How and When Team Average Individual Mindfulness Facilitates Team Mindfulness: The Roles of Team Relational Stress and Team Individual Mindfulness Diversity

Author(s):  
Xin Liu ◽  
Yu Yu ◽  
Xiaoming Zheng ◽  
Bradley P. Owens ◽  
Dan Ni
1950 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-21 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Phillips

The volume and seasonality of veal production in west Wales has been obtained from an analysis of the records of the collecting centres of the Ministry of Food.It has been found that about 1000 tons of veal are produced annually from 55% of the calves sold to the Ministry at an average carcass weight of 56 lb. Most of the veal is produced in the season of the maximum number of calvings, i.e. spring in the eastern areas and autumn in the western areas. Higher average carcass weights are produced in summer and a higher proportion of the calves offered, are veals during the summer than during the winter. March might be taken as the month of maximum veal output but of lowest average individual carcass weights. The relation between veal weights, production and the average price of milk has been illustrated, and the conclusion drawn is that when milk is cheap (summer) veal weights are high. The more intensive the dairying (in the central part of the region) the lower the average carcass weight and vice versa for the less intensively dairying areas. Calves sold for rearing are only of minor significance in the calf trade in west Wales, but one consolation is that the incidence of the casualty calf is also slight. The choice of colour in calves purchased for further rearing supports the general opinion that during the period under review (1943–6) the Shorthorn breed was the most important, and its Hereford crosses the most popular choice in the more remote beefproducing areas of Pembrokeshire.


2001 ◽  
Vol 82 (4) ◽  
pp. 304-308
Author(s):  
R. M. Shigapov ◽  
V. G. Morozov ◽  
R. K. Ismagilov ◽  
V. F. Chuprun

The average individual effective irradiation doses of population of the Zelenodolsk region by the radiation and hygienic passport system data for 1999 are determined. It is shown that 74% of the effective dose are defined by the natural factors. The measures directed to the decrease of the dose loads at the expense of medical roentgen procedures are considered. It is established that the true decrease of dose loads on population can achieved at the expense of reducing the medical irradiation part.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 203-210
Author(s):  
Theresia Panjaitan ◽  
Suradi Wijaya Saputra ◽  
Siti Rudiyanti

ABSTRAKPantai Wediombo terletak di  Desa Jepitu, Kecamatan Girisubo, Kabupaten Gunungkidul. Pantai Wediombo merupakan salah satu ekosistem perairan yang memiliki daya tarik untuk dapat dijadikan objek wisata. Manfaat yang diberikan oleh pantai Wediombo belum terukur secara ekonomi sehingga penting untuk dilakukan studi tentang besarnya nilai ekonomi kawasan wisata. Tujuan dari penelitian ini yaitu untuk mengetahui potensi dan nilai ekonomi Pantai Wediombso. Penelitian dilaksanakan pada bulan Maret 2019 di Pantai Wediombo. Penelitian menggunakan metode deskriptif. Pengumpulan data diperoleh melalui wawancara kepada 100 wisatawan dan 1 pengelola wisata menggunakan kuisioner dengan teknik sampling accidental sampling. Analisis valuasi ekonomi wisata menggunakan pendekatan Travel Cost Method. Potensi yang dimiliki oleh Pantai Wediombo mencakup keindahan dan kondisi daya tarik pantai termasuk dalam  kategori sangat baik, sarana dan prasarana yang sudah memadai, pelayanan pengelola yang cukup baik serta potensi budaya masyarakat seperti Upacara Ngalangi. Nilai ekonomi Pantai Wediombo sebesar Rp.52.787.622.096,00/tahun dengan rata-rata biaya perjalanan individu sebesar Rp. 208.296,00/kunjungan. ABSTRACTWediombo Beach located in Jepitu Village, Girisubo District, Gunungkidul Regency. Wediombo Beach is one of the aquatic ecosystems which has attraction that can be a good tourist destination. The benefits from Wediombo Beach were not yet measure in economic terms and it is important to study the magnitude of the economic value of tourist areas. The purpose of this research is to find out the potential and economic value of the beach. The research held on March at Wediombo Beach. The study used descriptive methods. Data obtained through interviews with 100 tourists and 1 tourism manager using questionnaires with accidental sampling. Analysis of tourism economic valuation using Travel Cost Method approach. The potential of Wediombo Beach including the beauty and conditions of coastal appeal is in a very good category, adequate facilities and infrastructure, good management services and potential cultural communities such as the Ngalangi ceremony. The economic value of Wediombo Beach based on tourist travel cost is about Rp.52.787.622.096.00 / year and average individual travel cost about Rp.208.296 / visit.


Author(s):  
Odo Diekmann ◽  
Hans Heesterbeek ◽  
Tom Britton

This chapter first considers the case when individuals differ only in infectivity, which means that one can in a sense, simply work with the “average” individual. It then exposes a crucial, but hitherto hidden, assumption, namely that the contact process is uniform. If, in contrast, the population is represented by a spatial lattice or a social network, with contact restricted to sets of neighbors (partners, acquaintances, etc.), then all neighbors of a certain individual will experience the actual infectious pressure exercised by this particular individual, and not some kind of average. The chapter goes on to illustrate the key influence of dependence in experienced infectivity.


Author(s):  
Gandhali Upadhye

Since the ancient times, man has always been in a search for age-erasing methods. Yoga puts a leash on ageing and helps the individual to stay happy and have a healthy ageing. A long life span has no importance in today’s world as the average individual is conquered by diseases in the third-fourth decade of his life itself. Hence for such an individual, a diseased free old age is a far stretched dream. Yoga lends a helping hand to such people as it is a natural and correct way of life, simply organized into a systematic manner. It is thought that mental health problems are a normal aspect of ageing. Besides dementia, anxiety, insomnia, an elderly mainly experiences emotional and psychological stress related to loneliness, isolation, or loss of loved one. But unfortunately, these are either ignored or not taken seriously. Jara or old age is a swabhavbalapravritta vyaadhi i.e it is an inescapable phase of one’s life. It is an inescapable part of life. Although this phase comes naturally, with the help of yogic interventions, a healthy and happy old age can be experienced. Yogic interventions are absolutely cost free and can be a good alternative to fight against stress.


Water ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 2580
Author(s):  
Elena Krupa ◽  
Sophia Romanova ◽  
Galym Berkinbaev ◽  
Natalya Yakovleva ◽  
Erlan Sadvakasov

The enrichment of the protected Borovoe Lake with nutrients has taken place within the last 100 years, from the moment the first resort was formed on its shores. The purpose of this study was to assess the current ecological state of Borovoe based on the structure of zooplankton. According to the chemical data, in the summer of 2019, the content of nutrients in the water was, relatively, not high; the content of heavy metals was very low. Twenty-seven species were found in zooplankton. The average abundance of zooplankton was 988.8 thousand ind./m3 with a biomass of 1.52 g/m3. Rotifera dominated. Cladocera sub-dominated. The Shannon index values were 2.31 bit/ind. and 2.57 bit/mg; the values of Clarke’s W-statistics and Δ-Shannon were negative. The abundance of zooplankton increased more than nine times, but the average individual mass of an organism decreased from 0.0112 to 0.0016 mg over the past decade. Despite the relatively low content of nutrients, the structure of zooplankton demonstrated that the nutritional load on Lake Borovoe is currently close to critical. Statistical mapping of the data and redundancy analysis (RDA) showed that the primary source of lake pollution is the village of Borovoe and sanatoriums located on the southeast and northwest coasts.


Author(s):  
Janne I. Kaariainen ◽  
Brian J. Bett

The benthic body size miniaturization hypothesis states that deep-sea communities are dominated by organisms of smaller body size, although some field studies have produced contradictory results. Using appropriate sample sets, this study tests this hypothesis by contrasting the benthic communities of the Fladen Ground (North Sea, 150 m) and the Faroe–Shetland Channel (1600 m). Samples were collected for large (500 μm) and small macrofauna (250–355 μm), meiofauna (45 μm) as well as an intermediate sized ‘mesofauna’ (180 μm) to ensure comprehensive coverage of the full meio- and macro-faunal body size-range. The body size structure of the benthos was compared using two methods. The more widely used average individual biomass method involves dividing the total sample biomass by sample abundance. Additionally, body size accumulation curves were constructed by assigning all specimens into a logarithmic size-class and then plotting the cumulative percentage of individuals present in each size-class. The results seem to support the hypothesis that the deep-sea environment is a small organism habitat. Although these findings only represent two locations, the overall body size accumulation curves clearly display a statistically significant shift towards smaller body sizes at the deeper site. The magnitude of the effect is appreciable with median metazoan body size reducing from 14.3 μg wet weight in the Fladen Ground to 3.8 μg wet weight in the Faroe–Shetland Channel. The average individual biomass measurements are shown to be of limited value and can lead to potentially misleading conclusions if the underlying size structure is not analysed in detail.


Biology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 134
Author(s):  
François Louchet

In the context of the COVID-19 epidemic, and on the basis of the Theory of Dynamical Systems, we propose a simple theoretical approach for the expansion of contagious diseases, with a particular focus on viral respiratory tracts. The infection develops through contacts between contagious and exposed people, with a rate proportional to the number of contagious and of non-immune individuals, to contact duration and turnover, inversely proportional to the efficiency of protection measures, and balanced by the average individual recovery response. The obvious initial exponential increase is readily hindered by the growing recovery rate, and also by the size reduction of the exposed population. The system converges towards a stable attractor whose value is expressed in terms of the “reproductive rate” R0, depending on contamination and recovery factors. Various properties of the attractor are examined, and particularly its relations with R0. Decreasing this ratio below a critical value leads to a tipping threshold beyond which the epidemic is over. By contrast, significant values of the above ratio may bring the system through a bifurcating hierarchy of stable cycles up to a chaotic behaviour.


1956 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 441-455 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. R. Beveridge ◽  
W. F. Connell ◽  
G. A. Mayer

Three dietary experiments have been performed in which 36, 37, and 49 male medical students and staff members participated as experimental subjects. In each study, everyone consumed the same homogeneous formula diet for eight days at which time they were divided into five groups. One group was maintained on the original diet for a further eight days and the others were given diets varying in respect of the level and nature of the fat moiety. Protein supplied 16.9% of total calories in all experimental rations. In the first experiment, 37 subjects ingested a diet providing 58.5% of calories as corn oil. During the initial period the average of the individual percentage decreases in plasma cholesterol was 32.0 (P = < 0.01). Those continuing on corn oil displayed a further insignificant decrease. The others, receiving diets high in beef dripping, chicken fat, lard, and butter showed average individual percentage increases of 11.7 (P = > 0.05), 12.7 (P = > 0.05), 15.4 (P = < 0.01), and 28.8 (P = < 0.01), respectively. In the second experiment, 49 subjects consumed a fat-free diet for eight days. The average individual percentage decrease in plasma cholesterol was 22.2 (P = < 0.01). Those continuing on the fat-free diet showed little further change. Those ingesting 20 and 60% of calories as corn oil showed further percentage decreases of 6.9 (P = > 0.05) and 15.2 (P = < 0.01), respectively. By contrast, those receiving diets providing 20 and 60%, of calories as butterfat showed respectively percentage increases of 6.6 (P = > 0.05) and 21.7 (P = < 0.01). In the third experiment, 36 subjects ingested for eight days a diet in which butterfat provided 60% of calories. The plasma cholesterol level remained essentially constant, and did not change significantly in those continuing on this diet for a further eight days. The composition of the fat moiety in the remaining groups in terms of per cent calories derived from butter-fat and corn oil respectively was: 45: 15; 30: 30; 15: 45; and 0: 60. The averages of the individual percentage decreases in plasma cholesterol values were, respectively, 3.9, 15.9, 27.1, and 32.0. Except for the lowest of these values all the changes are highly significant (P = < 0.01). In addition to other conclusions that may be drawn from this work, these studies reveal that (1) there is a factor (or are factors) in certain animal fats that acts to elevate plasma cholesterol levels, and (2) there is a factor (or are factors) in corn oil that acts to depress plasma cholesterol levels.


1983 ◽  
Vol 40 (10) ◽  
pp. 1633-1638 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael P. Weinstein

To study the population dynamics of young-of-the-year spot (Leiostomus xanthurus) I released 6981 marked fish midway up the tidal creek portion of a small (<20 ha) marsh creek–seagrass meadow coenocline. Holding mortality experiments (96 h) indicated that 61.5%, or 4300 individuals, survived the marking process to constitute the population available for recapture. Over a 90-d study period, 212 marked fishes were recaptured. From plots of the ratio of marked to unmarked individuals in subsequent samples, I concluded that the population was resident in the creek for up to 182 d with the average individual present for 91 d. When this population turnover rate was compared to the total population decay rate (marked plus unmarked fish), the exchange between habitats (immigration/emigration) accounted for about 26% of the total decay rate, with the remainder attributed to natural mortality. By correcting the overall disappearance rate for population turnover due to immigration/emigration, and using this adjusted value as a measure of instantaneous mortality (Z), the estimated production in this population was 21.8 kcal (91342 J)∙m−2∙d−1. This figure is over six times greater than previously reported values for this species for all size classes over the entire growing season.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document