5 resultados para INTENSITIES
em Universidad del Rosario, Colombia
Resumo:
Ecological validity of static and intense facial expressions in emotional recognition has been questioned. Recent studies have recommended the use of facial stimuli more compatible to the natural conditions of social interaction, which involves motion and variations in emotional intensity. In this study, we compared the recognition of static and dynamic facial expressions of happiness, fear, anger and sadness, presented in four emotional intensities (25 %, 50 %, 75 % and 100 %). Twenty volunteers (9 women and 11 men), aged between 19 and 31 years, took part in the study. The experiment consisted of two sessions in which participants had to identify the emotion of static (photographs) and dynamic (videos) displays of facial expressions on the computer screen. The mean accuracy was submitted to an Anova for repeated measures of model: 2 sexes x [2 conditions x 4 expressions x 4 intensities]. We observed an advantage for the recognition of dynamic expressions of happiness and fear compared to the static stimuli (p < .05). Analysis of interactions showed that expressions with intensity of 25 % were better recognized in the dynamic condition (p < .05). The addition of motion contributes to improve recognition especially in male participants (p < .05). We concluded that the effect of the motion varies as a function of the type of emotion, intensity of the expression and sex of the participant. These results support the hypothesis that dynamic stimuli have more ecological validity and are more appropriate to the research with emotions.
Resumo:
Introducción: El dolor posoperatorio no controlado es un predictor de dolor severo. La trayectoria de dolor durante la primera hora podría predecir el curso del dolor durante las primeras 24 horas. El control temprano del dolor posoperatorio facilita el manejo analgésico durante el primer día y mejora la experiencia del paciente, facilitando su recuperación y rehabilitación. Objetivo: Determinar la relación entre la trayectoria del dolor en la primera hora y durante las 24 horas post-operatorias. Material y métodos: Estudio analítico observacional prospectivo de 234 pacientes llevados a procedimientos quirúrgicos bajo anestesia general. Se registraron 8 intesidades de dolor durante las 24 horas. Se calcularon las pendientes y se estableció la relación entre ellas. Resultados: El 31,3% de pacientes tenían dolor no controlado al ingreso a recuperación. La intensidad del dolor al inicio se correlaciona de forma negativa con la trayectoria de la primera hora P1 rS= -0,657 (p=0.000). La intensidad de dolor inicial tiene una asociación negativa con P2 de rS= -0.141 (p=0.032). Al compararse las pendientes P1 y P2 y se encontró una correlación negativa muy baja rS= -0.126 (p=0.056). Conclusiones: Uno de cada tres pacientes presenta dolor severo durante el posoperatorio agudo. La trayectoria del dolor en la primera hora no permite predecir el comportamiento de la trayectoria durante el primer día posoperatorio. El comportamiento del dolor está relacionado con la intensidad al final de la anestesia. Cuando el dolor inicial es severo alcanzar la meta analgésica tarda más tiempo.
Resumo:
We study competition in two sided markets with common network externality rather than with the standard inter-group e¤ects. This type of externality occurs when both groups bene t, possibly with di¤erent intensities, from an increase in the size of one group and from a decrease in the size of the other. We explain why common externality is relevant for the health and education sectors. We focus on the symmetric equilibrium and show that when the externality itself satis es an homogeneity condition then platforms pro ts and price structure have some speci c properties. Our results reveal how the rents coming from network externalities are shifted by platforms from one side to other, according to the homogeneity degree. In the speci c but realistic case where the common network externality is homogeneous of degree zero, platform s pro t do not depend on the intensity of the (common) network externality. This is in sharp contrast to conventional results stating that the presence of network externalities in a two-sided market structure increases the intensity of competition when the externality is positive (and decreases it when the externality is negative). Prices are a¤ected but in such a way that platforms only transfer rents from consumers to providers.
Resumo:
This paper uses a two-sided market model of hospital competition to study the implications of di§erent remunerations schemes on the physiciansí side. The two-sided market approach is characterized by the concept of common network externality (CNE) introduced by Bardey et al. (2010). This type of externality occurs when occurs when both sides value, possibly with di§erent intensities, the same network externality. We explicitly introduce e§ort exerted by doctors. By increasing the number of medical acts (which involves a costly e§ort) the doctor can increase the quality of service o§ered to patients (over and above the level implied by the CNE). We Örst consider pure salary, capitation or fee-for-service schemes. Then, we study schemes that mix fee-for-service with either salary or capitation payments. We show that salary schemes (either pure or in combination with fee-for-service) are more patient friendly than (pure or mixed) capitations schemes. This comparison is exactly reversed on the providersíside. Quite surprisingly, patients always loose when a fee-for-service scheme is introduced (pure of mixed). This is true even though the fee-for-service is the only way to induce the providers to exert e§ort and it holds whatever the patientsívaluation of this e§ort. In other words, the increase in quality brought about by the fee-for-service is more than compensated by the increase in fees faced by patients.
Resumo:
A branching random motion on a line, with abrupt changes of direction, is studied. The branching mechanism, being independient of random motion, and intensities of reverses are defined by a particle's current direction. A soluton of a certain hyperbolic system of coupled non-linear equations (Kolmogorov type backward equation) have a so-called McKean representation via such processes. Commonly this system possesses traveling-wave solutions. The convergence of solutions with Heaviside terminal data to the travelling waves is discussed.This Paper realizes the McKean programme for the Kolmogorov-Petrovskii-Piskunov equation in this case. The Feynman-Kac formula plays a key role.