219 results match your criteria: "School of Historical[Affiliation]"
Omega (Westport)
November 2022
School of Psychology, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
A narrative systematic review was conducted to review studies that examine mental health implications of involvement in assisted-death services among health practitioners. Qualitative and quantitative studies were included to understand health practitioners' attitudes and experiences with assisted dying services, as well as to identify the mental health consequences. We identified 18 articles from 1591 articles drawn from seven major scientific databases (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Med
November 2022
MetaMelb Research Group, School of BioSciences, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.
Background: Various stakeholders are calling for increased availability of data and code from cancer research. However, it is unclear how commonly these products are shared, and what factors are associated with sharing. Our objective was to evaluate how frequently oncology researchers make data and code available and explore factors associated with sharing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
October 2022
Philosophy and Environmental Resources Institute, University College Cork, Munster T12 K8AF, Ireland.
Pediatr Diabetes
December 2022
Division of Population Medicine, School of Medicine, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK.
The Janus face metaphor approach highlights that a technology may simultaneously have two opposite faces or properties with unforeseen paradoxes within human-technology interaction. Suboptimal acceptance and clinical outcomes are sometimes seen in adolescents who use diabetes-related technologies. A traditional linear techno-determinist model of technology use would ascribe these unintended outcomes to suboptimal technology, suboptimal patient behavior, or suboptimal outcome measures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Environ Res Public Health
July 2022
College of Water Resource and Hydropower, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610065, China.
Identifying effective transformations to reduce poverty and approach rural sustainability is at the core of the first sustainable development goal of the United Nations. This article offers scientific support for continued efforts in sustaining rural development and livelihood resilience. Many studies have examined drivers of livelihood transition from farming to non-farm activities, especially participation in tourism against the backdrop of rural tourism development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Public Health
July 2022
Faculty Development and Diversity, Global Health and Infectious Diseases, Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States.
COVID-19 continues to be a public health crisis, while severely impacting global financial markets causing significant economic and social hardship. As with any emerging disease, pharmaceutical interventions required time, emphasizing the initial and continuing need for non-pharmaceutical interventions. We highlight the role of anthropological and historical perspectives to inform approaches to non-pharmaceutical interventions for future preparedness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
June 2022
School of Historical Culture and Tourism Management, Liaocheng University, Liaocheng, China.
The underlying aim of this study was to investigate the impact of human resource management (HRM) practices, organizational identity, and brand leadership on employee brand-based equity through the mediatory role of brand knowledge dissemination. A questionnaire was adopted to obtain data from 421 employees working in the construction sector of China. The SmartPLS software was used to analyze the data with the help of a structural equation modeling (SEM) technique.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Hum Lact
August 2022
School of Historical and Philosophical Inquiry, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Behav Brain Sci
May 2022
School of Historical and Philosophical Studies, The University of Melbourne, Victoria3010, Australia.
Cesario argues that experimental studies of bias tell us little about why group disparities exist. We argue that Cesario's alternative approach implicitly frames understanding of group disparities as a false binary between "bias" and "group differences." This, we suggest, will contribute little to our understanding of the complex dynamics that produce group disparities, and risks inappropriately rationalizing them.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Sex Marital Ther
January 2023
School of Historical and Philosophical Studies, University of Melbourne, Parkville3010, Australia.
This commentary compares two recently published informed consent recommendations for gender dysphoria. One key difference identified is in their assessment of the strength of the evidence base for the gender affirming treatment model. An evaluation of both authors' citations supports the claims of a weak evidence base for the use of puberty blockers and gender affirming hormonal treatments in youth with gender dysphoria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Migr Health
April 2022
School of Medicine and School of Historical & Philosophical Studies, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
Background: International medical graduates (IMGs) have made important contributions to Australian healthcare since colonization. Recent published data have documented source countries and characteristics of IMGs undertaking the examinations of the Australian Medical Council. However, information about those currently practicing in Australia is limited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Relig Health
June 2022
Centre for Spirituality, Theology and Health, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health
April 2022
Department of Health Sciences, The Swedish Red Cross University College, Hälsovägen 11, SE-141 57 Huddinge, Sweden.
Newly arrived refugees and asylum seekers constitute a vulnerable population in terms of health and social conditions due to lived trauma and experiences of loss, as well as factors in the host country such as not speaking the language, not having employment and social exclusion. Studies have shown that many newly arrived refugees find it difficult to establish a sustainable position in the host country's labour market due to a lack of connections, low levels of education and political, social and cultural barriers. The Swedish Public Employment Service runs an establishment programme aimed at helping newly arrived refugees to find employment quickly and manage their own livelihoods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChest
July 2022
Department of English, Winthrop University, Rock Hill, SC.
The outbreak of COVID-19 has brought renewed attention to past narratives of disease outbreaks. What do the Black Death and COVID-19 have in common? How we tell outbreak stories is shaped by political, cultural, social, and historical contexts. It is deeply rhetorical.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Syst Neurosci
February 2022
School of Historical and Philosophical Inquiry, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Understanding the neural bases of subjective experience remains one of the great challenges of the natural sciences. Higher-order theories of consciousness are typically defended by assessments of neural activity in higher cortical regions during perception, often with disregard to the nature of the neural computations that these regions execute. We have sought to refocus the problem toward identification of those neural computations that are necessary for subjective experience with the goal of defining the sorts of neural architectures that can perform these operations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Relig Health
April 2022
Centre for Spirituality, Theology and Health, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.
This paper presents additional qualitative results from Phase 1 of a larger study examining potentially morally injurious events/experiences (PMIE) and/or moral injury (MI) among Australian veterans (Hodgson et al. in J Relig Health 60(5):3061-3089, 2021). It makes specific reference to (1) betrayal and (2) retribution experienced or perpetrated by Australian military veterans during military conflicts and peacekeeping missions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNTM
March 2022
School of Historical and Philosophical Studies, Faculty of Arts, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Recent scholarship on the social history of health and medicine in colonial India has moved beyond enclavist or hegemonic aspects of imperial medicine and has rather focused on the role of Indian intermediaries and the fractured nature of colonial hegemony. Drawing inspiration from this scholarship, the article highlights the significance of the Indian subordinates in the lock hospital system in the nineteenth century Madras Presidency. This study focuses on a class of Indian subordinates called the "gomastah", who were employed to detect clandestine prostitution in Madras to control the spread of venereal disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCogn Sci
February 2022
School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, Arizona State University.
A puzzling feature of paradigmatic cases of dehumanization is that the perpetrators often attribute uniquely human traits to their victims. This has become known as the "paradox of dehumanization." I address the paradox by arguing that the perpetrators think about their victims as human in one sense, while denying that they are human in another sense.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStud Hist Philos Sci
April 2022
School of Humanities, University of Tasmania, Australia; School of Historical and Philosophical Studies, University of Queensland, Australia; Centre for Heritage and Museum Studies, Australian National University, Australia. Electronic address:
This article examines in contextual depth the investigations of Indigenous Australian ancestral bodily remains by four influential British Darwinian comparative anatomists active between 1860 and 1919: George Rolleston (1829-1881), William Henry Flower (1831-1899), Alexander Macalister (1844-1919), and William Turner (1832-1916). It also reviews the examination of the structural morphology of the brains of four Indigenous Australians by Macalister's protégé, Wynfrid Lawrence Henry Duckworth (1870-1956). Since the 1970s, Darwinian scientists of the last third of the long nineteenth century have been represented in connection with the efforts of Indigenous Australian communities to have the remains of their ancestors returned for burial, as having acquired and investigated their skulls and other bodily structures to prove their evolutionary inferiority, and thereby legitimate their violent dispossession and near enslavement under so-called 'protective' regimes, where they struggled to maintain their families' health and well-being, their languages and culture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
January 2022
Ven Te Chow Hydrosystems Laboratory, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 205 North Mathews Avenue, Urbana, IL, 61801, USA.
Travertine crystal growth ripples are used to reconstruct the early hydraulic history of the Anio Novus aqueduct of ancient Rome. These crystalline morphologies deposited within the aqueduct channel record the hydraulic history of gravity-driven turbulent flow at the time of Roman operation. The wavelength, amplitude, and steepness of these travertine crystal growth ripples indicate that large-scale sustained aqueduct flows scaled directly with the thickness of the aqueous viscous sublayer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSophia
April 2022
School of Historical and Philosophical Studies, University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC Australia.
Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol
August 2022
History & Philosophy of Science Programme, School of Historical & Philosophical Studies, The University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia.
Investigations of sex differences in the human brain take place on politically sensitive terrain. While some scholars express concern that gendered biases and stereotypes remain embedded in scientific research, others are alarmed about the politicization of science. To help better understand these debates, this review sets out three kinds of conflicts that can arise in the neuroscience of sex differences: academic freedom versus gender equality; frameworks, background assumptions, and dominant methodologies; and inductive risk and social values.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Sex Behav
February 2022
School of Historical and Philosophical Studies, Faculty of Arts, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, 3010, Australia.
Eur J Philos Sci
October 2021
Institute of Philosophy & Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research, University of Bern, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland.
Climate modelling plays a crucial role for understanding and addressing the climate challenge, in terms of both mitigation and adaptation. It is therefore of central importance to understand to what extent climate models are adequate for relevant purposes, such as providing certain kinds of climate change projections in view of decision-making. In this perspective, the issue of the stability of climate models under small relevant perturbations in their structure (or small relevant 'structural model errors' with respect to the target system) seems particularly important.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScience
October 2021
Department of History, School of Historical, Philosophical, and Religious Studies, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA.
A major data synthesis maps tribal displacements.
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