3 resultados para Judgment
em Repositório Científico da Universidade de Évora - Portugal
Resumo:
The intersection of Artificial Intelligence and The Law stands for a multifaceted matter, and its effects set the advances on culture, organization, as well as the social matters, when the emergent information technologies are taken into consideration. From this point of view, the weight of formal and informal Conflict Resolution settings should be highlighted, and the use of defective data, information or knowledge must be emphasized. Indeed, it is hard to do it with traditional problem solving methodologies. Therefore, in this work the focus is on the development of decision support systems, in terms of its knowledge representation and reasoning procedures, under a formal framework based on Logic Programming, complemented with an approach to computing centered on Artificial Neural Networks. It is intended to evaluate the Quality-of-Judgments and the respective Degree-of-Confidence that one has on such happenings.
Resumo:
Sendo os idosos um grupo de risco face a desidratação, torna-se particularmente relevante desenvolver estratégias eficazes de comunicação em saúde para o incremento da adesão a recomendações médicas para ingestão de água. Com este objetivo procurámos avaliar os efeitos da comunicação de uma recomendação, com recurso a uma referência familiar (e.g. garrafa de 1.5 Litros) na qual os idosos pudessem “ancorar” o seu julgamento e decisão de adesão à recomendação, com base numa mais eficaz compreensão de informação de quantidade. Dos 70 idosos que participaram no estudo, apenas 56 foram considerados na análise, por cumprirem os critérios de inclusão na amostra. Esta amostra incluiu idosos autónomos, não institucionalizados, responsáveis pelas suas escolhas alimentares e com indicadores de hidratação aceitáveis. Os resultados mostraram que numa condição com âncora familiar (mas não na condição sem), a adesão associada ao próprio nível de consumo existente, do idoso aumentou após a recomendação. Análises adicionais identificaram as crenças face à água e as suas várias funções, como um preditor psicossocial positivo da adesão, o mesmo não acontecendo com atitudes face à água, evitamento de informação alimentar negativa e numeracia; Abstract: Being the elderly a risk group with regard to dehydration it is necessary to develop effective health communication strategies to increase adherence to health recommendations concerning water intake. Accordingly, we aimed to assess the effects of communicating a recommendation with the addition of a familiar reference (e.g. bottle of 1.5 Liters) in which the elderly could anchor their judgment and decision making to adhere to the recommendation, based on a better comprehension of the quantified information presented. From the 70 older adults that have participated in the study, only 56 were considered in the analysis, for fulfilling the sample inclusion criteria. This sample included older adults considered to be autonomous, non-institutionalized, responsible for their good choices and with acceptable hydration levels. Results showed that in a condition with a familiar anchor (but not in a condition without) the adherence in line with the elderly own current consumption level, increased after the recommendation. Additional analysis identified beliefs concerning water and its various functions as a positive psychosocial predictor of adherence, the same not happening for attitudes towards water, avoidance of negative food information and numeracy.
Resumo:
Almost 10 years after Childhood and Society (Palgrave, 2nd edn, 2011), Michael Wyness, an associate professor of childhood studies at the University of Warwick, now brings to print a short yet broad introduction to the study of childhood. In particular, this book discusses multiple views about childhood, a concept that for the past two decades has been contested within social sciences’ critical theorizing. On the back cover of the book, William A Corsaro and Alan Prout, well-known scholars from the field, are unanimous in recognizing the value of this new contribution in childhood studies. The interested and attentive reader should not be indifferent to their words and judgment; Wyness’s Childhood is a ‘gem,’ according to Corsaro.