricultural advisers hired by SK, etc. Thus, most of the SK correspondence is about aspects of estate management. But the firm of SK was not only a manager of land. The correspondence reveals only two estates in Kildare, each of them relatively small, managed by SK in the 1840s. These were the lands of the Sherlocks near Naas and of Jane Coleman in the Kilcullen district. The correspondence on these properties differs substantively from most of those discussed in detail in the draft of Landlords, tenants, famine: first, it is relatively small in quantity, and secondly, it contains relatively little on the core aspects of estate management indicated above. Much of that on the Sherlocks focuses on misfortunes among family members, while the correspondence on Jane Coleman highlights the benevolence of that proprietor.
Chapitre 11. L’imprimé religieux
Livres et périodiques pour une communauté en plein développement STUART CLARKSON ET DANIEL O’LEARY Les livres religieux que distribuait la missionnaire Annie MacPherson dans la campagne ontarienne jouissaient d’une telle popularité que Charlie, le cheval de la mission, paraissait « instinctivement s’arrêter lorsqu’il croisait un piéton pour que puisse être extrait de [ses] sacoches bien remplies quelque tract ou livre » qu’on « s’arrachait et lisait avec frénésie ». Les imprimés religieux, di..
Ethnic identity, political identity and ethnic conflict: simulating the effect of congruence between the two identities on ethnic violence and conflict
This thesis outlines and presents an alternative hypothetical process to the emergence of ethnic conflict. Ethnic conflicts, rather than being dependent upon pre-existing 'ancient hatreds', are instead the result of a congruence between ethnic and political identity which grants individuals the ability to use ethnicity to identify and eliminate political threats. This hypothesis is formed by the examination of three case studies of ethnic conflict: Lebanon, Northern Ireland and Croatia. This hypothesis is then formalised and tested using an agent based simulation in which agent interactions are dependent upon ethnic and political identity and the congruence between the two. As predicted there was a strong positive correlation between how accurately ethnic identity reflected political identity and the level of ethnically motivated violence in the simulation, although the relationship was not linear. Furthermore the effect of a shift in congruence was found to be roughly comparable to the effect of initialising agents with a moderate level of pre-existing ethnic antagonism
sj-docx-1-jiv-10.1177_08862605221140044 – Supplemental material for The Relationship Behavior Survey: A Comprehensive Measure of Psychological Intimate Partner Violence for Adolescents
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-jiv-10.1177_08862605221140044 for The Relationship Behavior Survey: A Comprehensive Measure of Psychological Intimate Partner Violence for Adolescents by Michele Cascardi, Raghad Hassabelnaby, Hannah Schorpp, Amy M. Smith Slep, Ernest N. Jouriles and K. Daniel O’Leary in Journal of Interpersonal Violence</p
BBS_Supplemental_Table_1_03.17.2018 – Supplemental material for The Bystander Behavior (For Friends) Scale: Factor Structure and Correlation With Prior Victimization
Supplemental material, BBS_Supplemental_Table_1_03.17.2018 for The Bystander Behavior (For Friends) Scale: Factor Structure and Correlation With Prior Victimization by Michele Cascardi, Alison Krauss, K. Daniel O’Leary, Katie Lee Loatman, Kelli Sargent, John Grych and Ernest N. Jouriles in Journal of Interpersonal Violence</p
An Examination of Factors Influencing Small Proton Chemical Shift Differences in Nitrogen-Substituted Monodeuterated Methyl Groups
Monodeuterated methyl groups have previously been demonstrated to provide access to long-lived nuclear spin states. This is possible when the CH2D rotamers have sufficiently different populations and the local environment is chiral, which foments a non-negligible isotropic chemical shift difference between the two CH2D protons. In this article, the focus is on the N-CH2D group of N-CH2D-2-methylpiperidine and other suitable CH2D-piperidine derivatives. We used a combined experimental and computational approach to investigate how rotameric symmetry breaking leads to a 1H CH2D chemical shift difference that can subsequently be tuned by a variety of factors such as temperature, acidity and 2-substituted molecular groups.</jats:p
The legal framework for groundwater allocation in Quebec: towards integrated water management
This paper aims at providing a model of the legal framework for groundwater allocation in the province of Quebec (Canada), identifying its potential deficiencies and suggesting possible improvements. In Quebec, groundwater is a res communis. The right to use it is tied to real estate property. This right forms the basis of the legal framework for the management of groundwater quantity. However, according to statutory law, the actual use of groundwater also depends on governmental authorisations that limit quantities used. The main statutory instrument for managing the resource is the Groundwater Catchment Regulation (GWCR), which aims at conflict prevention between first users and new users by means of governmental authorisations. In agricultural areas, an additional authorisation regime indirectly prioritises agricultural groundwater uses. Finally, legal mechanisms addressing conflicts between water users rely on the general litigation framework provided by Quebec law without establishing an order of priority for the different uses of the resource. According to Integrated Water Resources Management, four aspects of the legal framework for groundwater quantity management can be modified to increase the efficiency of the allocation regime: 1) provisions should be made to preserve a residual environmental flow; 2) an order of priority should be established between the different uses to minimise conflict; 3) the scope of the regime should be extended to all groundwater users to increase its efficiency; 4) stakeholders should participate in the management of the resource
sj-docx-1-aor-10.1177_00034894211057374 – Supplemental material for Applicant Perspectives on Virtual Otolaryngology Residency Interviews
sj-docx-1-aor-10.1177_00034894211057374 for Applicant Perspectives on Virtual Otolaryngology Residency Interviews by Daniel O. Kraft, Eve M. R. Bowers, Brandon T. Smith, Noel Jabbour, Barry M. Schaitkin, Miriam A. O’Leary, Jan C. Groblewski, VyVy N. Young and Shaum Sridharan in Annals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology</p
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