965 research outputs found
Relationships Between Sensory Processing and Play Experiences Among Healthy Community-Dwelling Older Adults
Abstract
Date Presented 4/1/2017
This study aims to examine the relationships between sensory processing patterns and play experiences as well as to examine the feasibility of using the Adult Sensory Processing Scale and Daily Occupations Experience Survey with community-dwelling older adults.
Primary Author and Speaker: Megan Chang
Additional Authors and Speakers: Krista Yee, Nathan Nam, Naomi Starr, Larkin Petralli, Christine Huynh</jats:p
Being Chiang Yee: Feeling difference and storytelling
Chiang Yee was a Chinese writer, poet and painter who lived in England during the 1930s and 1940s. In his writing and drawings, there are many observations on the attention that his Chinese appearance provoked, all enabling him to tell stories about both Chinese and English cultures. The autobiographical persona of Silent Traveller, created by Chiang Yee in his writing, steered clear of controversial remarks, although he had strong feelings about Chinese politics, racism, and how Chinese people were regarded in Britain and America. This chapter explores how emotions, whether difficult or joyous, do not fit smoothly into linear narratives, and make personal memory an unreliable witness to history. Historians also may have a personal and emotional interest in the subjects they study. Indeed, I cannot think about Chiang Yee without resonances of my own family history, and experiences of being or embodying something of the Chinese in Britain. In a new analysis of The Silent Traveller in London (1945) and The Silent Traveller in Oxford (1946), the chapter explores what happens if we deepen rather than deny the historian’s role as storyteller, and pay closer attention to the differences and overlaps between Chiang Yee the author and Chiang Yee the Silent Traveller. Embracing the fragmented, the personal, the emotional, and the miss-remembered reveals a series of moments that speak about a Chinese physical presence in Oxford and London. These bring us closer to what it felt like to be a Chinese man in England during the 1940s, between the stories that were silenced and the things that could be said
Student Expectations in the New Millennium
Higher education has experienced vast changes as a result of global political and economic developments. Cultural and social changes in the last decade have also added to the continuing evolution of higher education. These changes inevitably lead to changing expectations of students entering higher education. An adequate understanding of student expectations is crucial in ensuring a good fit between higher educational institutions and their students. This study attempts to carry out a baseline descriptive-quantitative research on student expectations in the higher education of Hong Kong. Four scales have been developed to measure students’ attitude toward: 1. job-oriented curriculum design, 2. user-friendly course delivery method, 3. opportunities for lifelong learning, and 4. student consumerism. Students’ priority of what makes a good university, their reasons for going to university, and their self-perception of ability to cope with university life are also explored. The Student Expectations Questionnaire (developed by the author) was used to gather data from 857 first-year undergrads from nine institutions of higher education in Hong Kong. Analyses include, among others, gender, age, major of study as well as institution comparisons
Xin li ji jiu yu wei ji shi jian he zai nan zhong zuo wei gong gong wei sheng zai nan ying dui zhun bei de ce lüe
Cheung, Yee Lai.Thesis Ph.D. Chinese University of Hong Kong 2014.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 193-207).Abstracts and some appendixes also in Chinese.Title from PDF title page (viewed on 02, December, 2016).Cheung, Yee Lai
Population entropies estimates of proteins
The Shannon entropy equation provides a way to estimate variability of amino acids sequences in a multiple sequence alignment of proteins. Knowledge of protein variability is useful in many areas such as vaccine design, identification of antibody binding sites, and exploration of protein 3D structural properties. In cases where the population entropies of a protein are of interest but only a small sample size can be obtained, a method based on linear regression and random subsampling can be used to estimate the population entropy. This method is useful for comparisons of entropies where the actual sequence counts differ and thus, correction for alignment size bias is needed. In the current work, an R based package named EntropyCorrect that enables estimation of population entropy is presented and an empirical study on how well this new algorithm performs on simulated dataset of various combinations of population and sample sizes is discussed. The package is available at https://github.com/lloydlow/EntropyCorrectWai Yee Lo
Supplemental Material, sj-pdf-1-ptd-10.1177_08968608211055290 - Physical activity and exercise in peritoneal dialysis: International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis and the Global Renal Exercise Network practice recommendations
Supplemental Material, sj-pdf-1-ptd-10.1177_08968608211055290 for Physical activity and exercise in peritoneal dialysis: International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis and the Global Renal Exercise Network practice recommendations by Paul N Bennett, Clara Bohm, Oksana Harasemiw, Leanne Brown, Iwona Gabrys, Dev Jegatheesan, David W Johnson, Kelly Lambert, Courtney J Lightfoot, Jennifer MacRae, Anthony Meade, Kristen Parker, Nicole Scholes-Robertson, Krista Stewart, Brett Tarca, Nancy Verdin, Angela Yee-Moon Wang, Madeleine Warren, Mike West, Deborah Zimmerman, Philip Kam-Tao Li and Stephanie Thompson in Peritoneal Dialysis International</p
Validation of a novel traditional Chinese medicine pulse diagnostic model using an artificial neural network
Author name used in this publication: Joanne Wai Yee ChungAuthor name used in this publication: Thomas Kwok Shing wongVersion of RecordPublishedC
Testing the psychometric properties of a Chinese version of the level of expressed emotion scale
Author name used in this publication: Wai Tong ChienAuthor name used in this publication: Zenobia Chung-Yee Chan2013-2014 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishedC
CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collection
Mai, Yee Yan.Thesis M.Phil. Chinese University of Hong Kong 2015.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 90-94).Abstracts also in Chinese; appendixes in Chinese.Title from PDF title page (viewed on 07, November, 2016)
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