200,366 research outputs found

    Rutter, D M, 420500

    No full text
    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/414859Surname: RUTTER. Given Name(s) or Initials: D M. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 420500. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 51914.234923 Item: [2016.0049.47120] "Rutter, D M, 420500

    Can inattention/overactivity be an institutional deprivation syndrome?

    No full text
    Elevated rates of attention deficit and overactivity have been noted previously in samples of institution-reared children. This study examined the hypothesis that inattention/overactivity(I/O) might constitute a specific deprivation syndrome. One hundred and sixty five children adopted at varying ages (e.g., 0–42 months of age) into the UK following severe early deprivation were compared with 52 within-UK adoptees who did not suffer deprivation. The children were rated by teachers and parents on levels of I/O, conduct difficulties, and emotional difficulties using the Revised Rutter Scales. Data were collected at age 6 for the entire sample and at age 4 for the UK adoptees and for the subsample of Romanian children who entered the UK before the age of 2 years. Mean level analyses suggested a significant effect of duration of deprivation on I/O, but not on conduct or emotional difficulties. The effects of duration of deprivation were specific to I/O and were not accounted for by low birth weight, malnutrition, or cognitive impairment. Levels of I/O correlated with attachment disturbances. Furthermore, the effects of duration of deprivation on I/O did not attenuate over time. We conclude that I/O may well constitute an institutional deprivation syndrome, but that the type of attention deficit and overactivity exhibited by these children may present a different clinical picture from that of ordinary varieties of attention deficit disorder or hyperkinetic syndrome

    Lyman Earl Rutter

    No full text
    The Oklahoma A&M College World War I Veterans collection captures the memories and experiences of the men and women of Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College who served in World War I. In 1919, a project headed by Maude Cass, the editor of the 1919 Redskin; Professor Maroney of the Department of History; Margaret Walters, Librarian; and J.W. Cantwell, the College President, was undertaken to survey these veterans. The surveys were returned along with photographs, letters, and newspaper clippings documenting these veterans’ experiences during World War I

    Rutter, Michael: transcript of a video interview (18-Dec-2006 and 15-Feb-2007)

    No full text
    Michael Rutter is a leading international figure in academic psychiatry. He has worked in the USA, University of Birmingham and for much of his career at the Institute of Psychiatry in London. His research has included the epidemiology of childhood psychiatric illnesses, longitudinal studies of school effectiveness, depression and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. He has written extensively about childhood autism, including autistic “idiots savants”. He is well known for studying the interplay of nature and nurture in the development of childhood psychiatric disturbances, and devised objective measurements of the “deprivation index” in a child’s environment, showing that this correlated with the risk of developing antisocial behaviour, drug taking or criminality.Supported by a Wellcome Trust Public Engagement grant (2006-2008) in the History of Medicine to Professor Tilli Tansey (QMUL) and Professor Leslie Iversen (Oxford), this project recorded interviews with 12 prominent neuroscientists, between 2006 and 2008

    Miller, M. D. and Rutter, F. Child Artists of the Australian bush.

    No full text
    Métais Éliane. Miller, M. D. and Rutter, F. Child Artists of the Australian bush. . In: Journal de la Société des océanistes, tome 10, 1954. pp. 206-209

    Mathematical Analysis of Glioma Growth in a Murine Model

    No full text
    Full dataset for Rutter, Erica M., et al. "Mathematical Analysis of Glioma Growth in a Murine Model." Scientific Reports 7.1 (2017): 2508

    An Automated Toxicological Assessment of Daphnia magna Populations Using Digital Imaging and Machine Learning

    No full text
    All data associated with "An automated toxicological assessment of Daphnia magna populations using digital imaging and machine learning" by E. M. Rutter et al., submitted to PLoS On

    An Automated Toxicological Assessment of Daphnia magna Populations Using Digital Imaging and Machine Learning

    No full text
    All data associated with "An automated toxicological assessment of Daphnia magna populations using digital imaging and machine learning" by E. M. Rutter et al., submitted to PLoS On
    corecore