domingo, 26 de enero de 2020

psychology: Modern Psychology

Modern psychology is divided into several subdisciplines, each based on differing models of behavior and mental processes. Psychologists work in a number of different settings, including universities and colleges, primary and secondary schools, government agencies, private industry, hospitals, clinics, and private practices. Recent years have seen a rise in the significance of applied psychology—as can be seen from the areas contemporary psychologists concern themselves with—with an attendant decline in the importance of psychology in academia. In the United States, clinical psychology has become a significant focus of the discipline, largely separate from psychological research. Clinical psychologists are responsible for the diagnosis and treatment of various psychological problems.

Biological models of behavior have become increasingly prominent in psychological theory, particularly with the development of various tools—such as the positron emission tomography (PET) scan—for mapping the brain. The field of neuropsychology, which studies the brain and the connected nervous system, has been an outgrowth of this contemporary focus on biological explanations of human thought and behavior. Cognitive models, derived from the Gestalt school of psychology, focus on the various thinking processes which mediate between stimuli and responses.

Educational psychology, derived from the 18th and 19th cent. educational reforms of Friedrich W. Froebel , Johann Pestalozzi , and their follower Johann Herbart , was later expanded by G. Stanley Hall and by E. L. Thorndike . It is concerned with the development of improved methods of teaching and learning.

Social psychology, developed by British psychologists William McDougall and Havelock Ellis , studies the effects of various social environments on the individual. Some other branches of the field include developmental psychology, which studies the changes in thought and behavior through the course of life; experimental psychology, which is the laboratory research involved in the understanding of the mind; and personality psychology, which deals specifically with individual personality and the processes by which it is formed.

In recent years a number of new fields of psychology have emerged. Industrial/organizational psychology, emerging from social psychology, focuses on the workplace and considers such topics as job satisfaction, leadership, and productivity. Health psychology examines how psychological factors contribute to pathology, and demonstrates how psychology can contribute to recovery and illness prevention for such somatic disorders as heart disease, cancer, and diabetes. In environmental psychology, research focuses on how individuals react to their physical environments, and suggests improvements which may be beneficial to psychological health. Other new areas of psychology include counseling psychology, school psychology, forensic psychology, and community psychology.



viernes, 8 de diciembre de 2017

Nuevo alcalde de Miami quiere más “poder de decisión” para su gobierno

MIAMI, Estados Unidos.- Francis Suárez, el nuevo alcalde de Miami y primero de origen cubano que nació en la ciudad "capital del exilio" de la isla, afirma que buscará un gobierno más eficiente para mejorar la calidad de vida de los miamenses sin provocar por ello un aumento de gastos, informa Diario Las Américas.

Suárez tiene apenas 40 años y es "parte de una nueva generación que llega a la alcaldía". El líder del Ayuntamiento aplicará "un enfoque novedoso" y tendrá en cuenta "las nuevas tecnologías para atender las necesidades de la ciudad".

Especialmente sobre los problemas del tráfico y el transporte público en el condado Miami-Dade, uno de los más grandes y poblados del sureste de la Florida, Suárez subrayó que "si no ampliamos las posibilidades del transporte ahora, llegará el momento en que será imposible solucionarlo".

Otros asuntos que abordó el nuevo alcalde fueron el auge de las construcciones altas en el centro de la ciudad, el pleito de los 300 millones de dólares con los sindicatos de bomberos y policías, las impopulares "camaritas en los semáforos", así como la manera en que los bonos de obligación deben ser supervisados.

Suárez apuesta además por crear un alcalde fuerte, que no necesite un administrador

Fuente



miércoles, 21 de junio de 2017

The hidden inferno inside your laser pointer


28-Dec-2016

It may come as a surprise that temperature and voltage, basic notions developed in the nineteenth century in the fields of thermodynamics and electrodynamics, have until now lacked a mathematically rigorous definition, except for the case of an idealized equilibrium that does not actually occur in nature. The results of this study show that the two are intricately linked and could lead to a better understanding of what it means to be 'hot' or 'cold' at the subatomic and quantum scale.

If you thought that a kid's room, a Norwegian Nobel Laureate and a laser pointer had nothing in common, two UA physicists are about to enlighten you.

It's hard to believe, but after having unraveled many of the laws that make the universe tick, physicists still haven't reached an agreement on whether something as seemingly simple as "hot" or "cold" can be measured in a system under certain circumstances.

"Imagine you threw an iceberg into the sun and right before it's melted and gone, you wanted to know, 'How hot is that iceberg at that moment?' Would that be a meaningful question to ask?" says Charles Stafford, a professor in the Department of Physics in the UA's College of Science. "According to traditional physics, it wouldn't be."

Put simply, traditional knowledge holds that properties such as temperature or voltage can only be measured as long as a system is in equilibrium. (Hint: an iceberg plunging into the sun is not.)

"Temperature and voltage are two basic variables developed in the 19th century," Stafford says, "so it may come as a shock that such basic notions have until now lacked a mathematically rigorous definition except for the case of equilibrium, an idealized case that does not actually occur in nature, except perhaps for the 'heat death' predicted to mark the end of the universe."

Together with doctoral student Abhay Shastry, the first author of the study, Stafford used mathematical modeling to explore this conundrum. Their manuscript shows that these two quantities are so closely linked that it is impossible to know one without knowing the other.

"We have shown that actually any state of a system whatsoever, even far from equilibrium, can be characterized by a temperature," Stafford says.

This where the kid's room comes into play. (We'll get to the Nobel Laureates and laser pointers in a little bit.)

Everything in the universe -- from quarks to galaxies -- has an inherent tendency to achieve equilibrium with its surroundings and head toward the greatest possible degree of disorder. In reality, this phenomenon, called entropy and described in the Second Law of Thermodynamics, is a bit more complicated, but let's not worry about that for now. After all, we know this intuitively: Plop an ice cube into a drink and leave it alone for a while; soon, the water molecules in the ice cube have left their highly ordered crystal structure and settled into a cozy equilibrium, happily mingling with their disorderly, watery brethren. Same goes for the stuff in the kid's room: Leave things alone for a while without tidying up -- you get the idea.

That iceberg that's about to vaporize when we tossed it into the sun earlier illustrates a system that is very, very far from equilibrium, but let's look at a more everyday example: an ordinary laser pointer. When you push the button to activate that red dot of light your cat is so crazy about, an inferno breaks loose inside the little device.

"When they're lasing, the electrons inside the device get hotter than a temperature we call 'plus infinity,'" Shastry says. "If you heated up a pot of water, no matter how hot, even if you vaporized it at a million degrees, it would still not be as hot as the electrons in the laser."

Now, it's important to point out that we're talking about quantum phenomena here -- in this case the electron temperature, which has nothing to do with the temperature of the laser light and is the reason your laser pointer doesn't vaporize instantly in your hand upon activation.

Nevertheless, if you could somehow how touch the electrons in your laser, it would feel very, very hot, Shastry explains.

The point, according to the two physicists, is that when a laser is lasing, it is very far from equilibrium, much more so than, say, weather phenomena. Unlike the weather, which is driven largely by thermal differences, systems such as semiconductors and electronic devices are driven electrically, which can push their components -- in this case, electrons -- much farther from equilibrium than heat.

Under the current view, physicists would say that measuring the temperature in such a device that's far from equilibrium can't be done. Stafford's and Shastry's results say, yes, it can be done, but that conjures another question: Why would one want to?

"Current microelectronics technology is limited by the fact that the devices dissipate a lot of heat, and they're getting smaller and smaller," Stafford says. "As they get smaller, they dissipate more heat, so this is creating a big problem for advancing the technology.

"Because we show that it's possible to define temperatures and voltages even at the subatomic scale, and define it rigorously, one could hope to make devices that are integrated in such a way that one could have local cooling of just one spot on the device where that one transistor sits that is getting really hot, instead of cooling the entire chip. Currently, there is no way to do something like that."

Stafford and Shastry are currently exploring a possible collaboration with Pramod Reddy, a colleague at the University of Michigan whose lab has set the record in creating a thermometer capable of probing temperature across a few atoms, to subject their findings to experimental study.

Another example to which the work might apply is nuclear magnetic resonance, a technology routinely used in medical imaging.

"Someone who has experienced that might not have realized the atomic nuclei in their body were put into a state of absolute negative temperature, which is hotter than anything in the universe, but that is the case," Stafford says.

"Our theory is very general. It applies to lots of things, from quark-gluon plasmas generated in particle accelerators to laser pointers to neutron stars," Shastry says. "They all follow the exact same formalism."

As a side product of this research, Shastry and Stafford provide the first proof of a version of the Second Law of Thermodynamics formulated in 1931 by Norwegian chemist Lars Onsager, which applies in particular to thermoelectric processes, a feat that had eluded the physics community for 85 years.

"The Second Law of Thermodynamics is the most general of not just the laws of physics, but all the laws of nature," Stafford says. "And there are many practitioners in this field of quantum physics who are proposing that the second law doesn't apply to systems that are in a state that's far from equilibrium, but we show that it does."

As it turns out, everything has to respect the second law. Including a kid's room.

Original publication:

Abhay Shastry and Charles A. Stafford; "Temperature and voltage measurement in quantum systems far from equilibrium"; Phys. Rev. B; 2016


© 1997-2017 CHEMIE.DE Information Service GmbH, All rights reserved


Source

sábado, 3 de diciembre de 2016

Cuáles son los países de América Latina con más casos nuevos de VIH/sida

Cada año, cerca de 2,5 millones de personas son diagnosticadas con VIH en todo el mundo. Y en América Latina, Argentina es, con diferencia, el país con más casos nuevos de contagio.

Así lo reveló el último gran estudio sobre la propagación del virus, Global Burden of Disease (carga mundial de la enfermedad), realizado por el Instituto para la Medición y Evaluación de la Salud (IHME) de la Universidad de Washington, en EE.UU.

La investigación analizó la situación de 195 países entre 1980 y 2015, con motivo de la XXI Conferencia Internacional sobre el Sida, celebrada en Sudáfrica del 18 al 22 de julio.

"El estudio muestra que la epidemia del sida aún no está superada y que sigue siendo la mayor amenaza para la salud mundial de nuestro tiempo", dijo Peter Piot, miembro fundador del comité ejecutivo del Programa Conjunto de las Naciones Unidas sobre el VIH/Sida (Onusida).

Sin protección

"Un nivel de nuevos contagios superior a los dos millones de personas cada año representa un fallo colectivo que requiere un refuerzo de las políticas de prevención y de la investigación de una vacuna", agregó Piot.


Las estadísticas indican que el número de nuevas infecciones no han cambiado mucho en la última década: tan sólo cayeron un 0,7% al año entre 2005 y 2015 (en la década anterior este porcentaje fue del 2,7).

Y, de acuerdo con el informe, en Argentina los casos aumentaron un 7,8% al año en ese periodo de tiempo.

"La incidencia del VIH en Argentina indica que en 2015 se infectaban 14,4 personas por cada 100.000″, dijeron los autores de la investigación.

Y es que los contagios de en ese país están creciendo mucho más rápido que en otros países de la región.

Los 5 países de América Latina con más contagios nuevos de VIH

datos: 2005-2015

1. Argentina 7,8% nuevos casos al año

2. Paraguay 4,9%

3. Bolivia 4,8%

4. Colombia
4,6%

5. Ecuador
3,9%
Thinkstock

Pero ¿a qué se debieron tantos nuevos casos?

La causa principal del incremento en Argentina, según los científicos, fueron las relaciones sexuales sin protección: 9 de cada 10 personas diagnosticadas entre 2012 y 2014 no utilizaron preservativo.

Y la mitad de los casos corresponde a parejas heterosexuales.

El siguiente país, después de Argentina, con más casos nuevos de VIH es Paraguay (4,9%), seguido por Bolivia (4,8%), Colombia (4,6%) y Ecuador (3,9%).

Completan la lista -con cifras mucho más alentadoras- Perú (1,7%), Venezuela (0,4%), Uruguay (-0,5%) y Chile (-3,3%).

"Panorama preocupante"

En 2015, tres cuartas partes de los nuevos casos de contagio (1,8 millones) se dieron en África Subsahariana. Y de 2005 a 2015 hubo 74 países que alcanzaron cuotas preocupantes, especialmente Indonesia, Filipinas y algunos países del norte de África y del Europa del Este.

A pesar de los años de buen progreso y de reducción de casos a nivel global, no fue así en todas las regiones, y el acceso a la terapia antirretroviral (ART, por sus siglas en inglés) tuvo mucho que ver, dicen los especialistas.

Sin embargo, el número de muertes sí se redujo: de 1,8 millones en 2005 a 1,2 millones en 2015, precisamente por ese tratamiento.

"Nuestro estudio muestra un panorama preocupante del lento avance en la reducción de nuevas infecciones de VIH en los últimos 10 años", dijo Haidong Wang, autor principal de la investigación.

El director del IHME, Christopher Murray, habló de un "estancamiento" en la ayuda al desarrollo para los casos de VIH y de sida "en muchos países de bajos ingresos".

"Será necesaria una ampliación a gran escala por parte de gobiernos y agencias internacionales que alcance unos US$36.000 millones cada año para poder acabar con el sida hacia el año 2030".

Murray dijo que es importante "mejorar los programas de detección y de tratamiento, y el acceso a medicamentos antirretrovirales".


Fuente









martes, 22 de noviembre de 2016

Roberto Isaias Comments on United Nations Human Rights Committee Ruling Against the Government of Ecuador

- Isaias discusses the implications of the ruling and what it means for others who are seeking justice in Ecuador

- UN Human Rights Committee orders Ecuadorian Government to provide compensation for his seized property and a public apology to the family

MIAMI, Aug. 3, 2016 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- In a video commentary released today, banker and businessman Roberto Isaias discussed the political persecution that he and his family have endured at the hands of the Ecuadorian government over the past decade and the significance of the United Nations Human Rights Committee ruling against the Correa administration for its violations of civil rights. In the interview, he offers insight from his experiences and the numerous ways in which the Correa administration has manipulated the judicial and executive arms of the government to systematically suppress the civil rights of its own citizens and deny them due process of law. 

This past June 2016, the UN Human Rights Committee ruled in favor of the Isaias and ordered Ecuador to return all of the family's appropriated assets, which in part, include media assets such as radio stations, newspapers, magazines, and television stations. The ruling gives an impartial, definitive judicial lens to the pervasive nature in which the Correa government has violated its citizens' human and civil rights over the last ten years, including: the appropriation of private business, interference in the judicial system, and the abrogation of freedom of the press through the confiscation of media assets.

Roberto Isaias Comments on United Nations Human Rights Committee Ruling Against the Government of Ecuador

miércoles, 16 de noviembre de 2016

Ana Cristina Barragán y Pablo Aguirre hablan de la feminidad en la película ALBA



Ana Cristina Barragán
estudió cine en la Universidad San Francisco de Quito, fue actriz en la película Sed y se estrena como directora de largometraje con 'Alba', un film que ha causado un impacto en el cine nacional.

Es por eso que #LaTertulia invitó a Barragán y al actor Pablo Aguirre para conversar con Miguel Molina Díaz sobre el proceso de esta película, que, según Aguirre, es absolutamente femenina en su propuesta estética.

Se trata de una película sobre una niña llamada Alba (Macarena Aguirre), cuya madre está muy enferma y ante la perspectiva cierta de su hospitalización, debe ir a vivir con su padre (Pablo Aguirre), a quién no ve desde hace muchos años y con quién no ha compartido nada. Ese momento coincide con el de su inusitada inclusión en el grupo de las chicas populares de su colegio, quienes la empujan al descubrimiento de los chicos y, por desgracia, al ejercicio del bullying. (I)


Fuente