Refine
Has Fulltext
- yes (19) (remove)
Year of publication
- 2014 (19) (remove)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (19) (remove)
Keywords
- prevention (7)
- Gewalt (5)
- Kriminalität (5)
- Nachhaltigkeit (5)
- Prävention (5)
- Rechtsextremismus (5)
- crime (5)
- right-wing extremism (5)
- sustainability (5)
- violence (5)
- Cardiac rehabilitation (2)
- acquisition (2)
- english (2)
- stress (2)
- IHE attack (1)
- SLI (1)
- acquisition norms (1)
- age (1)
- animacy (1)
- balance training (1)
- bilingual children (1)
- central administration (1)
- characteristics (1)
- chronic kidney disease (1)
- complex words (1)
- complexity (1)
- constraints (1)
- control rates (1)
- death-threats (1)
- dependencies (1)
- derivation (1)
- dyslipidemia (1)
- emotional status (1)
- functional capacity (1)
- glomerular filtration rate (1)
- grammar (1)
- greek children (1)
- higher education (1)
- indefinite articles (1)
- inflected words (1)
- information (1)
- instability resistance training (1)
- intelligence (1)
- intervention (1)
- language (1)
- late bilinguals (1)
- leaking (1)
- lexical abilities (1)
- lipids (1)
- masked priming (1)
- mental lexicon (1)
- ministers and civil servants (1)
- movement (1)
- normally developing-children (1)
- orthographic overlap (1)
- participles (1)
- physical fitness test (1)
- political advisers (1)
- political responsiveness (1)
- politicization (1)
- prediction error signal (1)
- preschool-children (1)
- public administration (1)
- rampage (1)
- readers (1)
- registry (1)
- regularity (1)
- reinforcement learning (1)
- representation (1)
- risk factor (1)
- school attack (1)
- school shooting (1)
- sentences (1)
- speaking children (1)
- stretch-shortening cycle (1)
- surgical aortic valve replacement (sAVR) (1)
- transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) (1)
- ventral striatum (1)
- violence in schools (1)
- word categories (1)
Institute
- Humanwissenschaftliche Fakultät (19) (remove)
1. Einführung
2. Kriminalität, Gewalt und Rechtsextremismus: Begriffsgenese und Modell „nachhaltiger Prävention“
2.1 Entwicklungsorientierung
2.2 Kommunale Netzwerkarbeit
2.3 Evaluation und Qualität
3. Kriminal- und Gewaltprävention im Land Brandenburg
3.1 Gewaltprävention an einer Brennpunkt-Schule am Beispiel von „Wir für uns“
3.2 Regionale Netzwerkarbeit am Beispiel von „Mit-Ein-Ander in Kita und Schule“
3.3 Rechtsextremismusprävention am Beispiel des Handlungskonzepts „Tolerantes Brandenburg“
4. Folgerungen und Empfehlungen
Literatur
Background: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a frequent comorbidity among elderly patients and those with cardiovascular disease. CKD carries prognostic relevance. We aimed to describe patient characteristics, risk factor management and control status of patients in cardiac rehabilitation (CR), differentiated by presence or absence of CKD.
Design and methods: Data from 92,071 inpatients with adequate information to calculate glomerular filtration rate (GFR) based on the Cockcroft-Gault formula were analyzed at the beginning and the end of a 3-week CR stay. CKD was defined as estimated GFR <60 ml/min/1.73 m(2).
Results: Compared with non-CKD patients, CKD patients were significantly older (72.0 versus 58.0 years) and more often had diabetes mellitus, arterial hypertension, and atherothrombotic manifestations (previous stroke, peripheral arterial disease), but fewer were current or previous smokers had a CHD family history. Exercise capacity was much lower in CKD (59 vs. 92Watts). Fewer patients with CKD were treated with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), but more had coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery. Patients with CKD compared with non-CKD less frequently received statins, acetylsalicylic acid (ASA), clopidogrel, beta blockers, and angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, and more frequently received angiotensin receptor blockers, insulin and oral anticoagulants. In CKD, mean low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), total cholesterol, and high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) were slightly higher at baseline, while triglycerides were substantially lower. This lipid pattern did not change at the discharge visit, but overall control rates for all described parameters (with the exception of HDL-C) were improved substantially. At discharge, systolic blood pressure (BP) was higher in CKD (124 versus 121 mmHg) and diastolic BP was lower (72 versus 74 mmHg). At discharge, 68.7% of CKD versus 71.9% of non-CKD patients had LDL-C <100 mg/dl. Physical fitness on exercise testing improved substantially in both groups. When the Modification of Diet in Renal Disease (MDRD) formula was used for CKD classification, there was no clinically relevant change in these results.
Conclusion: Within a short period of 3-4 weeks, CR led to substantial improvements in key risk factors such as lipid profile, blood pressure, and physical fitness for all patients, even if CKD was present.
Two experiments tested how faithfully German children aged 4; 5 to 5; 6 reproduce ditransitive sentences that are unmarked or marked with respect to word order and focus (Exp1) or definiteness (Exp2). Adopting an optimality theory (OT) approach, it is assumed that in the German adult grammar word order is ranked lower than focus and definiteness. Faithfulness of children's reproductions decreased as markedness of inputs increased; unmarked structures were reproduced most faithfully and unfaithful outputs had most often an unmarked form. Consistent with the OT proposal, children were more tolerant against inputs marked for word order than for focus; in conflict with the proposal, children were less tolerant against inputs marked for word order than for definiteness. Our results suggest that the linearization of objects in German double object constructions is affected by focus and definiteness, but that prosodic principles may have an impact on the position of a focused constituent.
Regular and irregular inflection in children's production has been examined in many previous studies. Yet, little is known about the processes involved in children's recognition of inflected words. To gain insight into how children process inflected words, the current study examines regular -t and irregular -n participles of German using the cross-modal priming technique testing 108 monolingual German-speaking children in two age groups (group I, mean age: 8;4, group II, mean age: 9;9) and a control group of.. adults. Although both age groups of children had the same full priming effect as adults for -t forms, only children of age group II showed an adult-like (partial) priming effect for -n participles. We argue that children (within the age range tested) employ the same mechanisms for regular inflection as adults but that the lexical retrieval processes required for irregular forms become more efficient when children get older.
This study investigates whether number dissimilarities on subject and object DPs facilitate the comprehension of subject-and object-extracted centre-embedded relative clauses in children with Grammatical Specific Language Impairment (G-SLI). We compared the performance of a group of English-speaking children with G-SLI (mean age: 12; 11) with that of two groups of younger typically developing (TD) children, matched on grammar and receptive vocabulary, respectively. All groups were more accurate on subject-extracted relative clauses than object-extracted ones and, crucially, they all showed greater accuracy for sentences with dissimilar number features (i.e., one singular, one plural) on the head noun and the embedded DP. These findings are interpreted in the light of current psycholinguistic models of sentence comprehension in TD children and provide further insight into the linguistic nature of G-SLI.
Fluid intelligence (fluid IQ), defined as the capacity for rapid problem solving and behavioral adaptation, is known to be modulated by learning and experience. Both stressful life events (SLES) and neural correlates of learning [specifically, a key mediator of adaptive learning in the brain, namely the ventral striatal representation of prediction errors (PE)] have been shown to be associated with individual differences in fluid IQ. Here, we examine the interaction between adaptive learning signals (using a well-characterized probabilistic reversal learning task in combination with fMRI) and SLES on fluid IQ measures. We find that the correlation between ventral striatal BOLD PE and fluid IQ, which we have previously reported, is quantitatively modulated by the amount of reported SLES. Thus, after experiencing adversity, basic neuronal learning signatures appear to align more closely with a general measure of flexible learning (fluid IQ), a finding complementing studies on the effects of acute stress on learning. The results suggest that an understanding of the neurobiological correlates of trait variables like fluid IQ needs to take socioemotional influences such as chronic stress into account.
"Tolerantes Brandenburg"
(2014)
1. Einleitung
2. Kriminalitätsprävention und Rechtsextremismusprävention
3. Ausgewählte Strukturelemente des Kooperationsverbundes TBB
3.1 Aufgabendefinition zwischen Rechtsextremismusbekämpfung und Demokratieförderung
3.2 Status der landesweiten Zentralstelle
3.3 Ressortübergreifende Aufgaben im Verhältnis zu den Fachressorts
3.4 Vernetzung und Hierarchie
3.5 Verhältnis zur Zivilgesellschaft
3.6 Evaluation
4. Fazit