4 resultados para group dynamics
em Instituto Politécnico do Porto, Portugal
Resumo:
O presente trabalho tem como objetivo apresentar o desenvolvimento de um projeto de intervenção psicossocial num Lar e Residência de idosos. Foi um projeto sustentado na metodologia de Investigação-Ação Participativa, com a finalidade de promover o bem-estar e o desenvolvimento pessoal e social dos idosos, melhorando as relações interpessoais e aumentando a participação ativa em atividades. Após utilizadas diversas técnicas e métodos para analisar a realidade percebeu-se a existência de alguns problemas. Os problemas e as necessidades foram priorizados pelos participantes face ao grau de importância e urgência. Assim, foi desenhado e desenvolvido o projeto intitulado pelos idosos “Fez-se luz na VOTS”, com três ações que incorporaram conversas intencionais frequentes e regulares, encontros nos quais se desenvolveram atividades diversas e exercícios de dinâmica de grupo. Cada ação visava combater ou atenuar os problemas existentes, de acordo com os objetivos gerais e específicos desenhados. Ao longo de todo o processo de análise da realidade, desenho e desenvolvimento do projeto, incluindo a sua avaliação, tentou-se dar sempre voz aos idosos desde a consciencialização acerca dos problemas à participação ativa na sua resolução. Este projeto alcançou resultados positivos, na medida em que possibilitou o envolvimento ativo dos idosos, a melhoria de relações interpessoais e a consciencialização dos participantes para o processo de mudança, contribuindo para o seu bem-estar, desenvolvimento e empoderamento.
Resumo:
The Portuguese northern forests are often and severely affected by wildfires during the summer season. These occurrences affect significant and rudely all ecosystems, namely soil, fauna and flora. Preventive actions such as prescribed burnings and clear-cut logging are frequently used and have showed a significant reduction of the natural wildfires occurrences. In Portugal, and due to some technical and operational conditions, prescribed burnings in forests are the most common preventive action used to reduce the existing fuel hazard. The overall impacts of this preventive action on Portuguese ecosystems are complex and not fully understood. This work reports to the study of a prescribed burning impact in soil chemical properties, namely pH, humidity and organic matter, by monitoring the soil self-recovery capacity. The experiments were carried out in soil cover over a natural site of Andaluzitic schist, in Gramelas, Caminha, Portugal, who was able to maintain itself intact from prescribed burnings from four years. The composed soil samples were collected from five plots at three different layers (0-3cm, 3-6cm and 6-18cm) 1 day before prescribed fire and after the prescribed fire. The results have shown that the dynamic equilibrium in soil was affected significantly.
Resumo:
Bipedal gaits have been classified on the basis of the group symmetry of the minimal network of identical differential equations (alias cells) required to model them. Primary bipedal gaits (e.g., walk, run) are characterized by dihedral symmetry, whereas secondary bipedal gaits (e.g., gallop-walk, gallop- run) are characterized by a lower, cyclic symmetry. This fact has been used in tests of human odometry (e.g., Turvey et al. in P Roy Soc Lond B Biol 276:4309–4314, 2009, J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform 38:1014–1025, 2012). Results suggest that when distance is measured and reported by gaits from the same symmetry class, primary and secondary gaits are comparable. Switching symmetry classes at report compresses (primary to secondary) or inflates (secondary to primary) measured distance, with the compression and inflation equal in magnitude. The present research (a) extends these findings from overground locomotion to treadmill locomotion and (b) assesses a dynamics of sequentially coupled measure and report phases, with relative velocity as an order parameter, or equilibrium state, and difference in symmetry class as an imperfection parameter, or detuning, of those dynamics. The results suggest that the symmetries and dynamics of distance measurement by the human odometer are the same whether the odometer is in motion relative to a stationary ground or stationary relative to a moving ground.
Resumo:
We study the peculiar dynamical features of a fractional derivative of complex-order network. The network is composed of two unidirectional rings of cells, coupled through a "buffer" cell. The network has a Z3 × Z5 cyclic symmetry group. The complex derivative Dα±jβ, with α, β ∈ R+ is a generalization of the concept of integer order derivative, where α = 1, β = 0. Each cell is modeled by the Chen oscillator. Numerical simulations of the coupled cell system associated with the network expose patterns such as equilibria, periodic orbits, relaxation oscillations, quasiperiodic motion, and chaos, in one or in two rings of cells. In addition, fixing β = 0.8, we perceive differences in the qualitative behavior of the system, as the parameter c ∈ [13, 24] of the Chen oscillator and/or the real part of the fractional derivative, α ∈ {0.5, 0.6, 0.7, 0.8, 0.9, 1.0}, are varied. Some patterns produced by the coupled system are constrained by the network architecture, but other features are only understood in the light of the internal dynamics of each cell, in this case, the Chen oscillator. What is more important, architecture and/or internal dynamics?