Subjective Lexical Characteristics: Comparing Ratings of Members of the Target Population and Doctors for Words Stemming from a Medical Context

2016 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 562-575 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christelle Robert ◽  
Florence Cousson-Gélie ◽  
William Faurous ◽  
Stéphanie Mathey

The present study investigated the subjective lexical characteristics of words stemming from a medical context by comparing estimations of the target population (age range = 46–89) and of doctors. A total of 58 members of the target population and 22 oncologists completed measures of subjective frequency and emotional valence for words previously collected in interviews of announcement of cancer diagnosis. The members of the target population also completed tests of word definitions, without and within context. As expected, most of the words were rated less familiar, more negative and as generating more intense emotions to the target population than to the doctors. Moreover, only a few words were correctly defined by the target population. Adding a context helped the participants to define most of the words correctly. Importantly, we identified words that were rated familiar by the patients although they did not know their exact meaning. Overall, these results highlight the importance of taking into account the subjective lexical characteristics of words used in specific contexts.

Electronics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 1051
Author(s):  
Si Jung Kim ◽  
Teemu H. Laine ◽  
Hae Jung Suk

Presence refers to the emotional state of users where their motivation for thinking and acting arises based on the perception of the entities in a virtual world. The immersion level of users can vary when they interact with different media content, which may result in different levels of presence especially in a virtual reality (VR) environment. This study investigates how user characteristics, such as gender, immersion level, and emotional valence on VR, are related to the three elements of presence effects (attention, enjoyment, and memory). A VR story was created and used as an immersive stimulus in an experiment, which was presented through a head-mounted display (HMD) equipped with an eye tracker that collected the participants’ eye gaze data during the experiment. A total of 53 university students (26 females, 27 males), with an age range from 20 to 29 years old (mean 23.8), participated in the experiment. A set of pre- and post-questionnaires were used as a subjective measure to support the evidence of relationships among the presence effects and user characteristics. The results showed that user characteristics, such as gender, immersion level, and emotional valence, affected their level of presence, however, there is no evidence that attention is associated with enjoyment or memory.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. e7-e12
Author(s):  
Jennifer Nowers ◽  
Mark Kitchen ◽  
Sneha Rathod ◽  
Sharbathana Nageswaren ◽  
Caroline Lipski ◽  
...  

Background: Historic evidence suggests up to 16% (approximately) of non-visible haematuria (NVH) referrals result in Urological cancer diagnosis. The majority are bladder cancers, for which flexible cystoscopy is regarded the “gold standard” diagnostic procedure. Recent changes to suspected cancer referral guidelines, public information campaigns and reduced smoking prevalence may have changed this percentage. We retrospectively calculated cancer detection rates from NVH referrals to assess whether flexible cystoscopy,an invasive and morbid procedure, remains necessary.Patients and methods: All patients referred to our University teaching hospital on a suspected (“two-week”) cancer pathway with NVH over a 16-week period were included. Clinical and demographic data were collected for a series of 200 patients (96 male, age range 27–92, median 68).Results: Only eight patients had urological malignancy found (two renal and six bladder cancers). Both renal, and four bladder cancers, were identified on imaging prior to flexible cystoscopy. Only two bladder cancers were therefore detected by cystoscopy; one low-risk non-muscle invasive (patient has already been discharged) and one in a patient that was unfit for treatment (died of heart failure). Only seven (3.5%) of the patients were offered the option of not undergoing flexible cystoscopy.Conclusion: Our analyses suggest that flexible cystoscopy is rarely of benefit in patients with NVH. We suggest that patients should be given an accurate risk of bladder cancer diagnosis during the consent process. We advocate that flexible cystoscopy can be avoided for the majority of NVH referrals, particularly in patients without strong risk factors for urothelial cell carcinoma. Avoidance of flexible cystoscopy would reduce patient risks from procedural morbidity, reduce risks of acquiring coronavirus from hospital attendance, and there could be huge reductions in financial and service delivery demands in an overstretched secondary-care service.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 1087-1100
Author(s):  
Sook-Fern Yeo ◽  
Cheng-Ling Tan ◽  
Kah-Boon Lim ◽  
Elaine Lam

Nowadays, grooming is considered an essential part of life to maintaining and up keeping a healthy and hygienic outlook which plays a key role in social bonding. As it turns out, the desire to looking good has spawned a wide range of beauty products causing the beauty industry to thrive and grow at a rapid rate. In other words the Malaysian Beauty Salon Markets have become big business today, driven by a rising population, disposable incomes, urbanisation and increasing influence of western culture to look good and to feel good. The beauty market is valued at USD 119.24 million and is expected to grow at a CAGR of 5.23% in the next five years, to USD 153.86 million in 2015. As a result of a highly fragmented in this market, the need for differentiation from other salons is impendency for this industry. This research aims to study the different attributes of customer's concerns and reveals the final factors that generate customer intention to visit facial spa treatment centres in Malaysia. The effort is devoted to identifying those dimensions of services provided in facial spa treatment centres for instance, atmospheric, service quality, price, brand image and location which aid to build up a greater relationship with their patrons. Data is collected via questionnaires distribution from the target population of the female with the age range from 16-63 years old. A sample size of 308 was studied and data analysis involving Structural Equation Modeling SmartPLS version 3.0 software were used. Service quality reached the conclusion as the strongest predictor in influencing customer intention to visit facial spa treatment centres, followed by the factors of price and brand image. Further to that, an Importance-Performance matrix analysis was conducted in order to identify factors that need to be given priority for spa owners in Malaysia. These findings made contributions beyond the high context services for instance beauty salons, massage salons, hair salons, nail salons, financial consulting and medical care with the matching services characteristics.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ajaz Ahmad

This study was conducted to discover the relationship between spiritual personality and emotional empathy among medical and unani students. The target population consisted of students from faculty of medicine of JNMC (Jawaharlal Nehru Medical College, Aligarh, UP) and faculty of unani of AKTC (Ajmal Khan Tibbiya College, Aligarh, UP). The sample comprised of 100 participants (50 female and 50 male) whose age range was from 24 to 27 years. Out of 100 participants, 50 students were from MBBS course and the remaining 50 students were from BUMS course. The participants were selected by simple random sampling method. Data were obtained through Spiritual Personality Inventory (SPI) developed by Husain, Luqman and Jahan (2012) and Emotional Empathy Scale (EES) developed by Mehrabian and Epstein (l972). The data were analyzed by means of Pearson Product-Moment Correlation. SPSS 16.0 version was used to analyze the data. The obtained results indicated that in the MBBS male and female students, and BUMS male students only, spiritual personality is related to emotional empathy. The findings suggested that students of helping profession with spiritual personality express more empathic attitude toward others which is essential for speedy recovery of the patients.


Author(s):  
Seyed Amirhosein Mahdavi ◽  
Shahab Rezaeian ◽  
Mehran Rostami

The suicide rate among the Iranian population has increased over the past few decades. Descriptive information about this public health challenge could inform health policymakers to prioritize prevention strategies. We described the last updated data from the Iranian forensic medicine between 2016 and 2018. We obtained the data on the fatal suicide cases from the national suicide registry of the Iranian Forensic Medicine Organization (FMO), validated by death certificates and harmonized for epidemiologic studies. This study included 9,021 nationally registered suicide deaths from March 21, 2016, to March 20, 2018. A descriptive statistical approach was used to present the findings. Of 9,021 registered suicide deaths with age range between 10 to 94 years [median=31], 44.6% [n=4,015] was in the category of ≤ 29, 48.0% [n=4,328] between 30 to 59, and 7.4% (n=666) in the category of ≥ 60 years old. The percentage of fatal suicide was obviously higher in men (71.2%, n=6,424). Hanging was the most common method of suicide, both among men (57.7%, n=3706) and women (37.6%, n=976). The frequency of fatal suicide was significantly higher in married than single cases (52.6% vs. 42.9%). Overall, at the national level, the most common suicide method was hanging (51.9%), followed by self-poisoning (25.8%) and self-immolation (6.8%). We found evidence of age- and gender differences in suicide mortality across the country. Men, people in younger age groups, and married couples could be considered as the target population for preventive interventions in Iran.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 2604-2604
Author(s):  
Anna Falanga ◽  
Marina Marchetti ◽  
Sara Gamba ◽  
Laura Russo ◽  
Carmen Julia Tartari ◽  
...  

Abstract INTRODUCTION and AIM: The HYPERCAN study is an ongoing prospective Italian multicenter trial, designed to test whether the persistence of a laboratory hypercoagulation abnormalities may predict early cancer diagnosis in healthy subjects (Project A), or prognosis and response to therapy in patients with cancer (Project B). The aim of this abstract is to present a preliminary analysis of data collected for project A. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A large healthy population of Italian blood donors from Bergamo and Milan areas (North Italy) is prospectively enrolled after informed written consent and followed-up for 5 years for the occurrence of cancer. As established by a monitoring schedule, blood donors are periodically screened for a series of serological, biochemical and clinical parameters, and tested for viral infections. We plan to enroll 10,000 donors of both gender, age range 35-65, in 5 years. Blood samples from each study subject are collected at enrollment and after 8-10 months, and processed to obtain plasma, buffy coat, and serum subsamples, which are stored in a dedicated biobank until testing for hypercoagulation biomarkers. Demographic and clinical data are collected, including age, gender, body mass index (BMI), current medications, relevant comorbidities, routine hematological and biochemical workup. In addition, subjects are asked to fill in a questionnaire on lifestyle, smoke and dietary habits. An identification of all malignant tumors, according to the categories 140-208 (International Classification of Diseases) is carried out every 6 months. RESULTS: Between April 2012 and June 2016, 6,607 blood donors (70% males; median age 48 years) have been recruited. Routine biochemical and hematological workups are into the normal range values in more than 90% of subjects. The analysis of questionnaires reveals that 57% of the donors were not smokers, 15% regular smokers, 28% ex-smokers; 49% of them were moderate/low alcohol consumer (≥ 2 drink/die). The crude incidence of all malignant cancers in the Bergamo/Milan area is 552 cases/100,000 persons/year in males and 382 cases/100,000 person/year in females. According to the Cancer Registry, 57 cancer cases (38 males and 19 females) are to be expected in the general population in the age range 35-65 years, after a median follow-up of 2.5 years. In our population, at June 2016, after a median follow-up of 2.5 years, we recorded a total of 46 cancer cases (35 M / 11 F). Five cases were excluded because diagnosis occurred within 6 months from enrollment (incident cancer cases); the remaining 41 cases included in the analysis were diagnosed with cancer 6-28 months from enrollment (median time to diagnosis = 24.8 months). Median age at diagnosis of cancer was 53 years. The most frequent tumor type in male donors was prostate cancer (25.8%), followed by colo-rectal (19.3%) and thyroid (12.9%) cancers. In female donors, breast cancer was the most frequent (40%). Currently, the enrollment of healthy donors and follow-up is ongoing, as well as the identification of new cancer cases. Next, according to the original plan, samples from 3 matched cancer-free donors for each cancer-case donor (cancer: non-cancer = 1:3 ratio) will be analyzed in parallel for hypercoagulation markers. CONCLUSIONS: This preliminary analysis reveals that the distribution of tumor types in our population reflects the same as reported for the general population of the same geographic area. Second, in our population of healthy blood donors, the incidence of cancer diagnosis is lower than that predicted from epidemiological data. This message supports the concept that a healthy lifestyle can be effective to prevent cancer. Project funded by AIRC "5xMILLE" n. 12237 grant from the "Italian Association for Cancer Research (AIRC)". Disclosures Falanga: Pfizer: Speakers Bureau; Aspen: Speakers Bureau; Janssen: Speakers Bureau.


Author(s):  
Julia Córdoba ◽  
María José Bagnato

Characterising people with disabilities at the population level using the ICF approach is a challenge, as it implies that researchers are able to identify variables that can account for the components that make up the multidimensional definition of disability. The purpose of this study is to generate updated information on disability in Uruguay, as there has been no in-depth analysis of how this population lives, how they access the services and benefits that affect their quality of life, and what the significant differences are between those who make up this population. A quantitative analysis was applied to the target population, consisting of participants in the Longitudinal Survey of Social Protection (2016) who reported at least one limitation in performing ADLs and who were in the age range of 18–64 years. Significant differences were found between the different groups in terms of their reported limitations in relation to obtaining necessary services due to their health condition, dropping out of education before completing the compulsory level, low labour market insertion, feelings of loneliness, and low participation. More research needs to be done as it is clear that people with disabilities do not have access to the support they need, which leads to even greater exclusion.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 194-204
Author(s):  
Muhammad Ancha Sitorus

This study aims to look at evaluating fertility increases from factors that affect fertility.  The data processed and presented in this paper constitutes RPJMN Indicator Survey and the Program Performance and Accountability Survey (SKAP) of the North Sumatra Province BKKBN from 2017 to 2019. The target population of this survey is households, women of childbearing age 15 to 49 years, families and unmarried adolescents aged 15 to 24 years in selected clusters in the province. The sampling design used was stratified multistage sampling and for the province of North Sumatra the number of selected clusters was 78 clusters spread across 33 regencies and cities. Each cluster is listed (enumerated) and 35 eligible households are selected using systematic random sampling techniques to retrieve data. The SRPJMN/ SKAP sample target in North Sumatra Province covers 2,730 households. Information on fertility rates in this survey is based on the number of births collected from all women aged 15-49 years. The results are the increase of number TFR until 20.3% in three years, the number of ASFR also increase every year. Namely first married in the age range of 15-17 years (60%) in three years. And it also find the number of using contraception In the last 3 years (2017 - 2019) for the Province of North Sumatra, the use of a FP method / device has increased from 49.42% in 2017 to 56.25% in 2019.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hideyoshi Yanagisawa

Appropriate levels of arousal potential induce hedonic responses (i.e., emotional valence). However, the relationship between arousal potential and its factors (e.g., novelty, complexity, and uncertainty) have not been formalized. This paper proposes a mathematical model that explains emotional arousal using minimized free energy to represent information content processed in the brain after sensory stimuli are perceived and recognized (i.e., sensory surprisal). This work mathematically demonstrates that sensory surprisal represents the summation of information from novelty and uncertainty, and that the uncertainty converges to perceived complexity with sufficient sampling from a stimulus source. Novelty, uncertainty, and complexity all act as collative properties that form arousal potential. Analysis using a Gaussian generative model shows that the free energy is formed as a quadratic function of prediction errors based on the difference between prior expectation and peak of likelihood. The model predicts two interaction effects on free energy: that between prediction error and prior uncertainty (i.e., prior variance) and that between prediction error and sensory variance. A discussion on the potential of free energy as a mathematical principle is presented to explain emotion initiators. The model provides a general mathematical framework for understanding and predicting the emotions caused by novelty, uncertainty, and complexity. The mathematical model of arousal can help predict acceptable novelty and complexity based on a target population under different uncertainty levels mitigated by prior knowledge and experience.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document