271 research outputs found
«If you don’t Expose Children, they are not Going to get Interested» Temple Grandin interview
Present interview of Temple Grandin, PhD in animal science, professor of Colorado State University, given to guest editor of the Journal Stephen Edelson discusses person’s with autism perception of changes in lifestyle associated with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. During the interview, Professor Grandin gives advice on the schooling of children with ASD during the transition to distance learning. The questions of employment of people with autism are also proposed — what positions are best for people with ASD, how to get the employer interested in hiring a person with autism
She was always a writer, but now she's a published writer
Marjorie Edelson, author of novel Malkeh and Her Childre
Comments on the conceptualization of case study/s in psychoanalysis according to Marshall Edelson
El presente trabajo forma parte del plan investigación de una beca de posgrado (Universidad Nacional de La Plata) en torno a la utilización del Diseño de Estudios de Casos (DECs) en el psicoanálisis actual y del proyecto de investigación “Debates epistemológicos y metodológicos en torno a la construcción de conocimiento en psicoanálisis” (UNLP). Se tiene por objetivo presentar las ideas del psiquiatra Marshall Edelson sobre Estudios de Casos en su obra Psychoanalysis, a theory in crisis (1990), con un tratamiento escaso en el ámbito local. El texto aborda temáticas actuales y revive las polémicas suscitadas por la utilización de los DECs en el psicoanálisis.
En esta oportunidad se presentan las elaboraciones teóricas del autor así como su análisis reflexivo, con el objetivo de realizar un aporte al campo de las discusiones contemporáneas sobre el estatuto científico-metodológico del psicoanálisis en la actualidad. Edelson mantiene un intercambio tanto con quienes sostienen que el psicoanálisis no posee credibilidad científica por no utilizar otros métodos de indagación, así como con quienes afirman que esta disciplina no necesita ajustarse a los cánones de procedimiento y racionalidad científica.This work is part of the research plan of a postgraduate scholarship (Universidad Nacional de La Plata) around the use of Case Study Design (CSD) in current Psychoanalysis and of the research project "Epistemological and methodological debates around the construction of knowledge in psychoanalysis" (UNLP). The aim is to present the ideas of psychiatrist Marshall Edelson on Case Studies in his work "Psychoanalysis, a theory in crisis" (1988), with little treatment at the local level. The text deals with current topics and revives the polemics raised by the use of CSD in Psychoanalysis.
In this opportunity the theoretical elaborations of the author are presented as well as his reflexive analysis, with the objective of making a contribution to the field of the contemporary discussions on the scientific methodological statute of the Psychoanalysis in the present time. Edelson maintains an exchange both with those who maintain that Psychoanalysis does not have scientific credibility because it does not use other methods of investigation, as well as with those who affirm that this discipline does not need to adjust to the canons of procedure and scientific rationality.Facultad de Psicologí
Understanding Challenging Behaviors in Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Multi-Component, Interdisciplinary Model
A multi-component, interdisciplinary model is described which explains the presence of, and in other cases the lack of, many challenging behaviors associated with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). More specifically, the model expands the operant behavioral conditioning paradigm by taking into account medical comorbidities and interoceptive processing
Michelle Stuart and Mary Beth Edelson: returning to the root
AR 592.Graduate art history seminar.1988 Fall
Ten Years, Twenty-Nine Artists (Exhibition Catalogue)
This catalogue accompanies two exhibitions featuring the work of the 29 artists that took place in the Ewing Gallery September 25 - October 18, 1992 and OCtober 26 - November 13, 1992.
Exhibiting artists were: Michael Bulka, James Chatelain, Herbert Creecy, Nancy Dwyer, Mary Beth Edelson, Stephen Ellis, Biff Elrod, Robert Feintuch, Roy Fowler, Guynemer Giguere, Brenda Goodman, Pinkney Herbert, Royce Howes, Hokky Hughes, Richard Hull, Suzanne Joelson, Paul Krainak, Johannes Lacher, Seaver Leslie, Alvin Loving, Georgia Marsh, Joseph Nechvatal, Nancy Pletos, Lance Rutledge, Mira Schor, Karen Shaw, Gary Stephan, Richard Tobias, and Roger Welch
Partial triangulations of surfaces with girth constraints
Barnette and Edelson have shown that there are finitely many minimal triangulations of a connected compact 2-manifold M. Similar finiteness results are obtained for cellular partial triangulations that satisfy various girth inequality constraints for embedded cycles. A characterisation of various M-embedded sparse graphs is given in terms of the satisfaction of higher genus girth inequalities. With this it is shown that there are finitely many contraction-minimal M-embedded graphs that are (3,6)-tight or (3,3)-tight.Simplified proofs and new result
Correlated X-ray/ultraviolet/optical variability in the very low mass AGN NGC 4395
We report the results of a 1-yr Swift X-ray/ultraviolet (UV)/optical programme monitoring the dwarf Seyfert nucleus in NGC4395 in 2008-2009. The UV/optical flux from the nucleus was found to vary dramatically over the monitoring period, with a similar pattern of variation in each of the observed UV/optical bands (spanning 1900-5500 Å). In particular, the luminosity of NGC4395 in the 1900 Å band changed by more than a factor of 8 over the monitoring period. The fractional variability was smaller in the UV/optical bands than that seen in the X-rays, with the X-ray/optical ratio increasing with increasing flux. Pseudo-instantaneous flux measurements in the X-ray and each UV/optical band were well correlated, with cross-correlation coefficients of ≥0.7, significant at 99.9per cent confidence. Archival Swift observations from 2006 sample the intra-day X-ray/optical variability on NGC4395. These archival data show a very strong correlation between the X-ray and b bands, with a cross-correlation coefficient of 0.84 (significant at >99per cent confidence). The peak in the cross-correlation function is marginally resolved and asymmetric, suggesting that X-rays lead the b band, but by ≤1h. In response to recent (2011 August) very high X-ray flux levels from NGC4395 we triggered Swift target of opportunity observations, which sample the intra-hour X-ray/UV variability. These observations indicate, albeit with large uncertainties, a lag of the 1900 Å band behind the X-ray flux of ∼400s. The tight correlation between the X-ray and UV/optical lightcurves, together with the constraints we place on the lag time-scale, is consistent with the UV/optical variability of NGC4395 being primarily due to reprocessing of X-ray photons by the accretion disc
Art Criticism
Analog Original: v. ; 22 cm.If Art Criticism meets some of its editors’ hopes for it, we shall be able to claim the appearance of some art criticism, with subjects arising from the writers’ or editors’ decisions, rather than the art market’s. Articles on individual critics and on current groups and tendencies will lead towards the adequate history of art criticism so badly needed in relation to art and in relation to the literature of other disciplines. (L.A., D.B.K., Spring 1979)Archived web contentThis record was updated April 2013 by digitization and project advisers, Stephen Larese and Roland CoffeyDepartment of Art, Stony Brook University; Stony Brook University LibrariesGedo, Mary Matthews, “The Meaning of Artistic Form and the Promise of the Psychoanalytic Method.”
Graziani, Ron, “Adrian Stokes and the Psychoanalytic.”
Webster, Mary, “Response to an Empathetic Critic.”
Baranik, Rudolf, “Philistinism in Front of Art and Art History.”
Berkowilz, Terry, “Report from Behind the Screens.”
MarEdelson, Mary Beth, “Mary Beth Edelson on Saving the World.”
Luljak, David, “Criticism and Its Moral Imperative: An Interview with Mel Pekarsky.”
Plagens, Peter, “A Letter from Home.
Developmental Shifts in Stimulus Processing (Classification, Discrimination, Autism)
Classification and discrimination responding patterns were examined in normal children (3-, 5-, 9-11-year-old), autistic children, and college adults. Previous research has produced two different sets of results in low-mental age children. In one cluster of studies, research has indicated that young children respond to several cues within a stimulus object. In a second cluster of studies, researchers have found that young normal and autistic children typically respond to only one stimulus cue. In this thesis, it is argued that responding differences in low-mental age children are a function of the stimulus materials employed in the experimental task. In the present study, stimulus objects were varied on two dimensions. These dimensions were either spatially integrated or spatially separated, and the classification and discrimination tasks could be solved by responding to one or both dimensions. For spatially integrated dimensions, low-mental age normal and autistic children responded to both dimensions, whereas, for spatially separated dimensions they responded to only one dimension. For both spatially integrated and separated dimensions, older children responded to only one dimension, and adults responded to both dimensions. The results provide new information about developmental shifts in stimulus processing as a function of stimulus type. The findings have important implications for several theories of cognitive development.Made available in DSpace on 2014-12-15T19:46:04Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
8521757.pdf: 3649576 bytes, checksum: dfc00c7ecdbad5419a418e5da92bbebb (MD5)
Previous issue date: 1985Embargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 69824
Lift date: Forever
Reason: Restricted to the U of I community idenfinitely during batch ingest of legacy ETDsRestricted to the U of I community idenfinitely during batch ingest of legacy ETDsU of I Only124 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1985
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