life issue
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2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 132-140
Author(s):  
Ziad Al-Ani

The symptoms of TMJ Osteoarthrosis/Osteoarthritis(TMJ OA) are characteristic and in most cases specific to the disorder. There is, however, an overlap of symptoms with other TMDs. Treatment of TMJ OA is generally directed towards management of the symptoms as the temporomandibular joint does retain the capacity throughout life to repair and remodel. Non-conservative and invasive treatment is only rarely necessary. It should be remembered that the mandibular condyle retains the capacity to repair and remodel throughout life and patients should be encouraged to bear this in mind. Conservative measures are usually sufficient to treat symptoms and a period of time should be allowed to elapse before undertaking a more aggressive treatment plan, which, in the overwhelming majority of patients, will not be necessary. This disorder should be approached on the terms of ‘a quality of life issue’ and treatment should be directed towards patient needs.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Hamid Khanipour ◽  
◽  
Mahsan Pourali ◽  
Mojgan Atar ◽  
◽  
...  

Objective: How people use social rank (dominance vs prestige) could explain different attitudes toward five moral foundations. This study aimed to investigate the differential relationships between prestige, dominance, and moral foundations. Methods: This study was conducted on 150 participants who responded to the moral foundation questionnaire and dominance-prestige scale. Results: Multiple regression analysis revealed that prestige was positively associated with four kinds of moral foundations (harm/care, reciprocity/fairness, loyalty/subversion, and purity/sanctity), whereas dominance was negatively associated with harm/care, reciprocity/fairness, and progressivism. Prestige had a stronger association with moral foundations than dominance. Conclusion: It seems that dominance as a social status seeking-strategy is against any moral foundation, but prestige could increase attention to moral foundations in decision making toward every life issue.


Author(s):  
Dena AuCoin ◽  
Brian Berger

Inclusion is built on the idea that all students are valuable and significant members of their community and should be accepted in general education settings. Inclusion is a term that can define classroom practices, but it is also a valued system where all students have a sense of belonging. Collaboration between teachers can effectively support students with special needs (SSN) in inclusion, offering insight into student needs and providing valuable information for supporting students. Research has identified the effective collaborative constructs of (1) shared planning, (2) frequent communication, (3) shared vision, (4) mutual respect, and (5) joint trust. This chapter will investigate the real-life issue of collaboration needs and define the established collaborative constructs for practice.


2020 ◽  
pp. 205699712096635
Author(s):  
Thomas Smith ◽  
Anne Knowles

Agentic orientation, critical thinking (CrT) and taking the fourth-person perspective (4PP) are described as teachable attainments. A Personal Viewpoints (PVs) Biblical Studies curriculum challenged Year 7 students to resolve socially problematic situations through group discussion and perspective-taking. A life-issue scenario was used to pre- and post-test. Students’ PVs were coded. Responses were more personally agentic following the curriculum intervention, suggesting a strengthened resilience when faced with the threat of an oppressor. Increased perspective-taking and CrT, encouraged by counterfactual thinking, fostered students’ reliance on personal Bible-based judgements and led to greater other-focused, personally agentic resilience in socially problematic situations.


2020 ◽  
Vol 29 (12) ◽  
pp. 2050086
Author(s):  
Pisin Chen ◽  
Misao Sasaki ◽  
Dong-han Yeom

Hawking’s seminal discovery of black hole evaporation was based on the semi-classical, perturbative method. Whether black hole evaporation may result in the loss of information remains undetermined. The solution to this paradox would most likely rely on the knowledge of the end-life of the evaporation, which evidently must be in the non-perturbative regime. Here we reinterpret the Hawking radiation as the tunneling of instantons, which is inherently non-perturbative. For definitiveness, we invoke the picture of shell–anti-shell pair production and show that it is equivalent to that of instanton tunneling. We find that such a shell pair production picture can help to elucidate firewalls and [Formula: see text] conjectures that attempt to solve the information paradox, and may be able to address the end-life issue toward an ultimate resolution.


2020 ◽  
pp. 147737082093210 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graham Farrell ◽  
Nick Tilley

Some security devices can be ugly, inconvenient or an infringement on civil liberties. This means that security is a quality of life issue as well as one of crime prevention. Here we propose that, in addition to preventing crime and being cost effective, security should preferably be ethical and unobtrusive, aesthetically neutral or pleasing, and the easy-to-use or default option. We describe security with such characteristics as ‘elegant’. We use two case studies to explore how, as many types of crime have declined in recent decades, there was an increase in elegant and a decrease in inelegant security. We suggest that the lifecycle of some security technologies sees them evolve from inelegant to elegant, that continual improvement is required to keep ahead of offender adaptations, and that inelegant security can fall into disuse even if it prevents crime. It is hoped that this conceptual contribution might inform discussions about the appropriate form and role of security.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graham Farrell ◽  
Nick Tilley

Some security devices can be ugly, inconvenient or an infringement on civil liberties. This means that security is a quality of life issue as well as one of crime prevention. Here we propose that, in addition to preventing crime and being cost effective, security should preferably be ethical and unobtrusive, aesthetically neutral or pleasing, and the easy-to-use or default option. We describe security with such characteristics as ‘elegant’. We use two case studies to explore how, as many types of crime have declined in recent decades, there was an increase in elegant and a decrease in inelegant security. We suggest that the lifecycle of some security technologies sees them evolve from inelegant to elegant, that continual improvement is required to keep ahead of offender adaptations, and that inelegant security can fall into disuse even if it prevents crime. It is hoped that this conceptual contribution might inform discussions about the appropriate form and role of security.


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