identity transformation
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2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Owen Doody ◽  
Pauline Meskell ◽  
Maria Noonan ◽  
Sylvia Murphy-Tighe ◽  
Liz Kingston

Abstract BackgroundThe aim of this qualitative study is to explore the views and experiences of final year BSc intellectual disability nursing students’ journey, future work plans and examine factors influencing their migration intentions following graduation.MethodsA qualitative component of a mixed methods study where focus group interviews were conducted with final year BSc intellectual disability nursing students (n-=10). A topic guide was utilised, and participants were interviewed about their programme, future work plans and migration intentions. An inductive approach was utilised, and data were analysed using a pre-existing framework for initial coding and thematic development. Duffy’s conceptual model of identity transformation provided a structure to analyse the data and map themes onto the conceptual framework.ResultsThe findings were mapped onto the five stages of Duffy’s (2013) conceptual model of identity transformation: Pre-Entry; Reaffirming; Surmounting; Stabilising and Actualising. Findings indicate that further work is required to promote intellectual disability nursing and address professional esteem issues, support for education and professional development, such as providing career guidance opportunities prior to course completion, development of clinical skills within their education programme and support for the professional development of new graduates. Participants identified uncertainty about career opportunities and saw scope for future professional developments opportunities particularly in community-based work.ConclusionThis study has identified that final year intellectual disability nursing students are uncertain about career options and opportunities for intellectual disability nurses in other countries. There is an urgent need for the intellectual disability nursing profession to articulate their practice and advocate for their role and contribution to the care of people with intellectual disability. This study identified a clear need for direction and information regarding intellectual disability nursing roles and career opportunities.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 122-132
Author(s):  
Joachim I. Krueger

Historiographic analysis is underused in academic psychology. In this expository essay, I intend to show that historical events or persons can be described with reference to theory and research provided by empirical psychology. Besides providing evidence-based grounds for a more penetrating historical account, the conclusions drawn from a historiographic analysis may feedback into psychological theory by generating new testable hypotheses. Whereas standard empirical research is focused on statistical associations among quantitative variables obtained in random samples, historiographic analysis is most informative with the use of extreme cases, that is, by asking and showing the limits of what is possible. This essay focuses on the story of Gonzalo Guerrero to explore psychological processes involved in identity transformation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nienke van Sambeek ◽  
Andries Baart ◽  
Gaston Franssen ◽  
Stefan van Geelen ◽  
Floortje Scheepers

Aim: Enhancement of recovery-oriented care in psychiatry requires insight into the personal meaning and context of recovery. The Psychiatry Story Bank is a narrative project, designed to meet this need, by collecting, sharing and studying the narratives of service-users in psychiatry. Our study was aimed at expanding insight into personal recovery through contextual analysis of these first-person narratives.Methods: We analyzed 25 narratives, as collected through research interviews. To capture the storied context on both a personal, interpersonal and ideological level we combined several forms of qualitative analysis. A total of 15 narrative characteristics were mapped and compared.Results: Through comparative analysis we identified four narratives genres in our sample: Lamentation (narratives about social loss), Reconstruction (narratives about the impact of psychosis), Accusation (narratives about injustice in care), and Travelogue (narratives about identity transformation). Each genre provides insight into context-bound difficulties and openings for recovery and recovery-support.Conclusion: A contextual approach to studying personal recovery offers insights that can help attune recovery support in psychiatry. Important clues for recovery support can be found in people's narrated core struggle and the associated desire to be recognized in a particular way. Our results also indicate that familiarity with different ways of understanding mental distress, can help people to express and reframe their struggles and desires in a helpful way, thereby facilitating recognition.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (24) ◽  
pp. 8257
Author(s):  
Wanjin Zhang ◽  
Ping Lu ◽  
Zhiyuan Qu ◽  
Jiangshan Zhang ◽  
Qiang Wu ◽  
...  

A passive homodyne phase demodulation technique based on a linear-fitting trigonometric-identity-transformation differential cross-multiplication (LF-TIT-DCM) algorithm is proposed. This technique relies on two interferometric signals whose interferometric phase difference is odd times of π. It is able to demodulate phase signals with a large dynamic range and wide frequency band. An anti-phase dual wavelength demodulation system is built to prove the LF-TIT-DCM algorithm. Comparing the traditional quadrature dual wavelength demodulation system with an ellipse fitting DCM (EF-DCM) algorithm, the phase difference of two interferometric signals of the anti-phase dual wavelength demodulation system is set to be π instead of π/2. This technique overcomes the drawback of EF-DCM—that it is not able to demodulate small signals since the ellipse degenerates into a straight line and the ellipse fitting algorithm is invalidated. Experimental results show that the dynamic range of the proposed anti-phase dual wavelength demodulation system is much larger than that of the traditional quadrature dual wavelength demodulation system. Moreover, the proposed anti-phase dual wavelength demodulation system is hardly influenced by optical power, and the laser wavelength should be strictly limited to lower the reference error.


Author(s):  
Fangkun Liu ◽  
Hui Wang ◽  
Renhua Peng ◽  
Chengshi Zheng ◽  
Xiaodong Li

AbstractVoice conversion is to transform a source speaker to the target one, while keeping the linguistic content unchanged. Recently, one-shot voice conversion gradually becomes a hot topic for its potentially wide range of applications, where it has the capability to convert the voice from any source speaker to any other target speaker even when both the source speaker and the target speaker are unseen during training. Although a great progress has been made in one-shot voice conversion, the naturalness of the converted speech remains a challenging problem. To further improve the naturalness of the converted speech, this paper proposes a two-level nested U-structure (U2-Net) voice conversion algorithm called U2-VC. The U2-Net can extract both local feature and multi-scale feature of log-mel spectrogram, which can help to learn the time-frequency structures of the source speech and the target speech. Moreover, we adopt sandwich adaptive instance normalization (SaAdaIN) in decoder for speaker identity transformation to retain more content information of the source speech while maintaining the speaker similarity between the converted speech and the target speech. Experiments on VCTK dataset show that U2-VC outperforms many SOTA approaches including AGAIN-VC and AdaIN-VC in terms of both objective and subjective measurements.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (11) ◽  
pp. 298
Author(s):  
Kunlin Liu ◽  
Ping Wang ◽  
Wenbo Zhou ◽  
Zhenyu Zhang ◽  
Yanhao Ge ◽  
...  

Deepfake aims to swap a face of an image with someone else’s likeness in a reasonable manner. Existing methods usually perform deepfake frame by frame, thus ignoring video consistency and producing incoherent results. To address such a problem, we propose a novel framework Neural Identity Carrier (NICe), which learns identity transformation from an arbitrary face-swapping proxy via a U-Net. By modeling the incoherence between frames as noise, NICe naturally suppresses its disturbance and preserves primary identity information. Concretely, NICe inputs the original frame and learns transformation supervised by swapped pseudo labels. As the temporal incoherence has an uncertain or stochastic pattern, NICe can filter out such outliers and well maintain the target content by uncertainty prediction. With the predicted temporally stable appearance, NICe enhances its details by constraining 3D geometry consistency, making NICe learn fine-grained facial structure across the poses. In this way, NICe guarantees the temporal stableness of deepfake approaches and predicts detailed results against over-smoothness. Extensive experiments on benchmarks demonstrate that NICe significantly improves the quality of existing deepfake methods on video-level. Besides, data generated by our methods can benefit video-level deepfake detection methods.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (46) ◽  
pp. 273-280
Author(s):  
Anna Chernysh ◽  
Larysa Horbolis

This article is devoted to the investigation of Ukrainian national identity transformation, conditioned by the events of the Revolution of Dignity in the novel “Under the Wings of Big Mother” by S. Protsiuk. It was found out that the problem of national identity is the key one on the thematic, problematic, ideological, and figurative levels. The basic categories in the process of the new national identity formation in the novel “Under the Wings of Big Mother” by S. Protsiuk are pain, suffering, sorrow, and fear. The transformation of the national identity is subordinate to the moral and ethical discourse of changes, which were prompted by the revolution. The article serves to analyze political obstacles, mental traps and drawbacks of Ukrainian psychological character that prevented Ukrainians from forming a strong national identity. Changes of Ukrainian national identity is caused by the traumatic experience of Ukraine being a part of USSR, marked by genocide, linguicide, culturicide, Holodomor, and political repressions. The transformation of Ukrainian national identity in the beginning of the 21st century made possible the establishment of the key national identities (identitas): history, language, territory, basic national symbols and codes. It was proved that the modification of the national identity and the awareness of the ethnic value and self-identification are possible on the condition of understanding of mental traps and psychological drawbacks of Ukrainians that impeded the Ukrainian people of forming their identity and world view to the full extent.


2021 ◽  
Vol 43 ◽  
pp. 100-130
Author(s):  
Marsha Rampersaud

This paper theorizes that a process of identity transformation occurs when individuals enter prisons, whereby individuals become prisoners. I investigate how this identity transformation occurs through interaction with the prison’s architectural design. Prisons are posited as locations of purposeful spatial organization whose design evokes particular performances from those within and outside, and which actively contributes to the creation of the prisoner identity. This investigation reveals a carceral power at work which renders prisons sites of articulated and detailed control that exist within a broader set of institutional practices and relations of power aimed at the transformation of individuals. This discussion critically engages with the broader purpose of the prison: while prisons are meant to rehabilitate and reform prisoners, the structured architecture of the prison conflicts with this objective.


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