70 results match your criteria: "The University of Oregon[Affiliation]"
Soc Sci Med
December 2024
Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art at the University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, USA. Electronic address:
Purpose: To create and implement a Whole Personhood in Medical Education curriculum including Visual Thinking Strategies (VTS), close reading, and creative practice that features creative works by BIPOC, persons with disability, and/or LGBTQ + individuals that aligns with educational competencies.
Materials And Methods: Curriculum design by an interdisciplinary team made up of physician educators, medical sociologist, digital collection librarian, and art museum educators. Prospective single arm intervention study at a single site academic teaching hospital.
JMIR Form Res
December 2024
Center for Health Communication, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, United States.
This paper discusses the implementation of the Whole Communities-Whole Health (WCWH) initiative, which is a community-based, longitudinal cohort study. WCWH seeks to better understand the impact of location on family health and child development while also providing support for families participating in the study. Implementing a longitudinal study that is both comprehensive in the data it is collecting and inclusive in the population it is representing is what makes WCWH extremely challenging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Public Health
May 2024
Anne Marie Mauricio, Yahaira Garcia, Sophia Merelas, Camille C. Cioffi, Elizabeth L. Budd, Stephanie De Anda, Maryanne V. Mueller, Elaine Rodriguez, and Leslie D. Leve are with the University of Oregon, Prevention Science Institute, Eugene. Anne Marie Mauricio, Yahaira Garcia, Elizabeth L. Budd, and Leslie D. Leve are also with the Department of Counseling Psychology and Human Services, University of Oregon, Eugene. Stephanie De Anda is also with the Department of Special Education and Clinical Sciences, University of Oregon, Eugene. Elaine Rodriguez is also with Mano Amiga, Roseburg, OR. Ellen Hawley McWhirter is with the Department of Counseling Psychology and Human Services, University of Oregon, Eugene.
We conducted focus groups with staff from 5 community-based organizations (21 participants; 86% female, 52% Hispanic/Latino/a/x and 24% Mexican/Mexican American) between August and October 2021. Results highlighted community partner perceptions of practices congruent (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Public Health
May 2024
Jorge I. Ramírez García is with the University of Oregon, Prevention Science Institute, Eugene and the Oregon Research Institute, Springfield. Veronica Oro and Camille C. Cioffi are with the University of Oregon, Prevention Science Institute, Eugene. Ellen Hawley McWhirter is with the Department of Counseling Psychology and Human Services, University of Oregon, Eugene. Elizabeth L. Budd, Anne Marie Mauricio, David S. DeGarmo, and Leslie D. Leve are with the University of Oregon, Prevention Science Institute, Eugene and the Department of Counseling Psychology and Human Services, University of Oregon, Eugene. Stephanie De Anda is with the University of Oregon, Prevention Science Institute, Eugene and the Department of Special Education and Clinical Sciences, University of Oregon, Eugene.
Through a COVID-19 public health intervention implemented across sequenced research trials, we present a community engagement phased framework that embeds intervention implementation: (1) consultation and preparation, (2) collaboration and implementation, and (3) partnership and sustainment. Intervention effects included mitigation of psychological distress and a 0.28 increase in the Latinx population tested for SARS-CoV-2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlcohol Clin Exp Res (Hoboken)
January 2024
School of Public Health, The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth, Fort Worth, Texas, USA.
Understanding the efficacy and relative effectiveness of a brief alcohol intervention (BAI) relies on obtaining a credible intervention effect estimate. Outcomes in BAI trials are often count variables, such as the number of drinks consumed, which may be overdispersed (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
May 2023
Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Geriatrics, The University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States of America.
Atherosclerosis is the root cause of major cardiovascular diseases (CVD) such as myocardial infarction and stroke. ADP-ribosylation factor 6 (Arf6) is a ubiquitously expressed GTPase known to be involved in inflammation, vascular permeability and is sensitive to changes in shear stress. Here, using atheroprone, ApoE-/- mice, with a single allele deletion of Arf6 (HET) or wildtype Arf6 (WT), we demonstrate that reduction in Arf6 attenuates atherosclerotic plaque burden and severity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Cogn Neurosci
April 2023
Department of Psychology, the University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, USA.
Pubertal processes are associated with structural brain development, but studies have produced inconsistent findings that may relate to different measurements of puberty. Measuring both hormones and physical characteristics is important for capturing variation in neurobiological development. The current study explored associations between cortical thickness and latent factors from multi-method pubertal data in 174 early adolescent girls aged 10-13 years in the Transitions in Adolescent Girls (TAG) Study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
September 2022
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft, Schützenstraße 18, D-10117 Berlin, Germany.
The present study investigated "the" reduction in phrase-medial Verb-the-Noun sequences elicited from 5-year-old children and young adults (18-22 yr). Several measures of reduction were calculated based on acoustic measurement of these sequences. Analyses on the measures indicated that the determiner vowel was reduced in both child and adult speech relative to content word vowels, but it was reduced less in child speech compared to adult speech.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychiatry
September 2022
Research and Development Department, War Child Holland, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Background: Local children with developmental disabilities were deprived of learning opportunities due to recent social and health incidents, resulting in elevating challenging behaviors and familial conflicts. This study explored the acceptability and feasibility of the World Health Organization's Caregiver Skills Training Programme (WHO CST) in alternative delivery modes under new normal and post COVID-19 period.
Method: CST was delivered eLearning (EL), videoconferencing (VC), and in-person hybrid (IP) modes to 34 parent-child dyads, being randomly assigned to modes of asynchronous non-interfering EL ( = 9), synchronous with online coaching VC ( = 7), synchronous with in-person coaching IP ( = 9) and Wait-list Control WLC ( = 9).
Biophys J
December 2021
Materials Science Institute and Department of Physics, The University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, USA. Electronic address:
The viscosity of lipid membranes sets the timescales of membrane-associated motions, whether driven or diffusive, and therefore influences the dynamics of a wide range of cellular processes. Techniques to measure membrane viscosity remain sparse, however, and reported measurements to date, even of similar systems, give viscosity values that span orders of magnitude. To address this, we improve a method based on measuring both the rotational and translational diffusion of membrane-anchored microparticles and apply this approach and one based on tracking the motion of phase-separated lipid domains to the same system of phase-separated giant vesicles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Med
March 2023
Department of Psychiatry, Melbourne Neuropsychiatry Centre, The University of Melbourne and Melbourne Health, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Background: Understanding the neurobiological underpinnings of childhood maltreatment is vital given consistent links with poor mental health. Dimensional models of adversity purport that different types of adversity likely have distinct neurobiological consequences. Adolescence is a key developmental period, during which deviations from normative neurodevelopment may have particular relevance for mental health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
May 2021
Melbourne Neuropsychiatry Centre, Department of Psychiatry, University of Melbourne, Level 3, Alan Gilbert Building, 161 Barry St, Carlton, VIC, 3053, Australia.
Parenting behavior has a vital role in the development of the brain and cognitive abilities of offspring throughout childhood and adolescence. While positive and aggressive parenting behavior have been suggested to impact neurobiology in the form of abnormal brain activation in adolescents, little work has investigated the links between parenting behavior and the neurobiological correlates of cognitive performance during this age period. In the current longitudinal fMRI study, associations between parenting behaviors and cognitive performance and brain activation across mid- and late-adolescence were assessed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Psychol
February 2021
Melbourne Neuropsychiatry Centre, Department of Psychiatry, The University of Melbourne and Melbourne Health, Melbourne, VIC, Australia; Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Australia. Electronic address:
Shame and guilt are moral emotions that play an important role in social functioning. There is limited knowledge about the neural underpinnings of these emotions, particularly in young people. In the current study, 36 healthy females (mean age 18.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Affect Disord
January 2021
Melbourne Neuropsychiatry Centre, Department of Psychiatry, The University of Melbourne and Melbourne Health, Victoria, Australia; BrainPark, The Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, School of Psychological Sciences and Monash Biomedical Imaging Facility, Monash University, Australia. Electronic address:
Background: Adolescence is typified by increasing rates of substance use and the development of substance use disorders (SUD). Aberrant connectivity between cortical regions involved in executive control, and subcortical regions has been suggested to be associated with SUD and problematic substance use among adolescents. Few studies, however, have investigated system-level or whole-brain functional connectivity (FC) in order to test this hypothesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDoubled-up Latinx youth experience many daily challenges associated with ethnic minority status and residential instability. Doubled-up youth share housing with non-custodial caregivers such as friends and/or extended family members primarily because of economic hardship and a breakdown in available parental support. Using data from baseline and 10 days of twice-a-day surveys, this study examined how in-school positive experiences, familism (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Educ (Chic Ill)
May 2020
associate professor in sociology and an affiliated faculty member of Asian American studies and the Center for Research on Race and Ethnicity in Society at Indiana University Bloomington. She received her PhD in sociology from the University of Minnesota in 2007. Her research and teaching interests lie in the areas of sociology of education, immigration, and Asian American studies.
This study explores disparities in reclassification outcomes between Chinese and Latinx English learner (EL) students in one large school district, along with possible mechanisms that drive these differences. Using mixed methods including discretetime hazard modeling of longitudinal administrative data and analysis of in-depth interviews with veteran EL educators and administrators, we find large and persistent ethnic differences in reclassification outcomes across grade levels. Drawing on prior research on inequalities among immigrant students, we find evidence that individual background characteristics, social capital, school and instructional contexts, and stereotypes and bias all contribute to variation in reclassification patterns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Law Med Ethics
December 2019
Aila Hoss, J.D., is a Visiting Assistant Professor at Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law. Her research explores topics in public health law, health policy development, and the impact of federal Indian law and Tribal law on health outcomes. Prior to joining the faculty at IU, Aila served as a staff attorney for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Public Health Law Program, where she worked to improve public health through the development of legal tools and the provision of legal technical assistance to state, Tribal, local, and territorial governments. Aila completed her B.A. at Emory University and her J.D. at the University of Oregon. She is an active member of the Indiana bar. She calls Indianapolis and Atlanta home and is Iranian-American.
Federal Indian law is the body of law that defines the rights, responsibilities, and relationships between three sovereigns, Tribes, states, and the federal government. This area of law has defined, oftentimes poorly, the contours of treaty rights, criminal and civil jurisdiction, economic development, among other issues. Much has been documented in terms of the implications of social, legal, political, and economic systems that perpetuate inequities amongst American Indian and Alaska Native populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough liquids are mastered late, English-speaking children are said to have fully acquired these segments by age 8. The aim of this study was to test whether liquid coarticulation was also adult-like by this age. 8-year-old productions of /əLa/ and /əLu/ sequences were compared to 5-year-old and adult productions of these sequences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Int Congr Phon Sci
August 2019
This study examines the effects of determiner reduction and coarticulation on the perceived naturalness of resynthesized ( sequences. The determiner, equally spaced between monosyllabic and , was manipulated in 3 experiments along a 7-step continuum: (1) duration varied from 0.25x the original duration to 4x this duration; (2) amplitude varied from 55 dB to 85 dB; (3) schwa formants varied from completely overlapped with the vowel in to completely overlapped with the vowel in .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Behav Immun
August 2019
Department of Psychology, The University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, USA.
Clin Neuropsychiatry
February 2019
Department of Psychology, The University of Melbourne, Orygen Research Centre.
Objective: Facial expressions communicate emotional states and regulate social bonds. An approach or avoidance-based valence might interact with direct or averted gaze to elicit different attentional allocation. These processes might be aberrant in major depression or first-episode psychosis and this requires empirical investigation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
May 2019
Department of Psychiatry & Biobehavioral Sciences, Semel Institute for Neuroscience & Human Behavior, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, United States of America.
Background: The translocase of outer mitochondrial membrane 40 (TOMM40), which lies in linkage disequilibrium with the apolipoprotein E (APOE) gene, has been implicated in Alzheimer's disease (AD). TOMM40 influences AD pathology through mitochondrial neurotoxicity, and the medial temporal lobe (MTL) is the most likely brain region for identifying early manifestations of AD-related morphology changes. While early reports indicated that the longer length poly-T allele of TOMM40 increases risk for AD, these findings have not been consistently replicated in further studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
April 2019
Materials Science Institute, Institute of Molecular Biology, and Department of Physics, The University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, United States of America.
Light sheet fluorescence microscopy enables fast, minimally phototoxic, three-dimensional imaging of live specimens, but is currently limited by low throughput and tedious sample preparation. Here, we describe an automated high-throughput light sheet fluorescence microscope in which specimens are positioned by and imaged within a fluidic system integrated with the sheet excitation and detection optics. We demonstrate the ability of the instrument to rapidly examine live specimens with minimal manual intervention by imaging fluorescent neutrophils over a nearly 0.
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