985 resultados para Interaction Patterns
Resumo:
Se presentan resultados parciales de una investigación en curso que analiza la producción de conocimiento criminológico en el ámbito universitario público argentino desde la perspectiva del campo CTS. El foco principal de interés es la caracterización de las formas de vinculación entre actores científicos y no científicos durante las prácticas de producción de conocimiento, y la detección de fenómenos de co-producción, discutido en la literatura como uno de los factores que estimula la aplicación y uso social de resultados de la I+D. Para abordar este tema, se seleccionaron cuatro grupos de investigación localizados en una provincia argentina, e integrantes a su vez de una red multidisciplinaria de grupos universitarios financiada con fondos públicos y dedicada a estudiar el problema de la seguridad, el delito y las respuestas del Estado y las políticas públicas en el país. Estos grupos fueron analizados bajo una metodología de análisis de redes sociales, con el fin de modelizar los patrones de interacción observados entre los investigadores y otros actores sociales en diversas instancias del desarrollo de sus investigaciones. Se discuten los resultados obtenidos en el cálculo de indicadores relacionales de centralidad, centralización e intermediación derivados del análisis de redes.
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Se presentan resultados parciales de una investigación en curso que analiza la producción de conocimiento criminológico en el ámbito universitario público argentino desde la perspectiva del campo CTS. El foco principal de interés es la caracterización de las formas de vinculación entre actores científicos y no científicos durante las prácticas de producción de conocimiento, y la detección de fenómenos de co-producción, discutido en la literatura como uno de los factores que estimula la aplicación y uso social de resultados de la I+D. Para abordar este tema, se seleccionaron cuatro grupos de investigación localizados en una provincia argentina, e integrantes a su vez de una red multidisciplinaria de grupos universitarios financiada con fondos públicos y dedicada a estudiar el problema de la seguridad, el delito y las respuestas del Estado y las políticas públicas en el país. Estos grupos fueron analizados bajo una metodología de análisis de redes sociales, con el fin de modelizar los patrones de interacción observados entre los investigadores y otros actores sociales en diversas instancias del desarrollo de sus investigaciones. Se discuten los resultados obtenidos en el cálculo de indicadores relacionales de centralidad, centralización e intermediación derivados del análisis de redes.
Resumo:
Se presentan resultados parciales de una investigación en curso que analiza la producción de conocimiento criminológico en el ámbito universitario público argentino desde la perspectiva del campo CTS. El foco principal de interés es la caracterización de las formas de vinculación entre actores científicos y no científicos durante las prácticas de producción de conocimiento, y la detección de fenómenos de co-producción, discutido en la literatura como uno de los factores que estimula la aplicación y uso social de resultados de la I+D. Para abordar este tema, se seleccionaron cuatro grupos de investigación localizados en una provincia argentina, e integrantes a su vez de una red multidisciplinaria de grupos universitarios financiada con fondos públicos y dedicada a estudiar el problema de la seguridad, el delito y las respuestas del Estado y las políticas públicas en el país. Estos grupos fueron analizados bajo una metodología de análisis de redes sociales, con el fin de modelizar los patrones de interacción observados entre los investigadores y otros actores sociales en diversas instancias del desarrollo de sus investigaciones. Se discuten los resultados obtenidos en el cálculo de indicadores relacionales de centralidad, centralización e intermediación derivados del análisis de redes.
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La relación entre el desarrollo de la competencia matemática de los estudiantes y la innovación en la enseñanza hace emerger la necesidad de nuevas prácticas matemáticas en el aula. Uno de los aspectos que definen estas nuevas prácticas es la emergencia de nuevos patrones de interacción en el aula que deben caracterizar el discurso matemático. Desde esta perspectiva, la relación entre innovación y desarrollo de nuevas prácticas define ámbitos para el desarrollo profesional del profesor de matemáticas.
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Carpal glands (CG) of 105 feral pigs Sus domesticus, caught in the tropical lowland rainforest in northeast Queensland, Australia, between 1999 and 2004, were investigated to examine their function in chemical communication between animals, and their histology. Female feral pigs show significantly larger CG on the right leg than on the left leg while there were no side-specific differences in males. CG on both legs were significantly larger in reproductive than in non-reproductive females, but they did not differ between pregnant and lactating females. The results suggest that CG are involved in the defensive behaviour of reproductive females but not in the identification of the mother by piglets. The area of the left CG was significantly bigger in males compared to females, but no significant difference could be shown for the CG on the right legs. CG of same-aged boars did not change significantly in size throughout the year while females showed smaller CG on the left leg in January and February suggesting that CG may be involved in intra-matriarchal group communication, Same sized and aged boars did not show any correlations between the size of the CG and the weight of their testes and the serum levels of testosterone. These results suggest that CG are not involved in advertising dominance in boars. The histological investigation of CG showed that they are active in feral pigs in the lowland rainforest, consist mainly of apocrine tissue and that their hairs may play a role in distributing secretion.
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This paper reports on the early stages of a three year study that is investigating the impact of a technology-enriched teacher education program on beginning teachers' integration of computers, graphics calculators, and the internet into secondary school mathematics classrooms. Whereas much of the existing research on the role of technology in mathematics learning has been concerned with effects on curriculum content or student learning, less attention has been given to the relationship between technology use and issues of pedagogy, in particular the impact on teachers' professional learning in the context of specific classroom and school environments. Our research applies sociocultural theories of learning to consider how beginning teachers are initiated into a collaborative professional community featuring both web-based and face to face interaction, and how participation in such a community shapes their pedagogical beliefs and practices. The aim of this paper is to analyse processes through which the emerging community was established and sustained during the first year of the study. We examine features of this community in terms of identity formation, shifts in values and beliefs, and interaction patterns revealed in bulletin board discussion between students and lecturers.
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This article looks at learner initiative in teacher-fronted activities and how this can influence classroom interaction. Extracts from lesson transcripts of adult evening classes in Italy are used to give a precise definition of what is meant by learner initiative and to illustrate how it can change interaction patterns. It is suggested that learner initiative could have an important role to play in promoting comprehensible input and output and therefore language learning. It will be seen how, by giving learners more space and time, initiative can be actively encouraged. However, there are direct implications for teacher training as it is necessary to change traditional interaction patterns and make learner initiative more effective.
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To evaluate the theoretical underpinnings of current categorical approaches to classify childhood psychopathological conditions, this dissertation examined whether children with a single diagnosis of an anxiety disorder (ANX only) and children with an anxiety diagnosis comorbid with other diagnoses (i.e., anxiety + anxiety disorder [ANX + ANX], anxiety + depressive disorder [ANX + DEP], and anxiety + disruptive disorder [ANX + EXT]) could be differentiated using external validation criteria of clinical phenomenology (i.e., levels of anxiety, depression, and internalizing, externalizing and total behavior problems). This study further examined whether the four groups could be differentiated in terms of their interaction patterns with their parents and peers, respectively. The sample consisted of 129 youth and their parents who presented to the Child Anxiety and Phobia Program (CAPP) housed within the Child and Family Psychosocial Research Center at Florida International University, Miami. Youth were between the ages of 8 and 14 years old. A battery of questionnaires was used to assess participants' clinical presentation in terms of levels of anxiety, depression, and internalizing and externalizing symptoms. Family and peer interaction were evaluated through rating scales and through behavior observation tasks. Statistics based on the parameter estimates of the structured equation models indicated that all the comorbid groups were significantly different from the pure anxiety disorder group when it came to depression indices of clinical phenomenology. Further, significant differences appeared mainly in terms of the ANX + DEP comorbid group relative to the other comorbid groups. In terms of Parent-child interaction the ANX + EXT and the ANX + DEP comorbid groups were differentiated from the pure anxiety disorder and ANX + ANX comorbid group when it came to the appraisal of the parent/child relationship by the parent, and the acceptance subscale according to the mother report. In terms of peer-child interaction the ANX + EXT and the ANX + DEP comorbid groups were statistically significantly different from the pure anxiety disorder only when it came to the positive interactions and the social skills as rated by mother. Limitations and future research recommendations are discussed.
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El siguiente estudio tiene como objetivo principal describir las estrategias de afrontamiento familiar que los padres utilizan ante las pérdidas afectivas de los niños por separación, con fundamento en el modelo estructural de Salvador Minuchín. En esta investigación participaron cinco familias monoparentales. El enfoque de la investigación es cualitativo; se aplicó la escala F-Copes para identificar cómo la familia maneja sus problemas y afronta las demandas que surgen de la separación o divorcio, seguido de una entrevista semiestructurada, la misma que demostró que cuando surge la separación conyugal trae uno o varios cambios en la estructura familiar y, en la relación entre los subsistemas los individuos modifican sus rutinas y se crea una nueva organización. El estudio muestra cómo las potencialidades de estas familias avanzan tejiendo internamente estrategias adaptativas que regulan el equilibrio emocional y relacional del sistema hacia las vicisitudes o desafíos del ciclo vital y de la vida misma; que para afrontar las pérdidas afectivas, uno de los mecanismos de afrontamiento es la alianza entre hermanos, lo que contribuye a una estrategia funcional permitiendo una relación benéfica con vínculos asertivos. Concluyendo que el contexto que rodea al niño es esencial para el desarrollo de estrategias de afrontamiento durante la infancia y las etapas subsiguientes.
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We investigated how the relative direction of limb movements in external space (iso- and non-isodirectionality), muscular constraints (the relative timing of homologous muscle activation) and the egocentric frame of reference (moving simultaneously toward/away the longitudinal axis of the body) contribute to the stability of coordinated movements. In the first experiment, we attempted to determine the respective stability of isodirectional and non-isodirectional movements in between-persons coordination. In a second experiment, we determined the effect of the relative direction in external space, and of muscular constraints, on pattern stability during a within-person bimanual coordination task. In the third experiment we dissociated the effects on pattern stability of the muscular constraints, relative direction and egocentric frame of reference. The results showed that (1) simultaneous activation of homologous muscles resulted in more stable performance than simultaneous activation of non-homologous muscles during within-subject coordination, and that (2) isodirectional movements were more stable than non-isodirectional movements during between-persons coordination, confirming the role of the relative direction of the moving limbs in the stability of bimanual coordination. Moreover, the egocentric constraint was to some extent found distinguishable from the effect of the relative direction of the moving limbs in external space, and from the effect of the relative timing of muscle activation. In summary, the present study showed that relative direction of the moving limbs in external space and muscular constraints may interact either to stabilize or destabilize coordination patterns. (C) 2003 Published by Elsevier B.V.
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This Master Dissertation comprises two parts: a personal reflection and an empirical study. The personal reflection reviews the process of professionalization undergone by its author throughout the Master. The empirical study tackles teacher strategies to elicit knowledge from students in the CLIL classroom and more specifically the purpose of questions in controlled patterns of teacher-student interaction. The theories of relevant authors such as Vigotsky, Mercer and Tsui are used as a framework to analyze the data presented. The analysis shows the different strategies to elicit knowledge used by the teacher and the appropriateness of her questions in the analyzed interaction
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The splenium of the corpus callosum connects the posterior cortices with fibers varying in size from thin late-myelinating axons in the anterior part, predominantly connecting parietal and temporal areas, to thick early-myelinating fibers in the posterior part, linking primary and secondary visual areas. In the adult human brain, the function of the splenium in a given area is defined by the specialization of the area and implemented via excitation and/or suppression of the contralateral homotopic and heterotopic areas at the same or different level of visual hierarchy. These mechanisms are facilitated by interhemispheric synchronization of oscillatory activity, also supported by the splenium. In postnatal ontogenesis, structural MRI reveals a protracted formation of the splenium during the first two decades of human life. In doing so, the slow myelination of the splenium correlates with the formation of interhemispheric excitatory influences in the extrastriate areas and the EEG synchronization, while the gradual increase of inhibitory effects in the striate cortex is linked to the local inhibitory circuitry. Reshaping interactions between interhemispherically distributed networks under various perceptual contexts allows sparsification of responses to superfluous information from the visual environment, leading to a reduction of metabolic and structural redundancy in a child's brain.
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Peer-reviewed
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Design patterns are a way of sharing evidence-based solutions to educational design problems. The design patterns presented in this paper were produced through a series of workshops, which aimed to identify Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) design principles from workshop participants’ experiences of designing, teaching and learning on these courses. MOOCs present a challenge for the existing pedagogy of online learning, particularly as it relates to promoting peer interaction and discussion. MOOC cohort sizes, participation patterns and diversity of learners mean that discussions can remain superficial, become difficult to navigate, or never develop beyond isolated posts. In addition, MOOC platforms may not provide sufficient tools to support moderation. This paper draws on four case studies of designing and teaching on a range of MOOCs presenting seven design narratives relating to the experience in these MOOCs. Evidence presented in the narratives is abstracted in the form of three design patterns created through a collaborative process using techniques similar to those used in collective autoethnography. The patterns: “Special Interest Discussions”, “Celebrity Touch” and “Look and Engage”, draw together shared lessons and present possible solutions to the problem of creating, managing and facilitating meaningful discussion in MOOCs through the careful use of staged learning activities and facilitation strategies.
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Patterns of species interactions affect the dynamics of food webs. An important component of species interactions that is rarely considered with respect to food webs is the strengths of interactions, which may affect both structure and dynamics. In natural systems, these strengths are variable, and can be quantified as probability distributions. We examined how variation in strengths of interactions can be described hierarchically, and how this variation impacts the structure of species interactions in predator-prey networks, both of which are important components of ecological food webs. The stable isotope ratios of predator and prey species may be particularly useful for quantifying this variability, and we show how these data can be used to build probabilistic predator-prey networks. Moreover, the distribution of variation in strengths among interactions can be estimated from a limited number of observations. This distribution informs network structure, especially the key role of dietary specialization, which may be useful for predicting structural properties in systems that are difficult to observe. Finally, using three mammalian predator-prey networks ( two African and one Canadian) quantified from stable isotope data, we show that exclusion of link-strength variability results in biased estimates of nestedness and modularity within food webs, whereas the inclusion of body size constraints only marginally increases the predictive accuracy of the isotope-based network. We find that modularity is the consequence of strong link-strengths in both African systems, while nestedness is not significantly present in any of the three predator-prey networks.