scholarly journals Aggressive behavior: from theory to practice

Author(s):  
Viktoriia Ogorenko ◽  
Roman Tymofeyev ◽  
Andrii Shornikov

The problem of aggressive behaviour predicting remains important after decades of studying aggression. A large quantity of aggression theories and models do not allow to fully explain the aggressive behaviour emergence. Unified theory of aggressive behaviour proposes to regard aggression as a balance of provoking and limiting factors, which are based on adaptive problems: retention of a sexual partner, co-opting the resources of others, defending against attack, inflicting costs on same-sex rivals, negotiating status and power hierarchies, deterring rivals from future aggression, deterring mates from sexual infidelity. Factors of aggressive behaviour include the level of physiological arousal, negative or positive reinforcement of aggressive behaviour in the past, a state of frustration, aversive stimuli and the dominant emotion. Based on the proposed theory, a aggressive behaviour predicting scale is proposed, which allows to calculate the probability of aggressive behaviour, as well as its dynamics. The aggressive behaviour predicting scale is easy to use, does not take much time and allows to quantify and assess the probability of aggression.

2011 ◽  
Vol 17 (1, 2 & 3) ◽  
pp. 2008
Author(s):  
Carl F. Stychin

Over the past decade of Labour government in the United Kingdom (U.K.), the regulation of sexual orientation through law has frequently been explained by its supporters through a nar- rative of progress and even emancipation. The most recent junction in this journey came in 2007, with the coming into force of the Equality Act (Sexual Orientation) Regulations on 30 April 2007.1 These Regulations contain measures pro- hibiting discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation in the provision of goods, facilities and services, education, the use and disposal of premises, and the exercise of public functions.


10.28945/2347 ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 015-034 ◽  
Author(s):  
Meghan J. Pifer ◽  
Vicki L. Baker

Studies of doctoral education have included an interest not only in processes, structures, and outcomes, but also in students’ experiences. There are often useful recommendations for practice within individual examinations of the doctoral experience, yet there remains a need to strengthen the application of lessons from research to the behaviors of students and others engaged in the doctoral process. This paper is the first to synthesize research about doctoral education with the particular aim of informing practical strategies for multiple stakeholders. In this article, we summarize findings from a literature review of the scholarship about doctoral education from the past 15 years in a stage-based overview of the challenges of doctoral education. Our aim is to apply theory to practice through the systematic consideration of how research about doctoral education can best inform students and those who support them in the doctoral journey. We first present an overview of the major stages of doctoral education and related challenges identified in the research. We then consider key findings of that research to offer recommendations for doctoral students, faculty members, and administrators within and across stages.


K ta Kita ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 270-278
Author(s):  
Trisha Zoe Tedjakarna

This study aims to analyse the impacts of conversion therapy and the self-transformation of the main characters in Boy Erased and The Miseducation of Cameron Post, which are two films published post-legalisation of same-sex marriage in America. Both main characters showed signs of self-loathing, decreased authenticity, and feeling anger and disappointment due to conversion therapy. The two characters are first portrayed as victims and survivor of conversion therapy at the end of the film. Jared was shown as a silent victim turned outspoken survivor. Cameron was shown as a rebellious victim and survivor. Both films showed the growth from victims into survivors, which gave a strong, capable and hopeful image of homosexuals and is a contrast from some representation of homosexuals of the past. Despite the similarity in ending up as survivors, the two characters picked different fights. Keywords: Homosexual, Film, Victim, Survivor, Conversion therapy.


1965 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 72-87
Author(s):  
I. Katayama

In this paper Mr. Katayama of the Idemitsu Tanker Company describes some of the advantages and problems of operating mammoth tankers. The size of average tanker tonnage over the past seven years has increased from 33,000 to 55,000. The paper first of all discusses the economic advantages of large tankers and then describes the limiting factors to size, both from a shipbuilding and operating point of view. The handling and manœuvring characteristics of the Nissho-maru, the world's largest tanker which is operated by the author's company, are then described, and finally some navigational details of the passages made by this ship are given.


Author(s):  
Denis M. Provencher

In this chapter, I present the life and work of Ludovic-Mohamed Zahed, who is the founder of three non-profit associations over the past several years: Les Enfants du Sida (2006), Homosexuels musulmans de France (HM2F) (2010), and Musulman-es Progressistes de France (2012). He is also the author of Révoltes extraordinaires: un enfant du sida autour du monde (2011) and Le Coran et La Chair (2012), and co-author of Queer Muslim Marriage (2013). During the last few years, the French media have covered his same-sex marriage in Cape Town to husband Qiyaam Jantjies-Zahed in 2011, the publication of his book, Le Coran et La Chair in 2012, as well as and his creation of La Mosquée inclusive de l’Unicité, the first “gay friendly” or inclusive mosque in Paris, in 2012.


In the past few decades, the question of whether and how civil society should recognize committed intimate relationships between two people of the same sex is a prominent and divisive policy issue. This chapter discusses the heightened lawmaking efforts by legislators that are more inclined toward religious claims due to their opposition to homosexuality.


1981 ◽  
Vol 90 (5) ◽  
pp. 475-477 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. M. Brummitt ◽  
Blair Fearon ◽  
I. Brama

Currently available anesthetic techniques for laryngoscopy and bronchoscopy are briefly evaluated. Recently reported complications from the literature are reviewed. Satisfactory anesthetic techniques are shown to be limited by the physical dimensions of the instruments as well as the extreme limitations of the flow capacity of the small airway itself. The technique used at the Hospital for Sick Children for the past ten years is described. It is based upon spontaneous respiration with inhalation anesthesia, supplemented by topical lidocaine (Xylocaine). Size and age of the patient are not limiting factors. The safety and effectiveness of this technique are supported by representative blood gas studies as well as the clinical records of over 400 cases.


2006 ◽  
Vol 312 ◽  
pp. 27-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wan Lin Guo ◽  
Chongmin She ◽  
Jun Hua Zhao ◽  
Bin Zhang

The historical developments of the fracture mechanics from planar theory to threedimensional (3D) theory are reviewed. The two-dimensional (2D) theories of fracture mechanics have been developed perfectly in the past 80 years, and are suitable for some specific cases of engineering applications. However, in the complicated 3D world, the limitation of the 2D fracture theory has become evident with development of the structure toward complication and micromation. In the 1990’s, Guo has proposed the 3D fracture theory with a 3D constraint factor based on the deformation theory and energy theory. The proposed 3D theory can predict accurately the fracture problems for practical and complicated engineering structures with defects, by integrating the 3D theory of fatigue, which has been developed to unify fatigue and fracture. Our efforts to develop the 3D fracture mechanics and the unified theory of 3D fatigue and fracture are summarized, and perspectives for future efforts are outlined.


1987 ◽  
Vol 58 (5) ◽  
pp. 1123-1148 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Nakamura ◽  
T. Ono ◽  
R. Tamura

1. Unit activity in the lateral hypothalamus (LHA) of the rat was recorded during discrimination learning of cue-tone stimuli (CTS) predicting glucose (CTS1+) or intracranial self-stimulation (ICSS) (CTS2+) as positive reinforcement or electric shock (CTS1-) or tail pinch (CTS2-) as negative reinforcement. The same action, licking, was used as the behavioral response to all stimuli. Procaine hydrochloride, a local anesthetic, was microinjected into the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and the amygdala (AM). LHA neuron responses and licking were analyzed to investigate the afferent input pathway(s) responsible for LHA neural responses to conditioning CTSs in positive reinforcement and to identify the central site involved in CTS learning. Although the animals were restrained, there was no respiratory, cardiac rate, or blood pressure evidence of stress. The headholder was specially designed in our laboratory to avoid pain or discomfort to the animal. The subjects would often, after the first few sessions, voluntarily enter into position in the apparatus, presumably to obtain the reward available during the experiments. 2. In positive reinforcement, a rat was rewarded by 5 microliters of glucose or ICSS when it licked a spout. The rat licked for glucose after CTS1+ or for ICSS after CTS2+. In negative reinforcement, an aversive stimulus, either electric shock or tail pinch, was applied if the rat did not lick the spout. The electric shock and tail pinch were maintained weak enough to produce an avoidance ratio less than 20-30%, averaged in all trials. The rat licked to avoid electric shock after CTS1- or tail pinch after CTS2-. 3. Of 271 LHA neurons analyzed, 202 (74.5%) responded to either or both rewarding and aversive stimuli. The number of neurons that responded to only rewarding stimuli was relatively large (105/271), and the number that responded similarly to both rewarding and aversive stimuli was small (29/271). The effects of both glucose and ICSS, and the effects of both electric shock and tail pinch, were usually similar in neurons analyzed for both rewarding and aversive stimulation. Of 271 neurons, 173 responded differentially to rewarding and aversive stimuli. 4. Neural and behavioral responses were recorded before, during, and after local anesthesia of the VTA in 15 rats and of the AM in 14 rats. Injections of 0.3-0.8 microliters of 5% procaine hydrochloride or 0.9% saline were made at a rate of 0.3 microliters/min through guide cannulae chronically implanted in the VTA and AM, ipsilateral to the recording and ICSS sites in 29 rats that self-stimulated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


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