Currently, 36 genes have been reported to affect offensive behavior in male mice. Potentially, these genes could be used to analyze the mechanism of this behavior. But there are methodological flies in this conceptual ointment. The studies with these genes varied in the genetic background, the maternal environments, the postweaning housing, the strain or type of opponent, and the type of test. The effects of each of these on the genetics of offense are reviewed with examples. It is concluded that between-study variation in these environmental or experiential circumstances may make it difficult to impossible to relate the effect of one genetic variant to another and to use these to identify and relate the pathways for gene effects on offensive behaviors. For this reason, standardization of these conditions is recommended.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0018-506x(03)00137-5 | DOI Listing |
Int J Equity Health
January 2025
Queensland Bioethics Centre, Australian Catholic University, Brisbane, Australia.
Solidarity is one of the emerging values in global health ethics, and a few pieces of bioethics literature link it to decoloniality. However, conceptions of solidarity in global health ethics are influenced primarily by Western perspectives, thus suggesting the decolonial needs to include non-Western perspectives. This article explores a decolonial interpretation of solidarity to enrich our understanding of solidarity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFErgonomics
January 2025
Department of Systems and Information Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, USA.
Ergonomics and Human Factors (E/HF) practitioners are increasingly engaged in projects meant to centre underserved communities and reduce inequities. The subdiscipline of E/HF that has emerged to explore the application of E/HF in this way is called community ergonomics. In this qualitative-descriptive study, we reflect on the progress made in the field of community ergonomics since its original conceptualisation in 1994.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Soc Psychol
January 2025
Exeter University, Exeter, UK.
Knowledge production on marginalized identities is frequently shaped by epistemic violence, which limits both the scope and methodologies of research. One example of this is the case of Kurdish identity in Turkey, where we find that methodological and epistemic problems are evident particularly in social psychological research. To summarize social psychological studies on Kurdishness, Kurdish identity and conflict in Turkey we've conducted a systematic review that includes a total of 63 studies on topics related to Kurdishness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis essay is an attempt to determine what Robert Bernasconi's body of work in Critical Philosophy of Race can teach us about the way in which we, philosophers and professors of philosophy, ought to treat our institutional heritage. What should we make, for instance, of moral claims made by philosophers of the modern era who - tacitly or explicitly - manifested certain levels of endorsement toward the Atlantic Slave Trade? How should we comprehend the conceptual tools that we have inherited from them, knowing that those were formulated alongside justificatory claims for the enslavement of Africans - claims that we now deem undoubtably and universally immoral? I extract from Bernasconi's writings an implicit methodology that can be broken down into three main moves: (1) a historiographical work, akin to Michel Foucault's 'archaeological' method, aimed at uncovering the material conditions that allowed for the emergence of philosophical ideas of the past, (2) a dialectical work aimed at interpreting this collection of historical data through the critical lens of race, and (3) a pedagogical work aimed at transforming the practice of academic philosophy in light of the critique. I conclude that his methodological contribution culminates in an invitation to revisit and transform the past of the institution by treating the history of academic philosophy as philosophically and conceptually relevant rather than merely incidental.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Gaucha Enferm
January 2025
Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana. Departamento de Saúde. Programa de Pós-Graduação em Saúde Coletiva. Feira de Santana, Bahia, Brasil.
Objective: to analyze the implementation of care agreements developed in the CACTO program for mothers of children with Autism Spectrum Disorder.
Method: exploratory, qualitative study, guided by Unitary Caring Science and the Implementation Science methodological framework, based on the Consolidated Conceptual Framework for Implementation Research. Conducted with 20 mothers of children with Autism Spectrum Disorder, between April 2023 and February 2024, during care meetings developed in a non-governmental organization.
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!