positive identity
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2022 ◽  
pp. 433-439
Author(s):  
Eva Langeland ◽  
Hege Forbech Vinje

AbstractThis chapter deals with salutogenesis for a specific and growing group of people with mental health challenges. It emphasizes the importance of high-quality social support in interplay with positive identity development thus promoting salutogenic capacity. Aaron Antonovsky’s core concept of sense of coherence has been shown to be more closely related to mental health than to physical health. Thus, the application of salutogenesis on clients in mental healthcare settings is rather obvious. First, the expression “mental health challenges” is used because it is less disease-focused and encourages one to keep in mind that, despite suffering from mental illness, there always is some level of health and resources present that can be recognized, utilized, and nurtured. Second, it can result in specific forms of salutogenic therapy, for example, talk-therapy groups that aim to support positive salutogenic identity building as a specific resistance resource and to improve the sense of coherence of participants by specific offers of social support. Third, as in all health care, the material and social setting itself should be designed by salutogenic principles as empowering by being comprehensible, meaningful, and manageable. This is especially important for more sensitive people with mental health challenges who also might experience longer stay in mental healthcare organizations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 91-116
Author(s):  
Anna N. Blinova ◽  
Tatyana B. Smirnova ◽  
Elena A. Shlegel

The deportation of the Soviet Germans in 1941 was a turning point in their ethnic history. The deportation had a big influence on the ethnic identity of the Germans and transformed it. The aim of the research is to determine the influence of the deportation of 1941 on the modern identity of the Germans in Russia and Kazakhstan. The article contains facts about the deportation, analyzes its consequences, first of all the radical change in the territorial distribution of the Germans. The central part of the article is devoted to the influence of traumatic events on the identity of the people. The empirical base of the research consists of memories collected in expeditions and archives, as well as the results of an ethnosociological survey of Germans conducted in 2020 with the support of the International Union of German Culture. The final part is dedicated to the historical memory and presentation of the deportation events in the museums of Russia and Kazakhstan. The conclusions of the research are that the events of the deportation continue influencing the ethnic identity of the Germans of Russia and Kazakhstan greatly. The cause of it is incompleteness of rehabilitation, activities of public organizations, historical memory in which deportation occupies a central place. The authors show the need to form a positive identity that generates interest in the history and culture of their own people, a sense of pride and integrity of ethnic identity.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Soroor Hediyeh-zadeh ◽  
Jarryd Martin ◽  
Melissa J. Davis ◽  
Andrew I. Webb

AbstractPeptide identity propagation (PIP) can substantially reduce missing values in label-free mass spectrometry quantification by transferring peptides identified by tandem mass (MS/MS) spectra in one run to experimentally related runs where the peptides are not identified by MS/MS. The existing frameworks for matching identifications between runs perform peak tracing and propagation based on similarity of precursor features using only a limited number of dimensions available in MS1 data. These approaches do not produce accompanying confidence estimates and hence cannot filter probable false positive identity transfers. We introduce an embedding based PIP that uses a higher dimensional representation of MS1 measurements that is optimized to capture peptide identities using deep neural networks. We developed a propagation framework that works entirely on MaxQuant results. Current PIP workflows typically perform propagation mainly using two feature dimensions, and rely on deterministic tolerances for identification transfer. Our framework overcomes both these limitations while additionally assigning probabilities to each transferred identity. The proposed embedding approach enables quantification of the empirical false discovery rate (FDR) for peptide identification, while also increasing depth of coverage through coembedding the runs from the experiment with experimental libraries. In published datasets with technical and biological variability, we demonstrate that our method reduces missing values in MaxQuant results, maintains high quantification precision and accuracy, and low false transfer rate.


Identity ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Grace Wong ◽  
Renee V. Galliher ◽  
Hay Pradell ◽  
Tyus Roanhorse ◽  
Hanna Huenemann
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Karolina Koziara ◽  
Magdalena Mijas ◽  
Mateusz Pliczko ◽  
Jowita Wycisk ◽  
Bartosz Grabski

Geriatrics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 98
Author(s):  
Henrique Pereira ◽  
Patrícia Silva

The aim of this study was to assess the relationship between social support, positive identity, and resilience and the successful aging of older sexual minority men. The study involved having 210 self-identified gay and bisexual men aged between 50 and 80 years complete a cross-sectional online survey comprised of sociodemographic information; the Portuguese version of the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support; the Lesbian, Gay, and multifactor Bisexual Positive Identity Measure; the Connor–Davidson Resilience Scale 10; and the Successful Aging Perceptions Scale. The results showed that self-identified gay participants showed higher levels of positive identity, while bisexual participants scored higher for resilience, mental health, and successful aging. Higher levels of social support, resilience, and positive identity were significant predictors of mental health (28%), physical health (18%), and successful aging (10%) in our sample. These results offer similarities with the growing body of literature on the positive factors of successful aging in the gay and bisexual men communities, which is an important step in the development of aging and health preventive initiatives among this population.


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