Publications by authors named "A Hiebert"

Rates of sexual victimization among Indigenous women are 3 times higher when compared with non-Indigenous women. The purpose of this secondary data analysis was to explore the experiences and recommendations of Indigenous women who reported sexual assault to the police and were not believed. This qualitative study of the experiences of 11 Indigenous women reflects four themes.

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One in four women will experience sexual assault in their lifetime. Although less than 5% of sexual assaults are reported to law enforcement, one in five cases reported to police are deemed baseless (by police) and therefore coded as "unfounded." Police officers are in a unique position to act as gatekeepers for justice in sexual assault cases, given their responsibility to investigate sexual assault reports.

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The life cycle of gobies of the Sicydiinae subfamily depends on climbing waterfalls. Two sympatric sicydiines species from Reunion Island, (SIL) and (COA), employ different climbing modes. SIL uses a steady "inching" mode interrupted by short rest periods, whereas COA exhibits short "power-burst" undulatory movements punctuated by longer rest periods.

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Central Pattern Generator (CPG) is still an elusive concept that has a visual manifestation as a rhythmic oscillation commanded from the spine, but that also has another manifestation as a train of bursts in the surface electromyographic (sEMG) signals recorded on the para-spinal muscles. This leads to the challenging problem of correlating the visually observed spinal wave with the sEMG signals recorded during the session. This paper develops a mathematical model of the spinal wave phenomenon, which, when driven by the sEMG data, yields such visually observable features as wave nodes.

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Children with disruptive behaviour disorders and academic delay (DD-AD) were compared to children with disruptive behaviour disorders only (DD) and normal control children with no psychiatric disturbance or academic delay (NO) with respect to scalp-recorded event-related electrical potentials (ERPs) elicited by semantically primed and unprimed words. Primed words were preceded by spoken words having a related meaning, while unprimed words were preceded by nonassociated spoken words. For normal controls, the unprimed words elicited greater N400 amplitudes at frontal-central recording sites than primed words.

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