9 resultados para person perception
em Universidade do Minho
Resumo:
Solar passive strategies that have been developed in vernacular architecture from different regions are a response to specific climate effects. These strategies are usually simple, low-tech and have low potential environmental impact. For this reason, several studies highlight them as having potential to reduce the demands of non-renewable energy for buildings operation. In this paper, the climatic contrast between northern and southern parts of mainland Portugal is presented, namely the regions of Beira Alta and Alentejo. Additionally, it discusses the contribution of different climate-responsive strategies developed in vernacular architecture from both regions to assure thermal comfort conditions. In Beira Alta, the use of glazed balconies as a strategy to capture solar gains is usual, while in Alentejo the focus is on passive cooling strategies. To understand the effectiveness of these strategies, thermal performances and comfort conditions of two case studies were evaluated based on the adaptive comfort model. Field tests included measurement of hygrothermal parameters and surveys on occupants’ thermal sensation. From the results, it has been found that the case studies have shown a good thermal performance by passive means alone and that the occupants feel comfortable, except during winter where there is the need to use simple heating systems.
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Tese de Doutoramento em Contabilidade.
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Immersive environments (IE) are being increasingly used in order to perform psychophysical experiments. The versatility in terms of stimuli presentation and control and the less time-consuming procedures are their greatest strengths. However, to ensure that IE results can be generalized to real world scenarios we must first provide evidence that performance in IE is quantitatively indistinguishable from performance in real-world. Our goal was to perceptually validate distance perception for CAVE-like IEs. Participants performed a Frontal Matching Distance Task (Durgin & Li, 2011) in three different conditions: real-world scenario (RWS); photorealistic IE (IEPH) and non-photorealistic IE (IENPH). Underestimation of distance was found across all the conditions, with a significant difference between the three conditions (Wilks’ Lambda = .38, F(2,134)= 110.8, p<.01, significant pairwise differences with p<.01). We found a mean error of 2.3 meters for the RWS, 5 meters for the IEPH, and of 6 meters for the IENPH in a pooled data set of 5 participants. Results indicate that while having a photorealistic IE with perspective and stereoscopic depth cues might not be enough to elicit a real-world performance in distance judgment tasks, nevertheless this type of environment minimizes the discrepancy between simulation and real-world when compared with non-photorealistic IEs.
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Open Display Networks have the potential to allow many content creators to publish their media to an open-ended set of screen displays. However, this raises the issue of how to match that content to the right displays. In this study, we aim to understand how the perceived utility of particular media sharing scenarios is affected by three independent variables, more specifically: (a) the locativeness of the content being shared; (b) how personal that content is and (c) the scope in which it is being shared. To assess these effects, we composed a set of 24 media sharing scenarios embedded with different treatments of our three independent variables. We then asked 100 participants to express their perception of the relevance of those scenarios. The results suggest a clear preference for scenarios where content is both local and directly related to the person that is publishing it. This is in stark contrast to the types of content that are commonly found in public displays, and confirms the opportunity that open displays networks may represent a new media for self-expression. This novel understanding may inform the design of new publication paradigms that will enable people to share media across the display networks.
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This article focuses on the personal experiences of Portuguese women regarding separation and divorce. The sample included 96 women, with at least 1 child, who responded to an inventory that addressed conflict, dysfunctional conjugality, emotional experiences, social support, and adaptation to divorce. Higher levels of conflict and marital dysfunction in litigious divorces were found, as well as more conflict when different lawyers were employed. Those women who were satisfied with alimony and visiting rights reported less conflict, fewer negative emotional experiences, and greater social support. Level of education and duration of separation influenced women’s perceptions. Implications for intervention are addressed.
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[Excerpt] A critical case from a Portuguese hospital reveals how the ultimate healthcare customer, the patient, is a complete system, not a jumble of parts. (...) The lean production philosophy has made inroads into service sectors, including medical care in the United Kingdom and the United States. Unfortunately, numerous medical organizations in those two countries and the rest of the world treat patients like they are made up of parts, not as a whole system. This leads to disjointed handoffs, bottlenecks in information flow that delay treatment, and sending the patient back and forth from department to department. The following case in Portugal shows how most of the world’s health systems still suffer from functional silos and how waste is all over the place. In this case, the missing links in communication between doctors, nurses, auxiliary staff, the patient and her family led to the patient’s death. Adopting lean healthcare with its proven tools would be a solution to many of the problems described. When a patient dies in a hospital, the family often is told that the doctors did everything they could. Normally, that is the case, as healthcare providers – doctors, nurses, auxiliary staff, therapists – do their best with the system they have.
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Dissertação de mestrado em Enfermagem da Pessoa em Situação Crítica
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Tese de Doutoramento em Psicologia Básica
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Esta investigação teve por objectivo explorar: a) a influência das memórias de cuidados parentais na infância, do estilo de vinculação, da qualidade da relação com pessoas significativas e da perturbação psicopatológica na qualidade da aliança terapêutica; b) a relação entre a qualidade da aliança terapêutica e os resultados psicoterapêuticos; e, c) a relação entre as mudanças na qualidade da aliança terapêutica e os resultados psicoterapêuticos. Uma amostra de 20 mães adolescentes foi avaliada, na primeira e na última (16.ª) sessão de uma intervenção psicoterapâutica, quanto às memórias de cuidados parentais na infância (EMBU), ao estilo de vinculação (ASI), ao suporte social (SESS) e à presença de perturbação psicopatológica (BSI). Tanto na 4.ª como na última sessão, pacientes e psicoterapeutas responderam a medidas de aliança terapêutica (WAI). Os resultados sugerem a existência de relações significativas entre algumas características psicológicas do paciente e a percepção da aliança terapêutica inicial, quer por parte do paciente quer por parte do terapeuta. Sugerem ainda que uma percepção positiva da aliança terapêutica, por parte do terapeuta, no início do processo terapêutico, está positivamente relacionada com os ganhos psicoterapêuticos do paciente, em termos da redução da sintomatologia psicopatológica. Os ganhos psicoterapêuticos do paciente, ao nível do estilo de vinculação e da qualidade das relações significativas, estão positivamente relacionados com uma percepção positiva da qualidade da aliança terapêutica, por parte do paciente, na última sessão. Contudo, as mudanças psicoterapêuticas positivas associadas à intervenção não parecem estar exclusivamente relacionadas com o aumento da qualidade da aliança terapêutica, observada entre o paciente e o terapeuta.