| Results 451 - 500 of 1010 | ||
| < 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 > | ||
|
Belliure Josabel - - 2004
Many animals exhibit dramatic responses when subjected to a stressor. A classic marker of the stress response is an increase in plasma glucocorticoids, but this constitutes only one step in the cascade from experience of a stressor to wider organismal changes, including behavior. The behavioral sensitivity to glucocorticoids would determine ...
|
||
|
Meehan C L - - 2004
Stereotypies are abnormal repetitive behaviors that often develop in animals housed in impoverished environments. Stereotypy represents the interaction of several complex developmental phenomena. To characterize the temporal nature of stereotypy increase (escalation) and decrease (attenuation), we monitored changes in stereotypy performance in young Orange-winged Amazon parrots reared either in barren ...
|
||
|
Phillips Mary L - - 2004
There is debate in cognitive neuroscience whether conscious versus unconscious processing represents a categorical or a quantitative distinction. The purpose of the study was to explore this matter using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). We first established objective thresholds of the critical temporal parameters for overt and covert presentations of ...
|
||
|
Buchowski Katherine P - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: Syncope is a potentially dangerous symptom of anorexia nervosa that is usually attributed to bradycardia, dehydration, or hypoglycemia. METHODS: This study describes two adolescents, one male and one female, with recurrent self-induced syncope associated with isometric exercise. RESULTS: In one patient, Holter monitoring showed that isometric exercise led to ...
|
||
|
Schneider Joanne Kraenzle - - 2004
Health benefits associated with exercise are only obtained when exercise is maintained. The purpose of this pilot study was to examine the effects of a cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) intervention on exercise behavior and physical outcomes in older adults. All participants were taught progressive flexibility, strength, and endurance exercises. The ...
|
||
|
Wilson Philip M - - 2004
The aim of this study was to examine propositions stemming from Self-Determination Theory (SDT) that contend motivational consequences vary as a function of different regulations in the exercise domain. Participants (N = 276; n = 98 men; n = 178 women) completed inventories assessing exercise regulations, current exercise behavior, and ...
|
||
|
Barinov S M - - 2004
Fluorinated hydroxyapatite is known to be less soluble by body fluids, resulting in enhanced resistance to biodegradation in vivo conditions, as compared to the pure hydroxyapatite ceramics. The present work was aimed at the investigation of the effect of minor additions of ultrafine fluorapatite (up to 10 wt%) on the ...
|
||
|
Brewer B W - - 2004
This study examined relations among body mass index (BMI), social physique anxiety (SPA) and protective self-presentational exercise behaviours in a sample of 86 female participants in aerobics classes at a university fitness centre. Participants completed a questionnaire assessing demographic and exercise-related information, the 9-item version of the Social Physique Anxiety ...
|
||
|
Cardinal Bradley J - - 2004
Although the benefits of exercise are well documented, an international problem of physical inactivity exists. More research, especially theory based, has been recommended. One promising approach for studying exercise behavior is that proposed in the Transtheoretical Model (TTM) of behavior change. This model, however, has received minimal cross-cultural attention and, ...
|
||
|
Hennessy Michael B - - 2004
When guinea pig pups are isolated in a novel environment, they show an initial active phase of behavioral responsiveness characterized by vocalizations and locomotor activity. One earlier study found that after about an hour, pups began to exhibit a second, passive stage of responsiveness marked by a crouched stance, eye-closing, ...
|
||
|
Gomes Fernando R - - 2004
The aerobic capacity model, as well as other models for the evolution of aerobic metabolism and the origin of endothermy, requires a mechanistic link between rates of resting and activity oxygen consumption (VO2rest and VO2act). The existence of such link is still controversial, but studies with anuran amphibians support a ...
|
||
|
Kidd Pamela - - 2004
BACKGROUND: Traditionally, the difference between pretest and posttest scores is used as an estimate of change. This can be problematic when repeated self-report measures are used to assess change resulting from interventions intended to change beliefs, behaviors, attitudes, or values about health or safety. If the intervention is effective, participants ...
|
||
|
Optimism, abstinence self-efficacy, and self-mastery: a comparative analysis of cognitive resources.
Majer John M - - 2004
The relationship between optimism, abstinence self-efficacy, and self-mastery was examined by investigating levels of these cognitive resources among two samples of recovering substance abusers: Oxford House residents who attended twelve-step groups and twelve-step members who had never lived in an Oxford House. Participants 'levels of optimism were significantly and positively ...
|
||
|
Lebedev V V - - 2004
We consider the evolution of a passive scalar (concentration of pollutants or temperature) in a chaotic (turbulent) flow. A universal asymptotic behavior of the passive scalar decay (homogenization) related to peripheral regions (near walls) is established. The passive scalar moments and their pair correlation function in the peripheral region are ...
|
||
|
Hallam Jeffrey S - - 2004
Many work-site physical activity interventions use theoretical variables in the design of their programs. Yet, these interventions do not document the degree of change in theoretical variables produced by the intervention. This study examined the construct validity of an intervention designed to affect social cognitive theory variables linked to exercise ...
|
||
|
Collins Rakale - - 2004
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of a preintervention physical activity preparatory course on physical activity, and social, cognitive, and transtheoretical constructs. The sample included 82 low-income, multiethnic women (75% Latina) who completed an 8-week course designed to prepare them to become more active prior to ...
|
||
|
Valois Robert F - - 2004
This study explored relationships between perceived life satisfaction and physical activity behaviors in a statewide sample of adolescents in South Carolina (n = 4,758) using the CDC Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS) and the Brief Multidimensional Student Life Satisfaction Scale (BMSLSS). Adjusted logistic regression analyses and multivariate models constructed separately ...
|
||
|
Greaney Mary L - - 2004
Four focus groups were conducted with a total of 29 adults 60 years of age and older enrolled in the SENIOR Project, a health promotion intervention study designed to increase fruit and vegetable consumption and exercise among community-dwelling older adults. The focus groups explored the motivations of older adults to ...
|
||
|
McDermott Christa - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the nature of differing recruitment rates for clinical treatment trials for anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa. METHODS: Recruitment rates from a study recruiting women partially recovered from anorexia nervosa were compared with the rates from two studies conducted at the same sites recruiting women with bulimia nervosa. ...
|
||
|
Landi F - - 2004
Although exercise is usually promoted for weight loss and better heart health, there is growing evidence that regular physical activity helps people preserve their mental ability. We describe the results of a pilot longitudinal study addressing the impact of a moderate intensity exercise program on behavioral problems of frail, elderly, ...
|
||
|
Elliot Diane L - - 2004
OBJECTIVE: To assess efficacy of 2 worksite health promotion interventions. METHODS: Randomly assign 3 fire stations to (a) team-based curriculum, (b) individual counselor meetings, and (c) control. RESULTS: Both interventions were feasible and acceptable, and they resulted in significant reductions in LDL cholesterol. The team approach significantly increased coworker cohesion, ...
|
||
|
Annesi James J - - 2003
The effect of a treatment system based on principles of social cognitive and cognitive behavioral theory was estimated through case studies conducted in three YMCA fitness facilities. Significant (p < .05) reductions in drop-out rates of 23% (Georgia sample; n = 171), 27% (California sample; n = 159), and 21% ...
|
||
|
Norman Gregory J - - 2003
BACKGROUND: Tailored interventions require the identification of distinct homogenous subgroups that will benefit from different intervention materials. One way to identify such subgroups is to use cluster analysis to identify an empirical typology. METHODS: A sample of 346 adults completed surveys through a telephone interview that included questions related to ...
|
||
|
Abraham Charles - - 2003
Three studies tested the hypothesis that anticipated regret (AR) increases consistency between exercise intentions and behaviour. Study 1 employed a longitudinal survey design (N = 384). Measures specified by the theory of planned behaviour, past behaviour, and AR were used to predict self-reported exercise behaviour 2 weeks later. AR moderated ...
|
||
|
Cox K L - - 2003
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to examine the relation between self-reported psychological processes and changes in exercise behaviour in an 18-month longitudinal stage-based intervention trial in 115 initially sedentary women aged 40-65 years. DESIGN: A two-way factorial design was used. METHODS: Participants were assigned randomly to either moderate ...
|
||
|
Roelke Daniel - - 2003
Empirical evidence of chaos, or complex behavior, in ecosystems is scarce, presumably due to high system-level noise and/or the rarity of conditions necessary for complex behavior to arise. An alternative explanation might be that complex behavior is fragile and readily suppressed by disturbances that are common in many ecosystems. Here ...
|
||
|
Blanchard Chris M - - 2003
OBJECTIVE: To examine the moderating influence of ethnicity on the theory of planned behavior (TPB) in the exercise domain and to generate common and ethnic-specific underlying accessible beliefs. METHODS: 90 Caucasian and 94 African American undergraduate students completed a TPB questionnaire. RESULTS: Multilevel modeling analyses indicated that ethnicity and gender ...
|
||
|
Smith Amanda D - - 2003
Evidence suggests that following injury the brain has the capacity for self-repair and that this can be promoted through a variety of experiences including motor activity. In their article, Döbrössy and Dunnett have provided further evidence that this is the case in an animal model in which an excitotoxin is ...
|
||
|
Downs Danielle Symons - - 2003
Research examining the motivational determinants of exercising during pregnancy is mostly atheoretical, despite the need for theory-based designs. The study's main objective was to prospectively examine women's exercise intention and behavior from their second to third pregnancy trimester using the theory of planned behavior (TPB). Participants were 89 pregnant women ...
|
||
|
Anderson Cheryl B - - 2003
Understanding the mechanisms by which physical activity is influenced is particularly relevant for health promotion efforts aimed at women, who display lower levels of physical activity and may experience more barriers to exercise than men. This study examined the number of motives for exercise and the number of reasons for ...
|
||
|
Dannecker Erin A - - 2003
The purpose of this study was to examine evidence for the validity of a stages of change measure of the Transtheoretical Model for exercise behavior. Participants were 152 university students (53.3% women, 71.6% Caucasian, M age = 19.18 years) who completed processes of change, self-efficacy, decisional balance, stages of change, ...
|
||
|
Davidson H - - 2003
The course of anorexia nervosa frequently has episodes of exacerbation during which motivation and insight are reduced, cognition is impaired and treatment resistance is increased. Formalizing a directive to be used during these episodes when the patient has greater motivation and insight is one way of reducing treatment resistance. We ...
|
||
|
Lowe Rob - - 2003
The theory of planned behavior suggests attitudes are a product of salient beliefs. This study examined whether aggregating salient beliefs was plausible within a more biologically centered information-processing environment. A neural network was used to examine associations among beliefs relating to exercise intention. Data on intentions and behavioral, normative, and ...
|
||
|
Grimes Jill M - - 2003
Chronic anabolic-androgenic steroid (AAS) treatment during adolescence facilitates offensive aggression in male Syrian hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus). The current study assessed whether adolescent AAS exposure influenced the immunohistochemical localization of glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD65), the rate-limiting enzyme in the synthesis of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), in areas of hamster brain implicated in ...
|
||
|
Deaver Cristine M - - 2003
The affect regulation model of binge eating suggests that binge eating occurs because it provides momentary relief from negative affect. The purpose of this study was to evaluate change in affect during binge eating to evaluate the merits of this model. Participants were young adult women from a midwestern university. ...
|
||
|
Nephew Benjamin C - - 2003
Captive European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) were subjected to five acute stressors: a visual stressor (strobe light), an auditory stressor (music), and disturbance by three different humans; their accustomed caretaker, an antagonist (the experimenter), and a novel human. Heart rate (HR), behavioral, and corticosterone (CORT) responses to each stressor were simultaneously ...
|
||
|
De Geus Eco J C - - 2003
PURPOSE: A twin design was used to test whether the association between exercise behavior and heart rate and the association between exercise behavior and respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) derive from a common genetic factor. METHODS: Data were available from 157 adolescent (aged 13-22) and 208 middle-aged twin pairs (aged 35-62), ...
|
||
|
McAuley Edward - - 2003
BACKGROUND: Considerable research has established that self-efficacy is a consistent correlate of physical activity. Additional factors, such as exercise-induced affect, social support, and value judgments, have also been identified as having the potential to influence adherence to activity. This study examined the utility of such variables in predicting the long-term ...
|
||
|
Zmijewski Christine F - - 2003
Few community-based studies of exercise dependence have been conducted. This investigation examined the prevalence of exercise-dependence symptoms among 237 college undergraduates and the relationship of exercise-dependence symptoms to atypical and disordered attitudes toward eating. Women scored significantly higher than men on the Exercise Dependence Questionnaire's (EDQ) Exercise for Weight Control ...
|
||
|
Simmons J A - - 2003
Big brown bats can discriminate between echoes that alternate in delay (jitter) by as little as 10-15 ns and echoes that are stationary in delay. This delay hyperacuity seems so extreme that it has been rejected in favor of an explanation in terms of artifacts in echoes, most likely spectral ...
|
||
|
Sharp Katherine - - 2003
OBJECTIVE: To derive an empirical taxonomy of osteoprotective stages using the Precaution Adoption Process Model (PAPM) and to identify the predisposing factors associated with each stage. METHODS: An anonymous survey was completed by 504 undergraduates at a Midwestern public university. RESULTS: Cluster analytic findings indicate that only 2 osteoprotective stages ...
|
||
|
Blue Carolyn L - - 2003
OBJECTIVE: To address a theoretical debate regarding contributions of self-efficacy and the theory of planned behavior (TPB) in explaining the amount of variance in stage of readiness to exercise among blue-collar workers. METHOD: A validated questionnaire was used for assessment. RESULTS: LISREL indicated that self-efficacy had the most influence on ...
|
||
|
Zhao Yanan - - 2003
An industrial weigh belt feeder is used to transport solid materials into a manufacturing process at a constant feedrate. It exhibits nonlinear behavior because of motor friction, saturation, and quantization noise in the measurement sensors. To overcome the nonlinearities, a simple yet effective method of controller autotuning, an indirect self-tuning ...
|
||
|
Fahrenwald Nancy L - - 2003
This descriptive-correlational study examined the Transtheoretical Model (TTM) of behavior change in relationship to the physical activity behavior of mothers receiving assistance from the Women, Infants, and Children program. A purposive sample (N = 30) of six women at each of the five stages of readiness for behavior change was ...
|
||
|
Conn Vicki S - - 2003
BACKGROUND: Older women remain predominantly sedentary despite potential health benefits and reduced risks of cardiovascular disease associated with regular exercise. Primary care interventions to increase exercise need to focus on constructs amenable to intervention that predict exercise behavior. PURPOSE: The study tested an explanatory model of older women's exercise behavior ...
|
||
|
Rhodes Ryan E - - 2003
The purpose of this study was to detail the variability found in the exercise intention-behavior relationship and investigate social cognitive and personality correlates of successful intention translation. Participants were 300 undergraduate students who completed measures of exercise social cognition (theory of planned behavior), personality (five-factor model) and a two-week follow-up ...
|
||
|
Schumann A - - 2003
The stages of change construct of the Transtheoretical Model (TTM) has been proposed for examining exercise adoption. Studies investigating the construct validity of the stages of change for exercise have used physical activity of moderate or higher intensity as operationalization criterion. Since it has been shown that physical activity of ...
|
||
|
Krajisnik D - - 2003
In the course of investigation of the effects of polymeric emulsifier (Simulgel A) on the structural characteristics and physical stability (during storage time) of semisolid o/w emulsion systems with different emulsifier concentrations, dispersed droplets of an internal oil phase (4.5-11.5 microm size) were discovered. The degree of dispersity was increased ...
|
||
|
Eilam David - - 2003
Individual voles were tested on successive days under increasing, decreasing, or randomly changing arena size. Locomotor behavior was adjusted to arena size by (i) preserving the same level of activity, (ii) taking longer but less frequent trips in smaller arenas in contrast to taking more frequent yet shorter trips in ...
|
||
|
Staton Valerie W - - 2003
OBJECTIVE: To identify factors (eg, familiarity, sex, neutering status, and time of year) associated with aggression between domestic ferrets and test a method for reducing aggression when introducing ferrets. DESIGN: Prospective trial. ANIMALS: 56 healthy domestic ferrets. PROCEDURE: To identify variables associated with aggression, pairs were placed in an enclosed ...
|
||
| < 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 > | ||