138 resultados para parent participation
Resumo:
Diagnostic information on children is typically elicited from both children and their parents. The aims of the present paper were to: (1) compare prevalence estimates according to maternal reports, paternal reports and direct interviews of children [major depressive disorder (MDD), anxiety and attention-deficit and disruptive behavioural disorders]; (2) assess mother-child, father-child and inter-parental agreement for these disorders; (3) determine the association between several child, parent and familial characteristics and the degree of diagnostic agreement or the likelihood of parental reporting; (4) determine the predictive validity of diagnostic information provided by parents and children. Analyses were based on 235 mother-offspring, 189 father-offspring and 128 mother-father pairs. Diagnostic assessment included the Kiddie-schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia (K-SADS) (offspring) and the Diagnostic Interview for Genetic Studies (DIGS) (parents and offspring at follow-up) interviews. Parental reports were collected using the Family History - Research Diagnostic Criteria (FH-RDC). Analyses revealed: (1) prevalence estimates for internalizing disorders were generally lower according to parental information than according to the K-SADS; (2) mother-child and father-child agreement was poor and within similar ranges; (3) parents with a history of MDD or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) reported these disorders in their children more frequently; (4) in a sub-sample followed-up into adulthood, diagnoses of MDD, separation anxiety and conduct disorder at baseline concurred with the corresponding lifetime diagnosis at age 19 according to the child rather than according to the parents. In conclusion, our findings support large discrepancies of diagnostic information provided by parents and children with generally lower reporting of internalizing disorders by parents, and differential reporting of depression and ADHD by parental disease status. Follow-up data also supports the validity of information provided by adolescent offspring.
Resumo:
Au Mali, les technologies de l'information et de la communication ont suscité un vif engouement. Portés par l'ancien Président Alpha Oumar Konaré, de nombreux projets gouvernementaux ont vu le jour. Parallèlement, les cybercafés se sont multipliés : moins de dix en 1997, ils étaient presque plus de 120 en 2006. Si les possibilités de se connecter à domicile et sur son lieu de travail se sont développées, les cybercafés restent des espaces idéaux pour découvrir les pratiques numériques. Une façon d'étudier les usages de l'Internet est de s'intéresser aux liens qui se nouent autour de l'ordinateur. La situation est complexe à Bamako, car les personnes qui accompagnent les clients des cybercafés sont nombreuses. L'analyse de cette nébuleuse relationnelle est l'occasion de procéder à un double détour. Géographique tout d'abord, dans la mesure où l'anthropologue est conduit à quitter le cybercafé pour se rendre dans l'espace social plus vaste appelé Cyber. Disciplinaire ensuite puisque son regard se déplace progressivement du média vers l'étude des règles qui régissent la parenté et les classes d'âge.
Resumo:
To study the role of CD8 beta in T cell function, we derived a CD8 alpha/beta-(CD8-/-) T cell hybridoma of the H-2Kd-restricted N9 cytotoxic T lymphocyte clone specific for a photoreactive derivative of the Plasmodium berghei circumsporozoite peptide PbCS 252-260. This hybridoma was transfected either with CD8 alpha alone or together with CD8 beta. All three hybridomas released interleukin 2 upon incubation with L cells expressing Kd-peptide derivative complexes, though CD8 alpha/beta cells did so more efficiently than CD8 alpha/alpha and especially CD8-/- cells. More strikingly, only CD8 alpha/beta cells were able to recognize a weak agonist peptide derivative variant. This recognition was abolished by Fab' fragments of the anti-Kd alpha 3 monoclonal antibody SF1-1.1.1 or substitution of Kd D-227 with K, both conditions known to impair CD8 coreceptor function. T cell receptor (TCR) photoaffinity labeling indicated that TCR-ligand binding on CD8 alpha/beta cells was approximately 5- and 20-fold more avid than on CD8 alpha/a and CD8-/- cells, respectively. SF1-1.1.1 Fab' or Kd mutation D227K reduced the TCR photoaffinity labeling on CD8 alpha/beta cells to approximately the same low levels observed on CD8-/- cells. These results indicate that CD8 alpha/beta is a more efficient coreceptor than CD8alpha/alpha, because it more avidly strengthens TCR-ligand binding.
Resumo:
SUMMARYIntercellular communication is achieved at specialized regions of the plasma membrane by gap junctions. The proteins constituting the gap junctions are called connexins and are encoded by a family of genes highly conserved during evolution. In adult mouse, four connexins (Cxs) are known to be expressed in the vasculature: Cx37, Cx40, Cx43 and Cx45. Several recent studies have provided evidences that vascular connexins expression and blood pressure regulation are closely linked, suggesting a role for connexins in the control of blood pressure. However, the precise function that each vascular connexin plays under physiological and pathophysiological conditions is still not elucidated. In this context, this work was dedicated to evaluate the contribution of each of the four vascular connexins in the control of the vascular function and in the blood pressure regulation.In the present work, we first demonstrated that vascular connexins are differently regulated by hypertension in the mouse aorta. We also observed that endothelial connexins play a regulatory role on eNOS expression levels and function in the aorta, therefore in the control of vascular tone. Then, we demonstrated that Cx40 plays a pivotal role in the kidney by regulating the renal levels of COX-2 and nNOS, two key enzymes of the macula densa known to participate in the control of renin secreting cells. We also found that Cx43 forms the functional gap junction involved in intercellular Ca2+ wave propagation between vascular smooth muscle cells. Finally, we have started to generate transgenic mice expressing specifically Cx40 in the endothelium to investigate the involvement of Cx40 in the vasomotor tone, or in the renin secreting cells to evaluate the role of Cx40 in the control of renin secretion.In conclusion, this work has allowed us to identify new roles for connexins in the vasculature. Our results suggest that vascular connexins could be interesting targets for new therapies caring hypertension and vascular diseases.
Resumo:
Voting Advice Applications (VAAs) render a valuable platform for tackling one of democracy's central challenges: low voter turnout. Studies indicate that lack of information and cost-benefit considerations cause voters to abstain from voting. VAAs are online voting assistance tools which match own political preferences with those of candidates and parties in elections. By assisting voters in their decision-making process prior to casting their votes, VAAs not only rebut rational choice reasoning against voting but also narrow existing information gaps. In this paper we examine the impact of VAAs on participation and voter turnout. Specifically, we present results on how the Swiss VAA smartvote affected voter turnout in the 2007 federal elections. Our analyses suggest that smartvote does have a mobilizing capacity, especially among young voters who are usually underrepresented at polls. Moreover, the study demonstrates how VAAs such as smartvote do affect citizen's propensity to deal with politics in general.
Resumo:
Street demonstrations have received the lion's share of scholarly attention to collective action. This article starts by returning to this research in order to raise some methodological questions about how to collect data on demonstrations and on the validity of the subsequent results. Next, based on my own research on demonstrations, I suggest some questions that deserve to be analyzed. In particular, I argue that we should work more on the psychological effects of participation in demonstrations. One potential line of investigation would be to more systematically explore the socializing effects of political events. Indeed, vivid political events should be important catalysts because they can have significant effects. Events may have an impact at any age but socializing effects will differ based on one's position in the life cycle, from conversion for younger participants to substantiation for older participants. I hypothesize, in line with Mannheim's (1952) "impressionable years" model of socialization research, that people especially recall events as important if they happened in their adolescence or early adulthood.