919 resultados para Social Relationships


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A dor neuropática é uma síndrome dolorosa crônica, que ocorre muito frequentemente em pacientes com hanseníase, de difícil tratamento. Objetivou-se avaliar o efeito terapêutico da S(+)-cetamina na dor neuropática e qualidade de vida em portadores de hanseníase atendidos em ambulatórios em São Luís - MA. Estudo experimental tipo ensaio clínico, prospectivo, aleatório, duplamente cego, controlado por placebo, com 34 pacientes distribuídos aleatoriamente em um dois grupos, cetamina e placebo por três meses e randomizados por numeração sequenciada. A dor foi avaliada por meio de escala analógica visual (EAV) nas seis visitas quinzenais (1, 2, 3, 4, 5 e 6), e pelo inventário DN4, na visita 1 e 6, com distribuição da S(+)-cetamina e o analgésico de resgate e avaliado os efeitos adversos em cada visita. Realizou-se a coleta de 15mL de sangue para exames de segurança na visita 1 e 6 e para quantificação de citocinas plasmáticas IL-1, IL-6 e TNFα, nas visitas 1, 2, 4 e 6. Foi também, avaliada a qualidade de vida por meio do questionário WHOQOL-Bref nas visitas 1 e 6. Os resultados demostraram predominância do sexo feminino, idade de 18 a 29 anos, pardos, solteiros, renda de 2 a 4 salários mínimos; e média de 7,782,21 anos de estudo. Na avaliação da dor pela EAV os dois grupos apresentaram uma redução dos escores médios de dor ao longo do tempo, e mostrou significância estatística p < 0,05. Entretanto não foi observada diferença estatística para os escores de dor entre os grupos e também, em relação ao uso do medicamento analgésico (codeína) de resgate. Houve redução significante nos escore de DN4 no grupo placebo em relação às avaliações iniciais e finais comparadas à cetamina, ainda os escores iniciais do DN4 foram significativamente menores no grupo placebo, nas avaliações de antes e depois do uso da S(+)-cetamina. Na avaliação da qualidade de vida nos domínios físico, psicológico, relações sociais e meio ambiente, não se observou diferença estatisticamente significante entre os grupos estudados. Os valores de IL-1, IL-6 e TNF-α, em quatro coletas do soro dos grupos cetamina e placebo não mostraram diferença estatisticamente significante tanto na avaliação intragrupo ao longo das visitas, como entre os grupos. Em relação aos efeitos adversos, houve um predomínio estatisticamente significante no grupo cetamina especialmente para tontura, alteração visual e outros efeitos. Conclui-se que a S(+)-cetamina por via oral na dose utilizada em pacientes com hanseníase e dor neuropática não se mostrou superior ao placebo em relação ao efeito analgésico e no impacto na qualidade de vida.

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Esta dissertação, que se insere na Linha de Pesquisa Produção Social do Conhecimento, objetiva gerar uma reflexão acerca da metodologia de formar e inserir jovens no mundo do trabalho, após a promulgação do Estatuto da Criança e do Adolescente. Isto é feito a partir da análise ideológica do que está subjacente aos discursos dos que atuam ou estimulam o desenvolvimento desta atividade. Partindo de uma fundamentação em autores que, entre as décadas de 1980 e 1990, realizaram investigações nas áreas de trabalho/educação e de assistência à infância e à juventude, e de uma análise junto ao Projeto Bolsa de Iniciação ao Trabalho, desenvolvido pela UERJ em conjunto com DEGASE e 2 Vara, foram feitas observações e entrevistas com educadores e jovens envolvidos nesta prática. Foi possível, assim, desvelar o significado desses discursos: falas produzidas a partir das distintas e complexas relações sociais vivenciadas pela população brasileira e que, até os dias atuais, interferem no processo de formação e inserção profissional do jovem pobre. Após a análise, verificou-se que esta ideologia é reproduzida por educadores e jovens e, que, apesar das mudanças desta década, a prática instituída é a de adequar o jovem ao trabalho, visando a sua socialização, ocupação do tempo ocioso e renda familiar. Este texto ainda tenta sinalizar para a importância dos programas e da escola formal interagirem, rompendo com o falso paradigma de que a infância pobre está destinada, com raríssimas exceções, ao trabalho instrumental ou à marginalização, o que contribui para sua exclusão da escola e do direito ao lazer. Busca, também, estratégias que auxiliem na construção de um jovem/cidadão crítico e ciente de seus direitos.

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Este estudo indica o uso da pesquisa etnobotânica aplicada como estratégia metodológica para o fornecimento de subsídios para a comunidade do Quilombo São José da Serra, de modo a favorecer a visibilidade do seu etnoconhecimento botânico. Por meio de tal estratégia, esta pesquisa propõe alternativas que contribuam para o desenvolvimento socioambiental local. Localizado em Valença/Rio de Janeiro, este quilombo foi formado há cerca de 150 anos por descendentes de negros de origem africana, escravizados e enviados à região para trabalharem nas lavouras de café. Essa população permaneceu em terras privadas, e se caracteriza pela resistência e manutenção de suas tradições que se refletem no modo de vida, nas relações sociais e nas estabelecidas com o meio ambiente. Destaca-se, entre outros aspectos, pelas contribuições sobre o conhecimento das plantas e de seus múltiplos usos. Por tratar-se de um Quilombo historicamente ligado às atividades agrícolas, à restrição espacial e às precárias condições de plantio e de escoamento da produção, seus membros enfrentam ameaça de permanência e de continuidade. Tal problemática possibilitou a criação de alternativas que possam apontar para novas perspectivas de etnodesenvolvimento local, respeitando o perfil, as características socioculturais, o conhecimento sobre a natureza tradicionalmente mantido e as particularidades da paisagem. Acredito que promover a visibilidade do etnoconhecimento sobre acervo vegetal local pode permitir a emergência de novas perspectivas socioambientais àquela comunidade, em uma reconfiguração do processo produtivo baseado na ampliação do seu reconhecimento. A etnobotânica aplicada foi utilizada para além do levantamento do conhecimento tradicional sobre o acervo vegetal utilizado pela comunidade estudada. Ela contribuiu também para leitura e interpretação da paisagem onde vivem os quilombolas, identificando as marcas de seu território e territorialidade, com vistas a favorecer a visibilidade do etnoconhecimento. Foram utilizados procedimentos etnomedológicos envolvendo pesquisa de campo. Procurei avaliar as questões relacionadas à disponibilidade e à distribuição das plantas no local, ao reconhecimento das plantas como recurso financeiro, à importância das plantas para manutenção do modo de vida quilombola, à distribuição e à transmissão do conhecimento etnobotânico dentre os membros da população. Por meio da análise documental, dos procedimentos etnometodológicos de trabalho de campo, da coleta e identificação de material botânico e da análise da relação existente entre os quilombolas e as unidades de paisagem que compõem a paisagem cultural do Quilombo São José da Serra, perspectivas de rearranjo socioambientais puderam ser sugeridas. Como forma de retorno da pesquisa à comunidade, deu-se a instrumentalização dos quilombolas do São José da Serra para a participação ao longo do processo investigativo, a fim de contribuir com o objetivo de visibilizar, compreender e valorizar o etnoconhecimento, os detentores deste conhecimento, as espécies vegetais e a paisagem local, onde passado, presente e futuro se imbricam de forma contínua

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Esta dissertação tem como tema o processo de expropriação da terra e de exploração da força de trabalho enquanto estratégia de acumulação de capital. Tomando por base a apropriação da dinâmica de produção do espaço e de (re)produção das relações sociais pelo circuito de valorização do capital, tem como objetivo analisar as particularidades do processo de monopolização da terra no espaço urbano a partir da implementação da Operação Urbana Consorciada do Porto, também conhecida como Porto Maravilha. Os resultados dessa pesquisa demonstram que, dada a forma como foi implementada e considerando a modelagem financeira que lhe dá sustentação, a Operação Urbana Consorciada do Porto é exemplo de uma das estratégias do capital para superar suas crises internas via apropriação do espaço. Sendo assim, consideramos que essa operação urbana reforça o processo civilizatório do capital que, neste caso, se realiza por meio da acumulação por espoliação, do ajuste espacial, do empreendedorismo urbano, do controle e monopolização da terra para obtenção de renda capitalizada, e do uso do fundo público para se consolidar.

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Nessa dissertação, procuro compreender como são construídas algumas formas de discriminação racial no mundo do balé clássico. Ou seja, como ser negro ou ser branco é um diferencial nesse contexto, e como esta discriminação é subjetivamente experimentada pelos bailarinos negros. O estudo qualitativo realizado teve por base as entrevistas realizadas com bailarinos daquele universo, que me ajudaram a compor o quadro das relações vivenciadas, revelando reciprocidades e disputas. O ponto de partida desse estudo foi a minha própria trajetória neste universo e a análise das biografias de Eros Volúsia, dançarina brasileira que se projetou internacionalmente, através de coreografias próprias, inspiradas na cultura brasileira e de Mercedes Baptista, a primeira bailarina negra a pertencer ao corpo de baile do Theatro Municipal do Rio de Janeiro. Meu foco principal foram as relações sociais construídas no contexto do balé clássico, bem como as estruturas de poder. Apostei na ideia de que estas se constituíam em um bom caso para se pensar como determinadas modalidades de relações raciais se apresentam no Brasil.

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Mammalian studies show that frustration is experienced when goal-directed activity is blocked. Despite frustration's strongly negative role in health, aggression and social relationships, the neural mechanisms are not well understood. To address this we developed a task in which participants were blocked from obtaining a reward, an established method of producing frustration. Levels of experienced frustration were parametrically varied by manipulating the participants' motivation to obtain the reward prior to blocking. This was achieved by varying the participants' proximity to a reward and the amount of effort expended in attempting to acquire it. In experiment 1, we confirmed that proximity and expended effort independently enhanced participants' self-reported desire to obtain the reward, and their self-reported frustration and response vigor (key-press force) following blocking. In experiment 2, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to show that both proximity and expended effort modulated brain responses to blocked reward in regions implicated in animal models of reactive aggression, including the amygdala, midbrain periaqueductal grey (PAG), insula and prefrontal cortex. Our findings suggest that frustration may serve an energizing function, translating unfulfilled motivation into aggressive-like surges via a cortical, amygdala and PAG network.

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Projeto de Pós-Graduação/Dissertação apresentado à Universidade Fernando Pessoa como parte dos requisitos para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Ciências Farmacêuticas

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This research provides an interpretive cross-class analysis of the leisure experience of children, aged between six and ten years, living in Cork city. This study focuses on the cultural dispositions underpinning parental decisions in relation to children’s leisure activities, with a particular emphasis on their child-surveillance practices. In this research, child-surveillance is defined as the adult monitoring of children by technological means, physical supervision, community supervision, or adult supervised activities (Nelson, 2010; Lareau, 2003; Fotel and Thomsen, 2004). This research adds significantly to understandings of Irish childhood by providing the first in-depth qualitative analysis of the surveillance of children’s leisure-time. Since the 1990s, international research on children has highlighted the increasingly structured nature of children’s leisure-time (Lareau, 2011; Valentine & McKendrick, 1997). Furthermore, research on child-surveillance has found an increase in the intensive supervision of children during their unstructured leisure-time (Nelson, 2010; Furedi, 2008; Fotel and Thomsen, 2004). This research bridges the gap between these two key bodies of literature, providing a more integrated overview of children’s experience of leisure in Ireland. Using Bourdieu’s (1992) model of habitus, field and capital, the dispositions that shape parents’ decisions about their children’s leisure time are interrogated. The holistic view of childhood adopted in this research echoes the ‘Whole Child Approach’ by analysing the child’s experience within a wider set of social relationships including family, school, and community. Underpinned by James and Prout’s (1990) paradigm on childhood, this study considers Irish children’s agency in negotiating with parents’ decisions regarding leisure-time. The data collated in this study enhances our understanding of the micro-interactions between parents and children and, the ability of the child to shape their own experience. Moreover, this is the first Irish sociological research to identify and discuss class distinctions in children’s agentic potential during leisure-time.

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In chimpanzees, most females disperse from the community in which they were born to reproduce in a new community, thereby eliminating the risk of inbreeding with close kin. However, across sites, some females breed in their natal community, raising questions about the flexibility of dispersal, the costs and benefits of different strategies and the mitigation of costs associated with dispersal and integration. In this dissertation I address these questions by combining long-term behavioral data and recent field observations on maturing and young adult females in Gombe National Park with an experimental manipulation of relationship formation in captive apes in the Congo.

To assess the risk of inbreeding for females who do and do not disperse, 129 chimpanzees were genotyped and relatedness between each dyad was calculated. Natal females were more closely related to adult community males than were immigrant females. By examining the parentage of 58 surviving offspring, I found that natal females were not more related to the sires of their offspring than were immigrant females, despite three instances of close inbreeding. The sires of all offspring were less related to the mothers than non-sires regardless of the mother’s residence status. These results suggest that chimpanzees are capable of detecting relatedness and that, even when remaining natal, females can largely avoid, though not eliminate, inbreeding.

Next, I examined whether dispersal was associated with energetic, social, physiological and/or reproductive costs by comparing immigrant (n=10) and natal (n=9) females of similar age using 2358 hours of observational data. Natal and immigrant females did not differ in any energetic metric. Immigrant females received aggression from resident females more frequently than natal females. Immigrants spent less time in social grooming and more time self-grooming than natal females. Immigrant females primarily associated with resident males, had more social partners and lacked close social allies. There was no difference in levels of fecal glucocorticoid metabolites in immigrant and natal females. Immigrant females gave birth 2.5 years later than natal females, though the survival of their first offspring did not differ. These results indicate that immigrant females in Gombe National Park do not face energetic deficits upon transfer, but they do enter a hostile social environment and have a delayed first birth.

Next, I examined whether chimpanzees use condition- and phenotype-dependent cues in making dispersal decisions. I examined the effect of social and environmental conditions present at the time females of known age matured (n=25) on the females’ dispersal decisions. Females were more likely to disperse if they had more male maternal relatives and thus, a high risk of inbreeding. Females with a high ranking mother and multiple maternal female kin tended to disperse less frequently, suggesting that a strong female kin network provides benefits to the maturing daughter. Females were also somewhat less likely to disperse when fewer unrelated males were present in the group. Habitat quality and intrasexual competition did not affect dispersal decisions. Using a larger sample of 62 females observed as adults in Gombe, I also detected an effect of phenotypic differences in personality on the female’s dispersal decisions; extraverted, agreeable and open females were less likely to disperse.

Natural observations show that apes use grooming and play as social currency, but no experimental manipulations have been carried out to measure the effects of these behaviors on relationship formation, an essential component of integration. Thirty chimpanzees and 25 bonobos were given a choice between an unfamiliar human who had recently groomed or played with them over one who did not. Both species showed a preference for the human that had interacted with them, though the effect was driven by males. These results support the idea that grooming and play act as social currency in great apes that can rapidly shape social relationships between unfamiliar individuals. Further investigation is needed to elucidate the use of social currency in female apes.

I conclude that dispersal in female chimpanzees is flexible and the balance of costs and benefits varies for each individual. Females likely take into account social cues present at maturity and their own phenotype in choosing a settlement path and are especially sensitive to the presence of maternal male kin. The primary cost associated with philopatry is inbreeding risk and the primary cost associated with dispersal is delay in the age at first birth, presumably resulting from intense social competition. Finally, apes may strategically make use of affiliative behavior in pursuing particular relationships, something that should be useful in the integration process.

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Research This paper outlines some of the key findings from an evaluation of the project and demonstrates that EC funded projects such as this, which seek to promote cross border collaboration and understanding (i.e. across organisational, sectoral and geographical boundaries) offer considerable learning potential – not least about variances in health politics across different communities. However, for this learning to be realised a comprehensive system of knowledge management needs to be an integral part of project planning alongside a system for sustaining embryonic professional networks. The concept of managing relationships was also a key part of the projects success. Executing a project funded by the EU demands the development of complex organisational skills to negotiate all the administrative challenges en route to successful completion and this project in particular relied for its success on the development of social relationships of trust and mutual respect across national, professional and social boundaries. Context A three–year European Commission funded project designed to exchange a wide range of staff (professional semiprofessional and voluntary staff in health and social care) project led by the University of Greenwich (UK) and the Université Catholique de Lille, France was completed this year (February 2008). The project was complex because it involved working in different national contexts, was multi-disciplinary, and demanded the negotiation of multiple boundaries. Theories A mixed method evaluation including written reports gathered immediately after each exchange visit and a post hoc series of individual interviews and focus groups was conducted in order to gain qualitative information (from the participants perspective) on their experiences and to identify any learning gained. Results Analysis of the data provided evidence of learning on a number of levels; personally, inter and intra professionally and organisationally as well as across sectors and also from a project management perspective. The learning crystallised around the extent of the differences noted by the participants between the UK and the French health and social care systems despite geographical proximity, common membership of the EU and many shared challenges in health and social care. The extent of these differences, noted at every level from policy to practice proved a rich source for reflection on organisational philosophies, ways of working, distribution of resources, professional roles and autonomy and professional registration and mobility - in short on health politics at ‘macro’ and ‘micro’ levels.

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[Introduction] When a director of one company at the same time serves on the board of another company, the two companies are said to be interlocked by that director. Through this linkage each company has potential access to information about the activities of the other, either explicitly as intelligence transferred by the director or implicitly in shaping the director’s perspective and general views. Director interlocks formed by executive directors, employed by the firm, are generally interpreted as more instrumental for the firm than those formed by non-executive directors. Firms are often interlocked with more than one other firm and those firms, in turn, with others; a web of social relationships envelops business.

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Purpose – This study aims to investigate the pattern among 17 heterodox economic journals over a prolonged period to provide evidence about the social dynamics among the group of researchers who publish in them and the extent to which they hold or develop a collective identity as heterodox economists. Design/methodology/approach – Traditional approaches to citation analysis are extended by the use of techniques from social network analysis. In addition to citation counts, measures of network position and clique membership are used to identify key journals and turning points in a longitudinal analysis. Findings – Important shifts in the nature of citation within the network of journals are identified in the 1998-2001 period and evidence is found of the emergence of a collective identity. Research limitations/implications – The methods prove a valuable extension of citation analysis and also focus greater consideration on the social relationships that citations represent. They are well suited to addressing the principal limitation of the study, its restriction to journals within the defined community rather than journals in general. Originality/value – This extends traditional approaches to citation analysis, provides an important new technique in identifying emergent collective identities and provides insight into the history and nature of the heterodox economic community.

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This paper explores the school experiences of seven 11–14 year old disabled children, and focuses on their agency as they negotiated a complex, changing, and often challenging social world at school where “difference” was experienced in negative ways. The paper draws on ethnographic data from a wider three-year study that explores the influence of school experiences on both disabled and non-disabled children’s identity as they make the transition from primary to secondary school in regular New Zealand schools (although the focus of the present paper is only on the experiences of disabled children). The wider study considers how Maori (indigenous people of Aotearoa/New Zealand) and Pakeha (New Zealanders of NZ European descent) disabled children and their non- disabled matched peers (matched for age, gender and classroom) understand their personal identity, and how factors relating to transition (from primary to secondary school); culture; impairment (in the case of disabled children); social relationships; and school experience impact on children’s identities. Data on Maori children’s school experiences is currently being collected, and is not yet available for inclusion in this paper. On the basis of our observations in schools we will illustrate how disabled children felt and were made to feel different through an array of structural barriers such as separate provision for disabled students, and peer and teacher attitudes to diversity. However, we agree with Davis, Watson, Shakespeare and Corker’s (2003) interpretation that disabled children’s rights and participation at school are also under attack from a “deeper cultural division” (p. 205) in schools based on discourses of difference and normality. While disabled students in our study were trying to actively construct and shape their social and educational worlds, our data also show that teachers and peers have the capacity to either support or supplant these attempts to be part of the group of “all children”. We suggest that finding solutions that support disabled children’s full inclusion and participation at school requires a multi-faceted and systemic approach focused on a pedagogy for diverse learners, and on a consistent and explicitly inclusive policy framework centred on children’s rights.

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1) Executive Summary
Legislation (Autism Act NI, 2011), a cross-departmental strategy (Autism Strategy 2013-2020) and a first action plan (2013-2016) have been developed in Northern Ireland in order to support individuals and families affected by Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) without a prior thorough baseline assessment of need. At the same time, there are large existing data sets about the population in NI that had never been subjected to a secondary data analysis with regards to data on ASD. This report covers the first comprehensive secondary data analysis and thereby aims to inform future policy and practice.
Following a search of all existing, large-scale, regional or national data sets that were relevant to the lives of individuals and families affected by Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) in Northern Ireland, extensive secondary data analyses were carried out. The focus of these secondary data analyses was to distill any ASD related data from larger generic data sets. The findings are reported for each data set and follow a lifespan perspective, i.e., data related to children is reported first before data related to adults.
Key findings:
Autism Prevalence:
Of children born in 2000 in the UK,
• 0.9% (1:109) were reported to have ASD, when they were 5-year old in 2005;
• 1.8% (1:55) were reported to have ASD, when they were 7-years old in 2007;
• 3.5% (1:29) were reported to have ASD, when they were 11-year old in 2011.
In mainstream schools in Northern Ireland
• 1.2% of the children were reported to have ASD in 2006/07;
• 1.8% of the children were reported to have ASD in 2012/13.

Economic Deprivation:
• Families of children with autism (CWA) were 9%-18% worse off per week than families of children not on the autism spectrum (COA).
• Between 2006-2013 deprivation of CWA compared to COA nearly doubled as measured by eligibility for free school meals (from near 20 % to 37%)
• In 2006, CWA and COA experienced similar levels of deprivation (approx. 20%), by 2013, a considerable deprivation gap had developed, with CWA experienced 6% more deprivation than COA.
• Nearly 1/3 of primary school CWA lived in the most deprived areas in Northern Ireland.
• Nearly ½ of children with Asperger’s Syndrome who attended special school lived in the most deprived areas.

Unemployment:
• Mothers of CWA were 6% less likely to be employed than mothers of COA.
• Mothers of CWA earned 35%-56% less than mothers of COA.
• CWA were 9% less likely to live in two income families than COA.

Health:
• Pre-diagnosis, CWA were more likely than COA to have physical health problems, including walking on level ground, speech and language, hearing, eyesight, and asthma.
• Aged 3 years of age CWA experienced poorer emotional and social health than COA, this difference increased significantly by the time they were 7 years of age.
• Mothers of young CWA had lower levels of life satisfaction and poorer mental health than mothers of young COA.
Education:
• In mainstream education, children with ASD aged 11-16 years reported less satisfaction with their social relationships than COA.
• Younger children with ASD (aged 5 and 7 years) were less likely to enjoy school, were bullied more, and were more reluctant to attend school than COA.
• CWA attended school 2-3 weeks less than COA .
• Children with Asperger’s Syndrome in special schools missed the equivalent of 8-13 school days more than children with Asperger’s Syndrome in mainstream schools.
• Children with ASD attending mainstream schooling were less likely to gain 5+ GCSEs A*-C or subsequently attend university.



Further and Higher Education:
• Enrolment rates for students with ASD have risen in Further Education (FE), from 0% to 0.7%.
• Enrolment rates for students with ASD have risen in Higher Education (HE), from 0.28% to 0.45%.
• Students with ASD chose to study different subjects than students without ASD, although other factors, e.g., gender, age etc. may have played a part in subject selection.
• Students with ASD from NI were more likely than students without ASD to choose Northern Irish HE Institutions rather than study outside NI.

Participation in adult life and employment:
• A small number of adults with ASD (n=99) have benefitted from DES employment provision over the past 12 years.
• It is unknown how many adults with ASD have received employment support elsewhere (e.g. Steps to Work).

Awareness and Attitudes in the General Population:
• In both the 2003 and 2012 NI Life and Times Survey (NILTS), NI public reported positive attitudes towards the inclusion of children with ASD in mainstream education (see also BASE Project Vol. 2).

Gap Analysis Recommendations:
This was the first comprehensive secondary analysis with regards to ASD of existing large-scale data sets in Northern Ireland. Data gaps were identified and further replications would benefit from the following data inclusion:
• ASD should be recorded routinely in the following datasets:
o Census;
o Northern Ireland Survey of Activity Limitation (NISALD);
o Training for Success/Steps to work; Steps to Success;
o Travel survey;
o Hate crime; and
o Labour Force Survey.
• Data should be collected on the destinations/qualifications of special school leavers.
• NILT Survey autism module should be repeated in 5 years time (2017) (see full report of 1st NILT Survey autism module 2012 in BASE Project Report Volume 2).
• General public attitudes and awareness should be assessed for children and young people, using the Young Life and Times Survey (YLT) and the Kids Life and Times Survey (KLT); (this work is underway, Dillenburger, McKerr, Schubolz, & Lloyd, 2014-2015).

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The increasing popularity of the social networking service, Twitter, has made it more involved in day-to-day communications, strengthening social relationships and information dissemination. Conversations on Twitter are now being explored as indicators within early warning systems to alert of imminent natural disasters such earthquakes and aid prompt emergency responses to crime. Producers are privileged to have limitless access to market perception from consumer comments on social media and microblogs. Targeted advertising can be made more effective based on user profile information such as demography, interests and location. While these applications have proven beneficial, the ability to effectively infer the location of Twitter users has even more immense value. However, accurately identifying where a message originated from or author’s location remains a challenge thus essentially driving research in that regard. In this paper, we survey a range of techniques applied to infer the location of Twitter users from inception to state-of-the-art. We find significant improvements over time in the granularity levels and better accuracy with results driven by refinements to algorithms and inclusion of more spatial features.