55 results match your criteria: "Columbia University Teachers College[Affiliation]"

Medical specialty choice and well-being at work: Physician's personality as a moderator.

Arch Environ Occup Health

January 2020

c Department of Psychology and Logopedics , Faculty of Medicine, University of Helsinki, Helsinki , Finland.

We examined whether physicians' personality traits moderate the association between medical specialty and well-being at work. Nationally representative sample of Finnish physicians ( = 2,815; 65% women; aged 25-72 years in 2015) was used. Personality was assessed with the shortened Big Five Inventory.

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This study examined the relationship between Allen Cognitive Level (ACL) and psychiatric symptom severity, level of nursing support required to complete activities of daily living (ADLs), and post-hospitalization discharge disposition in a sample of 193 acute psychiatric inpatients. A subsample of 31 participants with acute psychotic disorders were administered three measures of executive functioning in order to examine the convergent validity between ACL and basic sequencing and shifting, phonemic fluency, and visuospatial construction. Findings indicated significant moderate positive correlations between ACL and motor processing speed, basic sequencing and shifting, and phonemic fluency, and a nonsignificant relationship with visuospatial construction.

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Creating visual explanations improves learning.

Cogn Res Princ Implic

December 2016

Stanford University, Columbia University Teachers College, New York, NY USA.

Many topics in science are notoriously difficult for students to learn. Mechanisms and processes outside student experience present particular challenges. While instruction typically involves visualizations, students usually explain in words.

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The purpose of this 2-arm randomized clinical trial was to evaluate the effectiveness of a 12-month, expert system-based, print-delivered physical activity intervention in a primary care Veteran population in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Participants were not excluded for many health conditions that typically are exclusionary criteria in physical activity trials. The primary outcome measures were physical activity reported using the Community Healthy Activities Model Program for Seniors (CHAMPS) questionnaire and an accelerometer-based activity assessment at baseline, 6, and 12 months.

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. Hurricane Matthew was the most powerful tropical cyclone of the 2016 Atlantic Basin season, bringing severe impacts to multiple nations including direct landfalls in Cuba, Haiti, Bahamas, and the United States. However, Haiti experienced the greatest loss of life and population disruption.

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The rise of eating disorders in Asia: a review.

J Eat Disord

September 2015

Department of Clinical & Counseling Psychology, Columbia University (Teachers College), New York, USA.

Once concentrated among adolescent Caucasian females in high-income Western countries, today, eating disorders (EDs) are truly global. Building upon previous work describing the rise of EDs among cultures in transition, we contextualize the emergence of EDs in Asia by locating this development within the broader discourse about the processes of change that have radically transformed Asian societies over the last three decades. By identifying where EDs are emerging in the region, and by examining their particular expression, our aim is to explicate a fuller story of the relationship between culture and eating disorders.

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Objectives: Disorders of behavioral dysregulation often involve more than one dsyregulated behavior (e.g., drug abuse and aggression, alcohol abuse and gambling).

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Physical activity for an ethnically diverse sample of endometrial cancer survivors: a needs assessment and pilot intervention.

J Gynecol Oncol

April 2015

Division of Gynecologic Oncology, Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Women's Health, Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY, USA.

Objective: To determine the physical activity (PA) behavior, needs and preferences for underserved, ethnically diverse women with a history of endometrial cancer (EC).

Methods: Women with a history of EC (41 non-Hispanic black, 40 non-Hispanic white, and 18 Hispanic) completed a needs assessment during their regular follow-up appointments at Montefiore Medical Center in Bronx, NY, USA. An 8-week pilot PA intervention based on the results of the needs assessment was conducted with 5 EC survivors.

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Assessment of a novel module for training dental students in child abuse recognition and reporting.

J Dent Educ

August 2014

Mr. Shapiro is a fourth-year D.D.S./M.A. candidate, Columbia University College of Dental Medicine and Columbia Teachers College; Dr. Anderson is Professor of Natural Sciences and Chair, Department of Mathematics, Science, and Technology, Columbia University Teachers College; and Dr. Lal is Director of Predoctoral Pediatric Dentistry and Associate Professor of Clinical Dentistry, Columbia University College of Dental Medicine.

This study assessed the merits of introducing a novel, online interactive training module designed to positively engage dental students and teach them to recognize and report signs of child abuse and neglect. The study aimed to determine if the online training module educated the students equivalently or better than a lecture presentation of the same content. Seventy-two students from Columbia University College of Dental Medicine's class of 2015 (90 percent of the class) agreed to participate and were randomly assigned to either a traditional lecture-based presentation or the online training module.

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Behavioral and emotional dynamics of two people struggling to reach consensus about a topic on which they disagree.

PLoS One

October 2014

Departments of Physics and Psychology, Dean Division of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, Queens College, City University of New York, Queens, New York, United States of America.

We studied the behavioral and emotional dynamics displayed by two people trying to resolve a conflict. 59 groups of two people were asked to talk for 20 minutes to try to reach a consensus about a topic on which they disagreed. The topics were abortion, affirmative action, death penalty, and euthanasia.

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We describe baseline demographic and psychosocial characteristics of low-income, diverse diabetes adults enrolled in a telephonic intervention trial. Environment for the study was New York City (NYC) A1C Registry program. Baseline data were analyzed from 941 participants randomized to either telephonic/print or print-only intervention to improve glycemic control.

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Cerebrovascular perfusion among older adults is moderated by strength training and gender.

Neurosci Lett

February 2014

Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Providence, RI 02912, USA; Butler Hospital Neuroimaging Center, Providence, RI 02906, USA; University of Georgia, Department of Psychology, Athens, GA 30602-3013, USA.

Cerebral perfusion is important in older adults as it is linked to cognitive declines. Physical activity can improve blood flow in the body but little is known about the relationship between physical activity and cerebral perfusion in older adults. In particular, no study has investigated the relation between strength training and cerebral perfusion.

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Background: Research on resilience in the aftermath of potentially traumatic life events (PTE) is still evolving. For decades, researchers have documented resilience in children exposed to corrosive early environments, such as poverty or chronic maltreatment. Relatively more recently, the study of resilience has migrated to the investigation of isolated PTE in adults.

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We report 2 experiments that tested the effects of multiple exemplar instruction (MEI) across training sets on the emergence of productive autoclitic frames (suffixes) for 6 preschoolers with and without language-based disabilities. We implemented multiple exemplar tact instruction with subsets of stimuli whose "names" contained the suffix "-er" denoting the comparative form of adjectives. Subsets of stimuli included regular, irregular, and contrived tacts containing the target relational autoclitic frame in order to determine if our MEI procedure would induce the abstraction of the frame across all stimulus sets.

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Enacting remembrance: turning toward memorializing September 11th.

J Relig Health

September 2011

Department of Clinical and Counseling Psychology, Columbia University Teachers College, New York, NY, USA.

The memorial at the site of the former World Trade Center will open on the tenth anniversary of 9/11 to help us commemorate, honor, educate, and mourn. Memorializing is an act that involves shared memory and collective grieving-aiming also to restore severed communal bonds and dismantled cultural ideals. As such, it is a form of cultural renewal that can transform traumatized mourners into an ethical community of memory.

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We report experiments using time-lagged pre- and postintervention designs with (a) 4 first graders with learning delays, and (b) a systematic replication with 3 preschoolers with learning delays. Both experiments tested the effects of multiple exemplar instructional procedures (MEI) on the emergence of untaught past tense emission of novel regular verbs (e.g.

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Measuring comparative risk perceptions in an urban minority population: the risk perception survey for diabetes.

Diabetes Educ

September 2007

The Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Department of Medicine/Endocrinology Diabetes Research Center, Bronx, New York (Dr Walker, Dr Caban, Ms Blanco, Ms DeWitt, Ms Kalten, Ms Mera, Ms Mojica)

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to assess comparative risk perceptions related to diabetes complications and their associations with patient characteristics in an urban minority sample.

Methods: The authors developed the Risk Perception Survey-Diabetes Mellitus (RPS-DM) and administered the survey using a Solomon Four group design with a random half of a sample of 599 adults with diabetes. This was the baseline survey to measure comparative risk perceptions in a multiethnic sample prior to implementation of randomly assigned behavioral interventions to improve diabetic retinopathy screening rates.

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The culture of affluence: psychological costs of material wealth.

Child Dev

March 2004

Developmental and Clinical Psychology Programs, Columbia University Teachers College, New York, NY 10027-6696, USA.

Children of affluence are generally presumed to be at low risk. However, recent studies have suggested problems in several domains--notably, substance use, anxiety, and depression--and 2 sets of potential causes: pressures to achieve and isolation from parents. Recognizing the limited awareness of these issues, the objectives in this paper are to collate evidence on the nature of problems among the wealthy and their likely causes.

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