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University of Vermont
1.
Hogan, Julianna Brett.
Distress Intolerance and Cannabis Use: An Initial Empirical Investigation.
Degree: PhD, Psychology, 2015, University of Vermont
URL: https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/405
► Within the United States (U.S.), one-third of those who use cannabis (the most commonly used illicit drug in the U.S.), exhibit cannabis use problems…
(more)
▼ Within the United States (U.S.), one-third of those who use cannabis (the most commonly used illicit drug in the U.S.), exhibit cannabis use problems significant enough to warrant a diagnosis of cannabis use disorder (CUD; Compton, Grant, Colliver, Glantz, & Stinson, 2004). Data suggests that quitting cannabis is highly difficult (Copersino et al., 2006), yet, there is little empirical knowledge about the nature of factors that relate to quit processes (e.g., self-efficacy). One potentially promising variable of relevance to CUD is distress
intolerance (Leyro, Zvolensky, & Bernstein, 2010). Distress
intolerance is referred to as (a) the perceived capacity to withstand negative emotional and/or aversive states, and (b) the behavioral act of withstanding distressing internal states elicited by some type of stressor. Although theoretically nested within a broader network of risk and protective processes, distress
intolerance is posited to be related to, though conceptually distinct from, other variables (e.g., anxiety sensitivity; emotion regulation; Leyro et al., 2010). Individuals with higher levels of distress
intolerance may be prone to maladaptively respond to distress (e.g., life stressors), and attempt to avoid negative emotions and/or aversive states (e.g., use cannabis to alter the perception or impact of negative mood, or to enhance positive mood). In contrast, persons with lower levels of distress
intolerance may be more able to adaptively respond to distress (e.g., seek out alternative, more adaptive coping strategies instead of using cannabis).
There is limited knowledge of the explanatory role of the inability to tolerate negative affect and other aversive internal sensations (e.g., withdrawal) in terms of CUD and the nature of the quit experience (e.g., beliefs about barriers to quitting). The aim of the present study was to examine the main and interactive effects of perceived and behavioral indices of distress
intolerance in terms of cannabis quit-related variables, including (a) failed quit attempts, and duration of average time to relapse for past quit attempts; (b) greater severity of withdrawal symptoms experienced while quitting in the past, lower self-efficacy for abstaining, and greater perceived barriers for quitting cannabis; and (c) greater CUD problems. The sample recruited was characterized by racially and ethnically diverse (65.2% minority) adult cannabis users, many of whom had not completed college (46.5%). The sample had high rates of co-occuring psychiatric and medical illness (e.g., 36.1% had a current anxiety disorder, 26.4% had a current mood disorder, and half endorsed a medical condition), and over 25% fell below the 2013 Federal Poverty Level.
There was no empirical support for an interactive or main effect of perceived or behavioral distress
intolerance for any of the dependent variables. Although previous studies did not employ most of the cannabis dependent measures utilized in the current report, the lack of significant effects in the…
Advisors/Committee Members: Rex Forehand, Michael Giangreco.
Subjects/Keywords: Cannabis; Distress Intolerance; Psychology
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APA (6th Edition):
Hogan, J. B. (2015). Distress Intolerance and Cannabis Use: An Initial Empirical Investigation. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of Vermont. Retrieved from https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/405
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Hogan, Julianna Brett. “Distress Intolerance and Cannabis Use: An Initial Empirical Investigation.” 2015. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Vermont. Accessed January 15, 2021.
https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/405.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Hogan, Julianna Brett. “Distress Intolerance and Cannabis Use: An Initial Empirical Investigation.” 2015. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Hogan JB. Distress Intolerance and Cannabis Use: An Initial Empirical Investigation. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. University of Vermont; 2015. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/405.
Council of Science Editors:
Hogan JB. Distress Intolerance and Cannabis Use: An Initial Empirical Investigation. [Doctoral Dissertation]. University of Vermont; 2015. Available from: https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/graddis/405

University of Minnesota
2.
Ekstrom, Pierce.
We're Good People: Moral conviction as social identity.
Degree: PhD, Psychology, 2018, University of Minnesota
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/11299/200198
► Moral convictions—attitudes that people report are connected to their beliefs about right and wrong—are known to have unique effects on behavior, from activism to intolerance.…
(more)
▼ Moral convictions—attitudes that people report are connected to their beliefs about right and wrong—are known to have unique effects on behavior, from activism to intolerance. Less is known, though, about why moral conviction has these effects. I propose that the unique predictive force of moral conviction is partly attributable to the fact that attitudes that people construe as “moral” are social identities closely tied to the self-concept. First, consistent with the idea that moral convictions are tied to the self-concept, I find in two studies that intensity of moral conviction predicts (1) self-reported identity centrality and (2) reaction time to attitude-related stimuli in a me/not me task, even when controlling for reported attitude importance. Further, moral conviction also predicted participants’ scores on a dominant common factor that underlay both outcomes, suggesting that the association between moral conviction and the self-concept is not a mere artifact of method-related factors. Second, and consistent with the idea that moral convictions are social identities, I find evidence that participants used their moral convictions to perceive, categorize, and remember information about other individuals’ positions on political issues, and that they did so more strongly when their convictions were more identity-central. Finally, I find that the association between moral conviction and intolerance is partly accounted for by moral convictions’ centrality to individuals’ identities, suggesting that the conflict that results from moral disagreement may resemble that which accompanies other identities (e.g., race, gender) and therefore might be mitigated with existing prejudice-reduction strategies.
Subjects/Keywords: Identity; Intolerance; Morality; Politics
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APA (6th Edition):
Ekstrom, P. (2018). We're Good People: Moral conviction as social identity. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of Minnesota. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/11299/200198
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Ekstrom, Pierce. “We're Good People: Moral conviction as social identity.” 2018. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Minnesota. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/11299/200198.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Ekstrom, Pierce. “We're Good People: Moral conviction as social identity.” 2018. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Ekstrom P. We're Good People: Moral conviction as social identity. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. University of Minnesota; 2018. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/11299/200198.
Council of Science Editors:
Ekstrom P. We're Good People: Moral conviction as social identity. [Doctoral Dissertation]. University of Minnesota; 2018. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/11299/200198

Louisiana State University
3.
Verma-Bueche, Sheetal Malini.
Celiac disease: increasing awareness for a better life.
Degree: PhD, Human Resources Management, 2011, Louisiana State University
URL: etd-08302011-110023
;
https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/3293
► The purpose of this study was to determine the awareness and knowledge of Celiac Disease/Gluten Intolerance (CD/GI), among clients of a medical facility in the…
(more)
▼ The purpose of this study was to determine the awareness and knowledge of Celiac Disease/Gluten Intolerance (CD/GI), among clients of a medical facility in the southern portion of the United States. A researcher-designed awareness/knowledge instrument was used to study a random sample of clients of a medical facility. Data were collected from 404 clients at the medical facility. Data collected included whether or not participants were aware of the disease, a 30-item knowledge instrument, and their demographic characteristics. Exploratory factor analysis revealed four identifiable subscales in the knowledge instrument: Symptomology, Diagnosis, Treatment, and Interaction with Other Conditions and Overall Knowledge Score. Multiple Regression analysis was used to determine the amount of variance in the knowledge subscales explained by the demographic characteristics. Results showed that a majority of the participants (53.2%) was unaware of CD/GI. The majority of participants did not know or inaccurately responded to 18 of the 30 statements in the knowledge of CD/GI instrument. Variables related to Awareness included Ethnicity, Marital Status, Highest Level of Education, Annual Family Income, and Physical Examination by their Primary Care Physician (PCP). Variables related to one or more knowledge subscales were Gender, Whether or Not Participants had Children, Highest Level of Education, Physical Examination by their PCP, and Distance Traveled from Home to Medical Facility. The variances explained in the knowledge subscale scores and the overall knowledge score from selected demographic variables ranged from 18.2%-22.4%. It was concluded from the study that there is a lack of awareness and minimal knowledge of CD/GI among the clients of the medical facility. Also, knowledge of CD/GI is a multi-factor concept which offers future research and application opportunities. Recommendations included research on designing and implementing more robust knowledge assessment instruments, education and publicity programs to increase awareness of CD/GI among the general public and enabling physicians to improve their diagnostic skills. The study was considered significant because the results could enable medical and health professionals and nonprofit organizations to direct their education and research efforts to address the many issues that arise from the disease, from heightening awareness, to amelioration, to treatment, to drug therapy.
Subjects/Keywords: Gluten Intolerance; Celiac Disease
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
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Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Verma-Bueche, S. M. (2011). Celiac disease: increasing awareness for a better life. (Doctoral Dissertation). Louisiana State University. Retrieved from etd-08302011-110023 ; https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/3293
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Verma-Bueche, Sheetal Malini. “Celiac disease: increasing awareness for a better life.” 2011. Doctoral Dissertation, Louisiana State University. Accessed January 15, 2021.
etd-08302011-110023 ; https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/3293.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Verma-Bueche, Sheetal Malini. “Celiac disease: increasing awareness for a better life.” 2011. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Verma-Bueche SM. Celiac disease: increasing awareness for a better life. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Louisiana State University; 2011. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: etd-08302011-110023 ; https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/3293.
Council of Science Editors:
Verma-Bueche SM. Celiac disease: increasing awareness for a better life. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Louisiana State University; 2011. Available from: etd-08302011-110023 ; https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/3293

University of Adelaide
4.
Li, Dan.
Microencapsulation of protein with EUDRAGIT S 100 polymer.
Degree: 2005, University of Adelaide
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2440/37986
► Lactose intolerance is a common and inconvenient medical condition and can cause severe discomfort. People who experience lactose intolerance often take lactase enzyme supplements when…
(more)
▼ Lactose
intolerance is a common and inconvenient medical condition and can cause severe discomfort. People who experience lactose
intolerance often take lactase enzyme supplements when they wish to consume dairy products. As a consequence, they normally consume dairy products that are rendered lactose free or else a lactase enzyme supplement is taken concurrently. Normally, these are pills or tablets that dissolve and release the enzyme in the stomach. However, the enzyme may be denatured in the low pH conditions of stomach. Hence, a higher dose is required to ensure that an effective concentration can survive and pass into the small intestine - the site of the enzyme ' s physiological action. This problem is being addressed by microencapsulation methods : surrounding the enzyme with protective materials in the form of small particles. These protect the enzyme in the stomach and allow release in the small intestine. The goal of this research was to investigate an appropriate microencapsulation method for this purpose. An oil - in - oil solvent evaporation method was used to produce microparticles containing BSA protein with a EUDRAGIT S 100 - methacrylic acid and methyl methacrylate copolymer. BSA was used as a cost - effective surrogate for lactase during the research. Sonification was employed during the emulsification step. The microparticles produced at different sonication amplitudes or power outputs were uniform with similar morphologies, typically spheres. Microparticle size decreased with sonicator energy output from 120 µ m to 12 µ m as the amplitude changed from 40 % to 70 %. The encapsulation efficiency at amplitude levels of 50 %, 60 % and 70 % was between 70 % and 80 %. However, the encapsulation efficiency recorded at the 40 % setting was much lower, around 40 %. The release profiles of those microparticles were studied at different pH. There was a slight leakage from the microparticles at low pH. Above pH 7, total release was achieved within 2 hours. The results of this research confirm that the microparticles could encapsulate lactase as part of a treatment of lactose
intolerance.
Advisors/Committee Members: Colby, Christopher Brett (advisor), O'Neill, Brian K. (advisor), Nguyen, Dzuy Q. (advisor), Ngothai, Yung My (advisor), School of Chemical Engineering (school).
Subjects/Keywords: Lactose intolerance; Microencapsulation
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Li, D. (2005). Microencapsulation of protein with EUDRAGIT S 100 polymer. (Thesis). University of Adelaide. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2440/37986
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Li, Dan. “Microencapsulation of protein with EUDRAGIT S 100 polymer.” 2005. Thesis, University of Adelaide. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/2440/37986.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Li, Dan. “Microencapsulation of protein with EUDRAGIT S 100 polymer.” 2005. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Li D. Microencapsulation of protein with EUDRAGIT S 100 polymer. [Internet] [Thesis]. University of Adelaide; 2005. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2440/37986.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Li D. Microencapsulation of protein with EUDRAGIT S 100 polymer. [Thesis]. University of Adelaide; 2005. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2440/37986
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation

University of Manchester
5.
Doebler, Stefanie Claudia.
Religion, ethnic intolerance and homophobia in Europe : a multilevel analysis across 47 countries.
Degree: PhD, 2013, University of Manchester
URL: https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/religion-ethnic-intolerance-and-homophobia-in-europe-a-multilevel-analysis-across-47-countries(04ec8f70-3268-4ae8-a1a1-0aea92755316).html
;
http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.607409
► This thesis is a multilevel analysis of relationships between religion, intolerance towards ethnic out-groups and homophobia across 47 European countries based on European Values Study…
(more)
▼ This thesis is a multilevel analysis of relationships between religion, intolerance towards ethnic out-groups and homophobia across 47 European countries based on European Values Study data (EVS 2010, wave 4). The analysis accounts for associations between the religiosity of individuals and their likelihood of being disinclined to accept people of a different race, immigrants and homosexuals as neighbours, or to accept homosexual behaviour as justifiable. Secondly, relationships between religious and socio-economic national contexts on the two forms of intolerance are studied. Religion is conceptualised as a three-dimensional phenomenon, thus a distinction is made between believing, belonging and religious practice. The main research question motivating the individual-level analysis is: To what extent is religion in Europe associated with intolerance towards ethnic out-groups and homosexuals? The research question of the contextual analysis is: How do the national religious, socio-economic and political contexts citizens live in matter for their tolerance towards out-groups? The key results of the analyses can be summarised as follows: religion is significantly related to both ethnic intolerance and homophobia. Believing in a Higher Power was found to be strongly negatively and fundamentalism strongly positively related to ethnic intolerance in most countries. Religious devoutness and observance, on the other hand, are positively related to ethnic intolerance only in a minority of mostly South-Eastern European countries. All of them have legacies of ethno-religious conflict, poverty and political instability. High religiosity, alongside poverty, nationalism and right-wing authoritarianism are strong predictors of ethnic prejudice in these contexts. In most of Europe, however, neither religious belonging nor religious practice is statistically significantly related to ethnic intolerance. Regarding homophobia, strong positive relationships with all three dimensions of religiosity were found. Contrary to the author’s expectation, religion matters most for the citizens’ dislike of homosexuals in Western European countries where the overall levels of homophobia are comparatively low. In large parts of post-communist Eastern Europe homophobia appears to have a secular face. The finding surprises, given the frequent utilisations of Orthodox and Catholic Christian symbolism that could be observed at public protests against eastern European gay pride parades of the last couple of years. Plausible explanations are explored alongside modernisation- and identity theory: religion has less impact on homophobic attitudes in societies where homophobia is generally more socially acceptable, while in highly modernised Western societies, where liberal values and a general acceptance of homosexuality are prevalent, religious fundamentalism appears to be strongly associated with anti-modern and traditionalistic identities that are exclusive towards out-groups.
Subjects/Keywords: 303.4; Religion, Ethnic Intolerance, Prejudice, Homophobia; Europe
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Doebler, S. C. (2013). Religion, ethnic intolerance and homophobia in Europe : a multilevel analysis across 47 countries. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of Manchester. Retrieved from https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/religion-ethnic-intolerance-and-homophobia-in-europe-a-multilevel-analysis-across-47-countries(04ec8f70-3268-4ae8-a1a1-0aea92755316).html ; http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.607409
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Doebler, Stefanie Claudia. “Religion, ethnic intolerance and homophobia in Europe : a multilevel analysis across 47 countries.” 2013. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Manchester. Accessed January 15, 2021.
https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/religion-ethnic-intolerance-and-homophobia-in-europe-a-multilevel-analysis-across-47-countries(04ec8f70-3268-4ae8-a1a1-0aea92755316).html ; http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.607409.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Doebler, Stefanie Claudia. “Religion, ethnic intolerance and homophobia in Europe : a multilevel analysis across 47 countries.” 2013. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Doebler SC. Religion, ethnic intolerance and homophobia in Europe : a multilevel analysis across 47 countries. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. University of Manchester; 2013. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/religion-ethnic-intolerance-and-homophobia-in-europe-a-multilevel-analysis-across-47-countries(04ec8f70-3268-4ae8-a1a1-0aea92755316).html ; http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.607409.
Council of Science Editors:
Doebler SC. Religion, ethnic intolerance and homophobia in Europe : a multilevel analysis across 47 countries. [Doctoral Dissertation]. University of Manchester; 2013. Available from: https://www.research.manchester.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/religion-ethnic-intolerance-and-homophobia-in-europe-a-multilevel-analysis-across-47-countries(04ec8f70-3268-4ae8-a1a1-0aea92755316).html ; http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.607409

King's College London (University of London)
6.
Evetts, Simon Nicholas.
Human cardiovascular baroreceptor function and blood pressure control : effects of aerobic fitness and microgravity.
Degree: PhD, 2001, King's College London (University of London)
URL: https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/human-cardiovascular-baroreceptor-function-and-blood-pressure-control –
effects-of-aerobic-fitness-and-microgravity(13def2f6-128a-45a4-aaf8-c3cc0bf65268).html
;
http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.250721
Subjects/Keywords: 612.014; Orthostatic intolerance
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Evetts, S. N. (2001). Human cardiovascular baroreceptor function and blood pressure control : effects of aerobic fitness and microgravity. (Doctoral Dissertation). King's College London (University of London). Retrieved from https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/human-cardiovascular-baroreceptor-function-and-blood-pressure-control – effects-of-aerobic-fitness-and-microgravity(13def2f6-128a-45a4-aaf8-c3cc0bf65268).html ; http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.250721
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Evetts, Simon Nicholas. “Human cardiovascular baroreceptor function and blood pressure control : effects of aerobic fitness and microgravity.” 2001. Doctoral Dissertation, King's College London (University of London). Accessed January 15, 2021.
https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/human-cardiovascular-baroreceptor-function-and-blood-pressure-control – effects-of-aerobic-fitness-and-microgravity(13def2f6-128a-45a4-aaf8-c3cc0bf65268).html ; http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.250721.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Evetts, Simon Nicholas. “Human cardiovascular baroreceptor function and blood pressure control : effects of aerobic fitness and microgravity.” 2001. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Evetts SN. Human cardiovascular baroreceptor function and blood pressure control : effects of aerobic fitness and microgravity. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. King's College London (University of London); 2001. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/human-cardiovascular-baroreceptor-function-and-blood-pressure-control – effects-of-aerobic-fitness-and-microgravity(13def2f6-128a-45a4-aaf8-c3cc0bf65268).html ; http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.250721.
Council of Science Editors:
Evetts SN. Human cardiovascular baroreceptor function and blood pressure control : effects of aerobic fitness and microgravity. [Doctoral Dissertation]. King's College London (University of London); 2001. Available from: https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/en/theses/human-cardiovascular-baroreceptor-function-and-blood-pressure-control – effects-of-aerobic-fitness-and-microgravity(13def2f6-128a-45a4-aaf8-c3cc0bf65268).html ; http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.250721
7.
Naberhuis, Jane.
A multifaceted approach to addressing feeding intolerance in the preterm infant.
Degree: PhD, Nutritional Sciences, 2015, University of Illinois – Urbana-Champaign
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2142/78773
► In 2013, 11.4% of births in the United States occurred preterm.1 Due to the immaturity of the gastrointestinal tract, these infants are at increased risk…
(more)
▼ In 2013, 11.4% of births in the United States occurred preterm.1 Due to the immaturity of the gastrointestinal tract, these infants are at increased risk of feeding
intolerance and necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC). NEC is the most common surgical emergency among infants and proves fatal for 25-33% those diagnosed.2,3 Effective early detection of these conditions,4 combined with targeted therapies to promote intestinal adaptation and weaning from parenteral nutrition (PN), represent an important opportunity to improve infant outcomes. To this end, the following studies were conducted.
1. The safety and efficacy of teduglutide, an analog of human glucagon-like peptide-2 (GLP-2) approved for use only in adults, in reducing PN requirements was assessed via a systematic review.5 Fourteen reports met the inclusion criteria. Teduglutide reduced PN requirements vs. placebo regardless of PN dependence duration, whereas adverse event incidence was similar between groups (number needed to treat to benefit [NNTB] = 3-4; number needed to treat to harm [NNTH] = 24-187).
2. Teduglutide-stimulated intestinal adaptation, potential synergies with partial enteral nutrition (PEN), and distinct temporal markers of adaptation were investigated in a neonatal piglet model of short bowel syndrome (SBS). Teduglutide improved (P < 0.05) mucosal surface area (villus height: duodenum, jejunum, ileum; crypt depth: ileum, colon; proliferation: duodenum, jejunum, ileum, colon; apoptosis: jejunum, ileum, colon) and acute nutrient processing capacity (glucose: duodenum, jejunum, ileum; glutamine: duodenum, jejunum). PEN complimented and synergistically enhanced these effects. Structural adaptation preceded functional adaptation, but crypt depth was a strong indicator of adaptation, regardless of time.
3. A novel feeding
intolerance and NEC risk scoring tool was implemented in the University of Illinois-affiliated Carle Foundation Hospital (CFH) level III neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). During the study period, 499 tools were completed on the 133 enrolled infants. Indices of feeding
intolerance included days with emesis, abdominal distention, or gastric residuals > 50% of previous feeding volume, and NEC. Anonymous surveys (n = 42) indicated nurses’ positive attitudes toward the tool (ease of use of 6.9 [SD 1.9] on 10-point scale). Estimated tool completion time was 4.2 minutes (range 1-10). Error rate (9.2%), Cronbach’s alpha (0.71), the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC; 0.99), and Fleiss’ kappa (1.00) were in acceptable ranges. Gestational age at birth, hypoxia/asphyxia at birth, red blood cell (RBC) transfusion, and congenital heart disease/patent ductus arteriosis (PDA) were significantly associated with all four outcome measures. Total optimized tool score was also associated with all four outcome measures, with area under the ROC curve (AUC) and diagnostic odds ratio (OR) estimates [95% CI] of: emesis, AUC = 0.69 and OR = 1.14 [1.06, 1.23]; abdominal distention, AUC = 0.82 and OR = 1.28 [1.18, 1.41]; gastric residuals > 50%…
Advisors/Committee Members: Tappenden, Kelly A. (advisor), Teran-Garcia, Margarita (Committee Chair), Swanson, Kelly S. (committee member), Soloveychik, Vitaliy (committee member).
Subjects/Keywords: Feeding intolerance; necrotizing enterocolitis; preterm; infant; teduglutide
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Naberhuis, J. (2015). A multifaceted approach to addressing feeding intolerance in the preterm infant. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of Illinois – Urbana-Champaign. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2142/78773
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Naberhuis, Jane. “A multifaceted approach to addressing feeding intolerance in the preterm infant.” 2015. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Illinois – Urbana-Champaign. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/2142/78773.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Naberhuis, Jane. “A multifaceted approach to addressing feeding intolerance in the preterm infant.” 2015. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Naberhuis J. A multifaceted approach to addressing feeding intolerance in the preterm infant. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. University of Illinois – Urbana-Champaign; 2015. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2142/78773.
Council of Science Editors:
Naberhuis J. A multifaceted approach to addressing feeding intolerance in the preterm infant. [Doctoral Dissertation]. University of Illinois – Urbana-Champaign; 2015. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2142/78773

University of Minnesota
8.
Reifen Tagar, Michal.
Why Disagreement Obstructs Constructive Dialogue: The Role of Biased Attribution of Moral Motives.
Degree: PhD, Psychology, 2014, University of Minnesota
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/11299/183337
► Diversity of opinions is often celebrated as an opportunity to learn from one another and to improve decision-making by widening the scope of considerations informing…
(more)
▼ Diversity of opinions is often celebrated as an opportunity to learn from one another and to improve decision-making by widening the scope of considerations informing decisions, and, on the societal level, is lauded as the foundation of liberal democracy. Yet, constructive dialogue across lines of disagreement is often lacking, especially around the more charged and contentious issues of disagreement. The goal of the current research project was to examine the proposition that biased attribution of moral motives plays an adverse role in the relation between disagreement and tolerance of ideational opponents. In particular, it was expected that people impugn the moral motives of those with dissimilar opinions, especially when the issue of contention is held as a moral conviction, and that this biased perception in turn leads to greater intolerance of such opponents. The pattern of results accrued across four studies supports this expectation. Across diverse issues of disagreement, to the extent that participants held their positions with high moral conviction, they were more likely to see their ideational opponents as less morally motivated than themselves, and this biased attribution, in turn, led to more negative attitudes and emotions toward the other, to greater distrust and desire for social distance, and less willingness to work together; all this occurring above and beyond the simultaneous mediating role of biased attribution of ability. These negative outcomes effectively obstruct the likelihood of engagement and constructive dialogue that could advance shared understanding, and ultimately individual and societal progress and well-being. As such, the pattern of results that emerged from the current research suggests that biased attribution of moral motives in the context of moral disagreement deserves greater attention in future studies of interpersonal, organizational, and intergroup relations, as well as democratic processes.
Subjects/Keywords: Attribution; Conflict; Disagreement; Intolerance; Morality; Political Psychology
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APA (6th Edition):
Reifen Tagar, M. (2014). Why Disagreement Obstructs Constructive Dialogue: The Role of Biased Attribution of Moral Motives. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of Minnesota. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/11299/183337
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Reifen Tagar, Michal. “Why Disagreement Obstructs Constructive Dialogue: The Role of Biased Attribution of Moral Motives.” 2014. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Minnesota. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/11299/183337.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Reifen Tagar, Michal. “Why Disagreement Obstructs Constructive Dialogue: The Role of Biased Attribution of Moral Motives.” 2014. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Reifen Tagar M. Why Disagreement Obstructs Constructive Dialogue: The Role of Biased Attribution of Moral Motives. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. University of Minnesota; 2014. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/11299/183337.
Council of Science Editors:
Reifen Tagar M. Why Disagreement Obstructs Constructive Dialogue: The Role of Biased Attribution of Moral Motives. [Doctoral Dissertation]. University of Minnesota; 2014. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/11299/183337

University of Iowa
9.
Diehl, Ursula Anne.
The role of the hydrostatic indifferent point in governing splachnic blood pooling during orthostatic stress.
Degree: MS, Exercise Science, 2011, University of Iowa
URL: https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/948
► The response of the circulatory system to gravity and hydrostatic forces has been well studied, for example the hydrostatic indifferent point (the location at…
(more)
▼ The response of the circulatory system to gravity and hydrostatic forces has been well studied, for example the hydrostatic indifferent point (the location at which pressure does not change with posture) of the venous system has been established to be an important determinant of orthostatic responses and it has been found to be located near the diaphragm. However, the role of the abdomen has been less researched; for example, it appears that the concept that the abdominal compartment may have its own hydrostatic indifferent point has been overlooked. The goal of the present study was to establish the location of the abdominal hydrostatic indifferent point (HIPab) and to test the hypothesis that binding of the lower abdomen would shift the location of the HIPab cranially. Intra-abdominal pressure was measured using a modified wick needle technique in the supine and upright posture before and after binding of the lower abdomen in 7 anesthetized rats. In the unbound condition, the HIPab was located 5.2 ± 0.3 cm caudal to the xyphoid, meaning the hepatic veins were exposed to relatively large negative interstitial pressures during head-up tilt. Binding of the lower abdomen significantly (p <0.05) shifted the HIPab cranially by 1.7 cm. Thus, the relatively caudal location of the HIPab causes a relatively large hepatic transmural pressure owing to the fall in interstitial pressure during upright posture. The cranial shift of the HIPab by binding of the lower abdomen lessens the fall in hepatic extramural pressure and thereby protects the hepatic veins from distension.
Advisors/Committee Members: Sheriff, Don D. (supervisor).
Subjects/Keywords: orthostatic intolerance; venous pooling; Exercise Physiology
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APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
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APA (6th Edition):
Diehl, U. A. (2011). The role of the hydrostatic indifferent point in governing splachnic blood pooling during orthostatic stress. (Masters Thesis). University of Iowa. Retrieved from https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/948
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Diehl, Ursula Anne. “The role of the hydrostatic indifferent point in governing splachnic blood pooling during orthostatic stress.” 2011. Masters Thesis, University of Iowa. Accessed January 15, 2021.
https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/948.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Diehl, Ursula Anne. “The role of the hydrostatic indifferent point in governing splachnic blood pooling during orthostatic stress.” 2011. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Diehl UA. The role of the hydrostatic indifferent point in governing splachnic blood pooling during orthostatic stress. [Internet] [Masters thesis]. University of Iowa; 2011. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/948.
Council of Science Editors:
Diehl UA. The role of the hydrostatic indifferent point in governing splachnic blood pooling during orthostatic stress. [Masters Thesis]. University of Iowa; 2011. Available from: https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/948

University of Houston
10.
Grad, Jaclyn.
INTOLERANCE OF UNCERTAINTY: A COGNITIVE VULNERABILITY THAT PREDISPOSES INDIVIDUALS TO DEVELOP SOCIAL ANXIETY DISORDER?.
Degree: Psychology - Clinical, Clinical Psychology, 2012, University of Houston
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10657/250
► One of the goals in the field of psychology is to identify risk factors that may predispose certain individuals to develop psychological disorders. If psychologists…
(more)
▼ One of the goals in the field of psychology is to identify risk factors that may predispose certain individuals to develop psychological disorders. If psychologists can find such vulnerabilities, they can formulate behavioral interventions targeting those factors. One potential cognitive vulnerability that may be a risk factor for the development of social anxiety disorder is “
intolerance of uncertainty” (IU). The primary aim of the current study is to explore the relationship between
intolerance of uncertainty and social anxiety. 217 participants were chosen from a selection of individuals seeking services through a university run psychology clinic. Once enrolled in the study, they completed a battery of questionnaires regarding experience of anxiety and
intolerance of uncertainty. They were then interviewed using a structured interview schedule based on DSM-IV criteria for diagnosis of anxiety disorders. The current analyses indicated that
intolerance of uncertainty is significantly linked with social anxiety. In examining the direct and indirect paths in the model, all pathways were significant at the <.01 level. Interestingly, the direct path from
intolerance of uncertainty to social anxiety was substantially stronger than any other pathway in the model. This suggests that
intolerance of is uniquely related to social anxiety above and beyond the influence of other variables. Overall, the results of this study extend the work of previous research and provide empirical support for
intolerance of uncertainty as a cognitive vulnerability impacting social anxiety. Future research should explore behavioral interventions targeted at reducing
intolerance of uncertainty to ascertain its utility as a focus of clinical interventions.
Advisors/Committee Members: Norton, Peter J. (advisor), Babcock, Julia (committee member), Alcantara, Adriana (committee member), Grant, Jill R. (committee member).
Subjects/Keywords: Intolerance of uncertainty; social phobia; cognitive vulnerability
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APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
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Export
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APA (6th Edition):
Grad, J. (2012). INTOLERANCE OF UNCERTAINTY: A COGNITIVE VULNERABILITY THAT PREDISPOSES INDIVIDUALS TO DEVELOP SOCIAL ANXIETY DISORDER?. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of Houston. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10657/250
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Grad, Jaclyn. “INTOLERANCE OF UNCERTAINTY: A COGNITIVE VULNERABILITY THAT PREDISPOSES INDIVIDUALS TO DEVELOP SOCIAL ANXIETY DISORDER?.” 2012. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Houston. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/10657/250.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Grad, Jaclyn. “INTOLERANCE OF UNCERTAINTY: A COGNITIVE VULNERABILITY THAT PREDISPOSES INDIVIDUALS TO DEVELOP SOCIAL ANXIETY DISORDER?.” 2012. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Grad J. INTOLERANCE OF UNCERTAINTY: A COGNITIVE VULNERABILITY THAT PREDISPOSES INDIVIDUALS TO DEVELOP SOCIAL ANXIETY DISORDER?. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. University of Houston; 2012. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/10657/250.
Council of Science Editors:
Grad J. INTOLERANCE OF UNCERTAINTY: A COGNITIVE VULNERABILITY THAT PREDISPOSES INDIVIDUALS TO DEVELOP SOCIAL ANXIETY DISORDER?. [Doctoral Dissertation]. University of Houston; 2012. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/10657/250
11.
Spitaletta, Jason.
Intolerance of Uncertainty and Ambiguity and the Preservation of Working Memory Capacity in Military and Undergraduate Cohorts.
Degree: PhD, Psychology, 2015, Catholic U of America
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1961/cuislandora:28256
► The study began with the assumptions that military personnel are required to make decisions under uncertainty, that uncertainty is inherently stressful and that stress can…
(more)
▼ The study began with the assumptions that military personnel are required to make decisions under uncertainty, that uncertainty is inherently stressful and that stress can negatively impact cognitive components, specifically working memory. As a consequence, in supporting military decision-making, it is important to examine how those cognitive components are related to established models of decision-making. Orientation, the hub upon which Boyd's Observation, Orientation, Decision, Action (OODA) Loop rotates (Richards, 2012), is enabled by working memory, and as such the OODA Loop provides a framework to examine the association between intolerance of ambiguity (IA) and of uncertainty (IU) and working memory capacity (WMC). The inability to tolerate different forms of distress, specifically intolerance of ambiguity and intolerance of uncertainty may predispose individuals to stressful reactions to uncertainty and therefore degrade working memory. Since the cognitive component of primary interest was working memory, the experiments examined the relationship between IA and IU and working memory over time. The mechanism by which that was accomplished was the introduction of ambiguous stimuli to the Operation Span (OSpan) task, resulting in a variant called the OSpan(A). This measure was used first with the military cohort as a part of a broader study on the cognitive neuroscience of resilience and again with the undergraduate cohort with a narrower focus. The main findings were that IA and IU are highly correlated; IA and IU are related to the preservation of WMC to a limited degree, although there are no consistently strong relationships; and that recall of ambiguous stimuli is a reliable predictor of WMC preservation. Additional research is required to validate the cognitive aspects of the OODA Loop, to determine whether ambiguous stimuli differentially induce stress in high IU/IA individuals, and if so, to identify how that stress impacts WM.
Degree awarded: Ph.D. Psychology. The Catholic University of America
Advisors/Committee Members: Sebrechts, Marc M. (Advisor), Clawson, Deborah M. (Other), Fuller, Rebecca L.M. (Other).
Subjects/Keywords: Psychology; decision-making; intolerance of ambiguity; intolerance of uncertainty; military psychology; working memory
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APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Spitaletta, J. (2015). Intolerance of Uncertainty and Ambiguity and the Preservation of Working Memory Capacity in Military and Undergraduate Cohorts. (Doctoral Dissertation). Catholic U of America. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1961/cuislandora:28256
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Spitaletta, Jason. “Intolerance of Uncertainty and Ambiguity and the Preservation of Working Memory Capacity in Military and Undergraduate Cohorts.” 2015. Doctoral Dissertation, Catholic U of America. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/1961/cuislandora:28256.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Spitaletta, Jason. “Intolerance of Uncertainty and Ambiguity and the Preservation of Working Memory Capacity in Military and Undergraduate Cohorts.” 2015. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Spitaletta J. Intolerance of Uncertainty and Ambiguity and the Preservation of Working Memory Capacity in Military and Undergraduate Cohorts. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Catholic U of America; 2015. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1961/cuislandora:28256.
Council of Science Editors:
Spitaletta J. Intolerance of Uncertainty and Ambiguity and the Preservation of Working Memory Capacity in Military and Undergraduate Cohorts. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Catholic U of America; 2015. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1961/cuislandora:28256

University of Adelaide
12.
Yantcheva, Bella Bojidarova.
Psychological characteristics associated with food avoidance behaviour and perceived (non-‐medically diagnosed) food intolerance in Australia.
Degree: 2017, University of Adelaide
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2440/107382
► Background: The aim of this thesis was to increase understanding of the discrepancy reported in the literature between perceived and medically diagnosed food intolerance. It…
(more)
▼ Background: The aim of this thesis was to increase understanding of the discrepancy reported in the literature between perceived and medically diagnosed food
intolerance. It also addressed the emerging trend in modern health decision making towards self-diagnosis and self-management of symptoms through the use of non‐medically supervised exclusion diets. The hypothesis was investigated that specific individual‐level psychological characteristics may underpin this phenomenon. Of particular interest was to explore factors, which are associated with the belief that reported symptoms are due to an
intolerance or sensitivity to certain foods, in the absence of formal medical diagnosis. Underlying this was the question whether the psychogenic characteristics previously associated with perceived food
intolerance in mostly clinical studies, which are thought to result in the misperception and misattribution of symptoms, could be generalised to people with perceived food
intolerance in the general population. Aims of the thesis: • To extend understanding of predictors of food avoidance in the Australian adult population beyond wheat avoidance to dairy avoidance. As part of that to investigate the symptoms, diagnoses and the potential for misattributions leading to self-prescribed food avoidance (Study 1). • To explore the associated symptoms, the sources of diagnosis, and the psychological predictors of reporting of non‐medically diagnosed (NMD) and medically diagnosed (MD) food intolerances in the Australian population (Study 2). • To explore whether somatosensory amplification, described in previous research as a predisposing condition that leads to perceived food
intolerance through the process of somatisation, is potentially a response to the experiencing of very severe symptoms, rather than a cause of the condition and its symptoms (Study 3). Results: Study 1 The avoidance of dairy appeared to rely substantially on a NMD connection between ingestion and symptoms, and was associated with increased reporting of past food
intolerance. It was also predicted by worry about illness. These findings raised questions regarding the individual-level characteristics that may predispose individuals to attribute symptoms to the consumption of certain foods and, without a medical diagnosis, to subsequently label themselves as food intolerant. They also directed attention to the possible contribution of illness worry to the amplification and misattribution of these symptoms. Study 2 found that many adult Australians classify themselves as food intolerant without a supporting medical diagnosis. Having a NMD
intolerance was associated with increased receptiveness to complementary and alternative medicine. Null effects for neuroticism cast doubt on the role of anxiety and negative affect suggested by clinical research. The found association of somatosensory amplification with both MD and NMD intolerances indicates that extra‐vigilance in respect of symptoms is not peculiar to the latter. Study 3 revealed that the tendency to amplify…
Advisors/Committee Members: Mohr, Philip Benjamin (advisor), Golley, Sinead (advisor), School of Psychology (school).
Subjects/Keywords: food avoidance; medically diagnosed intolerance; non-medically diagnosed intolerance; somatosensory amplification tendency; Research by Publication
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APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Yantcheva, B. B. (2017). Psychological characteristics associated with food avoidance behaviour and perceived (non-‐medically diagnosed) food intolerance in Australia. (Thesis). University of Adelaide. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2440/107382
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Yantcheva, Bella Bojidarova. “Psychological characteristics associated with food avoidance behaviour and perceived (non-‐medically diagnosed) food intolerance in Australia.” 2017. Thesis, University of Adelaide. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/2440/107382.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Yantcheva, Bella Bojidarova. “Psychological characteristics associated with food avoidance behaviour and perceived (non-‐medically diagnosed) food intolerance in Australia.” 2017. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Yantcheva BB. Psychological characteristics associated with food avoidance behaviour and perceived (non-‐medically diagnosed) food intolerance in Australia. [Internet] [Thesis]. University of Adelaide; 2017. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2440/107382.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Yantcheva BB. Psychological characteristics associated with food avoidance behaviour and perceived (non-‐medically diagnosed) food intolerance in Australia. [Thesis]. University of Adelaide; 2017. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/2440/107382
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation

University of Minnesota
13.
Rautu, Alex.
Toward a Structurally-Sound Model of Uncertainty-Related Personality Traits.
Degree: PhD, Psychology, 2018, University of Minnesota
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/11299/201121
► Numerous personality constructs have been proposed over the last 70 years to describe individual differences in attitudes toward uncertainty, including Intolerance of Ambiguity (IA), Intolerance…
(more)
▼ Numerous personality constructs have been proposed over the last 70 years to describe individual differences in attitudes toward uncertainty, including Intolerance of Ambiguity (IA), Intolerance of Uncertainty (IU), Uncertainty Orientation (UO), Need for Closure (NFC), and Personal Need for Structure (PNS). Despite differences in their theoretical foundations and applications, these constructs share considerable similarities in conceptualization and measurement, which have confounded researchers about how they can be meaningfully distinguished. Study 1 examined the facet- and construct-level overlap among multiscale measures of IA, IU, and NFC—constructs that have received the lion’s share of research attention—also including the Uncertainty Response Scale (URS; Greco & Roger, 2001). Confirmatory factor analysis revealed that the general factors underlying each measure were identical or near-identical with one another (in two US samples but not an Italian sample), and exploratory factor analyses of both the items and facets of each measure found that only four factors replicated across US and Italian samples. Moreover, the four factors uncovered showed strong concurrent validity with trait measures of neuroticism, orderliness, curiosity/exploration, and naïve epistemic beliefs, which suggested that they reflect distinct types of responses to uncertainty, consistent with the model assumptions of the URS. Another two studies examined the discriminant predictive validity of the four factors with respect to evidence gathering (Study 2) and avoidance of ambiguity under conditions of threat and high cognitive demand (Study 3). Their results confirmed that these factors predict different behavioral outcomes and have more predictive power than NFC, IA, and IU scales. Overall, this work demonstrates that a four-factor model has psychometric and conceptual advantages over current measures of uncertainty-related constructs, which are lacking in discriminant validity.
Subjects/Keywords: intolerance of ambiguity; intolerance of uncertainty; need for closure; personality trait; uncertainty
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APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Rautu, A. (2018). Toward a Structurally-Sound Model of Uncertainty-Related Personality Traits. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of Minnesota. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/11299/201121
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Rautu, Alex. “Toward a Structurally-Sound Model of Uncertainty-Related Personality Traits.” 2018. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Minnesota. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/11299/201121.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Rautu, Alex. “Toward a Structurally-Sound Model of Uncertainty-Related Personality Traits.” 2018. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Rautu A. Toward a Structurally-Sound Model of Uncertainty-Related Personality Traits. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. University of Minnesota; 2018. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/11299/201121.
Council of Science Editors:
Rautu A. Toward a Structurally-Sound Model of Uncertainty-Related Personality Traits. [Doctoral Dissertation]. University of Minnesota; 2018. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/11299/201121
14.
Nilsson, Oskar.
Quantifying Environmental Intolerance : Digital Reports From Daily Life.
Degree: Psychology, 2018, Umeå University
URL: http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-149052
► Environmental intolerance (EI) is a condition characterized by low tolerance to environmental stimuli at levels that would not affect most people. EI is an…
(more)
▼ Environmental intolerance (EI) is a condition characterized by low tolerance to environmental stimuli at levels that would not affect most people. EI is an ill-defined condition from which sufferers experience highly individual multisystem symptoms following exposure from specific environmental sources. Subgroups of EI are typically distinguished by the source that cause negative effects. In this study, intolerance attributed to noise and odors was investigated. Most research on EI is conducted using cross sectional approaches and among the instruments used to quantify EI is the Noise Sensitivity Scale (NSS-11) and the Chemical Sensitivity Scale for Sensory Hyperreactivity (CSS-SHR). To fully understand EI, more longitudinal research is needed. The aim of this study was to establish how a recently developed smartphone app, intended for longitudinal research, compares to the NSS-11 and CSS-SHR with regards to its ability to detect EI. 12 participants (mean age 29 years, SD=10.7 years) filled out the NSS-11/CSS-SHR following a period of two weeks using the app. It was hypothesized that individuals scoring high/low on the NSS-11/CSS-SHR would also express high/low levels of EI as measured by reports in the app on the variables discomfort rating, number of unique symptoms reported and number of reports. Although analyses revealed effects in the direction of the hypothesis for all variables, Independent samples t-test analyses yielded no significant associations. Either there are in fact no differences, but speculatively, the lack of significant associations can also be attributed any the following: (1) the groups were to similar (2) the sample was too small (3) the participants used avoidance as coping strategies.
Subjects/Keywords: Environmental intolerance; noise intolerance; chemical intolerance; Applied Psychology; Tillämpad psykologi
…high- or low intolerance group for noise and odors/chemicals, respectively, based
on a split… …samples t-test analyses with group (high/low intolerance) as independent variables
and… …Grouping
Participants were grouped into a high or low intolerance group based on their scores on… …present study and norm
data revealed that the low intolerance group corresponded to the 59th… …percentile for the CSS-SHR
(mean score 25.17, SD=4). The high intolerance group…
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APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Nilsson, O. (2018). Quantifying Environmental Intolerance : Digital Reports From Daily Life. (Thesis). Umeå University. Retrieved from http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-149052
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Nilsson, Oskar. “Quantifying Environmental Intolerance : Digital Reports From Daily Life.” 2018. Thesis, Umeå University. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-149052.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Nilsson, Oskar. “Quantifying Environmental Intolerance : Digital Reports From Daily Life.” 2018. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Nilsson O. Quantifying Environmental Intolerance : Digital Reports From Daily Life. [Internet] [Thesis]. Umeå University; 2018. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-149052.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Nilsson O. Quantifying Environmental Intolerance : Digital Reports From Daily Life. [Thesis]. Umeå University; 2018. Available from: http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-149052
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation

University of Guelph
15.
Hamilton, Melissa.
Feeding butter with elevated content of trans-10, cis-12 conjugated linoleic acid to obese-prone rats impairs glucose and insulin tolerance.
Degree: MS, Department of Human Health and Nutritional Sciences, 2015, University of Guelph
URL: https://atrium.lib.uoguelph.ca/xmlui/handle/10214/9148
► This study was conducted to evaluate dietary CLAt10c12 consumption by obese prone rats considering supplemental doses have shown to contribute to the development of insulin…
(more)
▼ This study was conducted to evaluate dietary CLAt10c12 consumption by obese prone rats considering supplemental doses have shown to contribute to the development of insulin resistance. We created butter from cows with subacute ruminal acidosis (SARA), a condition that decreases the pH of a dairy cow’s rumen and increases CLAt10c12 10-fold making this an enriched naturally occurring source of CLAt10c12. We evaluated if SARA butter would result in a greater risk of developing glucose and insulin
intolerance, impaired insulin signaling and increased markers of inflammation compared to various diets (Lean Zuckers: low (10%) fat (LF), Obese Zuckers: LF, 45% lard, 45% non-SARA butter). After 8 weeks, SARA was comparable with Lard for its negative impact on glucose and insulin tolerance, followed by non- SARA, LF and leans respectively. Differences were not reflected in the insulin signaling markers. Markers of inflammation were variable across tissues (adipose, skeletal muscle, liver).
Advisors/Committee Members: Hamilton, Melissa (advisor), Dyck, David (advisor).
Subjects/Keywords: CLA; Conjugated Linoleic Acid; Insulin Resistance; Glucose Intolerance; Insulin Intolerance; Butter; Subacute Ruminal Acidosis; Natural; Obesity; Zucker; Rats
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Hamilton, M. (2015). Feeding butter with elevated content of trans-10, cis-12 conjugated linoleic acid to obese-prone rats impairs glucose and insulin tolerance. (Masters Thesis). University of Guelph. Retrieved from https://atrium.lib.uoguelph.ca/xmlui/handle/10214/9148
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Hamilton, Melissa. “Feeding butter with elevated content of trans-10, cis-12 conjugated linoleic acid to obese-prone rats impairs glucose and insulin tolerance.” 2015. Masters Thesis, University of Guelph. Accessed January 15, 2021.
https://atrium.lib.uoguelph.ca/xmlui/handle/10214/9148.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Hamilton, Melissa. “Feeding butter with elevated content of trans-10, cis-12 conjugated linoleic acid to obese-prone rats impairs glucose and insulin tolerance.” 2015. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Hamilton M. Feeding butter with elevated content of trans-10, cis-12 conjugated linoleic acid to obese-prone rats impairs glucose and insulin tolerance. [Internet] [Masters thesis]. University of Guelph; 2015. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: https://atrium.lib.uoguelph.ca/xmlui/handle/10214/9148.
Council of Science Editors:
Hamilton M. Feeding butter with elevated content of trans-10, cis-12 conjugated linoleic acid to obese-prone rats impairs glucose and insulin tolerance. [Masters Thesis]. University of Guelph; 2015. Available from: https://atrium.lib.uoguelph.ca/xmlui/handle/10214/9148

Freie Universität Berlin
16.
Melde, Annika.
Histamine intolerance - a cause of chronic spontanous urticaria?.
Degree: 2013, Freie Universität Berlin
URL: https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/handle/fub188/12684
► A variety of food components are accused of inducing or aggravating chronic spontaneous urticaria (csU). Among these, histamine is one of the prime suspects and…
(more)
▼ A variety of food components are accused of inducing or aggravating chronic
spontaneous urticaria (csU). Among these, histamine is one of the prime
suspects and histamine
intolerance has been claimed to be one of the causes of
csU. To assess the prevalence and relevance of histamine
intolerance as an
underlying cause in csU we prospectively investigated 241 csU patients for a
history of histamine-induced urticarial rash, their changes in disease
activity following a three week pseudoallergen- and histamine-low diet, and
their responses (including the development of csU symptoms) to a double blind
placebo-controlled oral provocation test with 75 mg histamine. The self-
reported prevalence of episodes of urticarial rash after the consumption of
histamine-rich foods was 30.3% (66 patients). 43.7% (100 patients) benefited
substantially (improvement of urticaria activity score: ≥ 30%) from the
histamine-low diet, and 12.5% (28 patients) experienced wheals following oral
histamine provocation, but not placebo provocation. Interestingly, self-
reported urticarial symptoms due to histamine-rich foods did not correlate
with a likeliness of benefitting from elimination diet. Among the patients who
benefited from the elimination diet 1/3 considered themselves to respond with
urticarial rash to histamine-rich foods, 2/3 did not. Thus, the patients’
self-assessment was no indicator of a possible benefit from the elimination
diet. Only 3 of all patients (1.5%) had a history of urticarial rash due to
histamine-rich foods, a benefit from the diet and a positive response to
histamine provocation. In conclusion, these data indicate that csU due to
histamine
intolerance as defined by a history of urticarial rash induced by
histamine-rich foods, benefit from a histamine-low diet and the induction of
urticaria symptoms following histamine provocation is rare.
Advisors/Committee Members: [email protected] (contact), w (gender), Prof. Dr. Maurer (firstReferee), Prof. Dr. Brockow (furtherReferee), Prof. Dr. Jakob (furtherReferee).
Subjects/Keywords: histamine intolerance; chronic spontanous urticaria; urticaria; food intolerance; 600 Technik, Medizin, angewandte Wissenschaften::610 Medizin und Gesundheit
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APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Melde, A. (2013). Histamine intolerance - a cause of chronic spontanous urticaria?. (Thesis). Freie Universität Berlin. Retrieved from https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/handle/fub188/12684
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Melde, Annika. “Histamine intolerance - a cause of chronic spontanous urticaria?.” 2013. Thesis, Freie Universität Berlin. Accessed January 15, 2021.
https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/handle/fub188/12684.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Melde, Annika. “Histamine intolerance - a cause of chronic spontanous urticaria?.” 2013. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Melde A. Histamine intolerance - a cause of chronic spontanous urticaria?. [Internet] [Thesis]. Freie Universität Berlin; 2013. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/handle/fub188/12684.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Melde A. Histamine intolerance - a cause of chronic spontanous urticaria?. [Thesis]. Freie Universität Berlin; 2013. Available from: https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/handle/fub188/12684
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation

Universidade do Rio Grande do Sul
17.
Pacheco, Marina de Araújo.
Criminalização da pobreza e situações-limite : considerações acerca do conflito e da justiça restaurativa sob um olhar sociopsicanalítico.
Degree: 2012, Universidade do Rio Grande do Sul
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10183/72778
► A presente pesquisa busca analisar o fenômeno do conflito humano, sintoma do mal-estar trabalhado por Freud, quando expresso através da agressividade, da violência, do ato…
(more)
▼ A presente pesquisa busca analisar o fenômeno do conflito humano, sintoma do mal-estar trabalhado por Freud, quando expresso através da agressividade, da violência, do ato infracional e da exclusão do diferente que, em níveis extremos, resulta no genocídio. A partir daí, interessa-nos a avaliação de um método alternativo para a resolução desses conflitos, a justiça restaurativa, cujo posicionamento diverso do sistema jurídico-penal vigente é aqui embasado pela criminologia crítica, de Alessandro Baratta. Temos como pano de fundo o estudo da biopolítica, representada pelos processos de normalização e práticas jurídicas descritos por Michel Foucault, sobremaneira influentes na constituição das subjetividades, e, especificamente, o contexto sociopolítico-econômico brasileiro, cujas particularidades determinam o crivo seletivo do sistema penal, que pune com maior rigor as camadas mais vulneráveis da população. Com o foco da pesquisa no ato infracional cometido pelo sujeito adolescente, abordamos o Estatuto da Criança e do Adolescente, o qual, apesar de seu excelente texto e de já estar em vigor há vinte e um anos, parece resultar em processo similar de punição seletiva. Amparados pelas proposições de Giorgio Agamben, analisaremos situações onde o poder instaura um estado de exceção no qual as leis são suspensas em prol da autorização do extermínio, e o homem, destituído de sua condição humana e de seus direitos, não é mais visto como sujeito, senão enquanto vida que pode ser morta impunemente. Além de prisioneiros de campos de concentração, de acordo com o que originalmente propõe Agamben, influenciados pelo trabalho do psicanalista Paulo Endo, acreditamos que se aproximam dessa categoria os presidiários, tendo em vista as condições precárias em que se encontram subjugados, e os próprios adolescentes autores de ato infracional. Ambos encontram-se sob o jugo de um imaginário social de extrema intolerância, representado pelos clamores por uma segurança pública de “tolerância zero”. Realizamos uma leitura positiva acerca da violência e do ato antissocial, enxergando-os como denúncia, busca de reconhecimento, e, conforme propõe Winnicott, como resultado de privações e sinal de esperança. A justiça restaurativa, diante desse contexto, pode ser vista como espaço favorável a mudanças de perspectivas, da verticalidade para a horizontalidade, de uma cultura punitiva para uma cultura do diálogo, onde um sistema autoritário de resolução de conflitos dá lugar a um encontro no qual o conflito é devolvido àqueles a quem de fato pertence, possibilitando a visão do outro enquanto alteridade, e ainda a responsabilização e a restauração de um pacto social que fora rompido muito antes da ofensa em questão. No entanto, apesar da esperança que caracteriza nossas proposições, a pesquisa, embasada pela metodologia psicanalítica, tem como base duas asserções: um conflito original inconsciente, figurado pela pulsão de vida e pulsão de morte em incessante disputa no psiquismo, e a agressividade como inerente a todo o ser humano. Disso decorre…
Advisors/Committee Members: Sousa, Edson Luiz Andre de.
Subjects/Keywords: Violence; Psicologia forense; Intolerance; Psicanálise; Justiça; Otherness; Adolescente; Restorative justice; Utopia
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APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Pacheco, M. d. A. (2012). Criminalização da pobreza e situações-limite : considerações acerca do conflito e da justiça restaurativa sob um olhar sociopsicanalítico. (Thesis). Universidade do Rio Grande do Sul. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10183/72778
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Pacheco, Marina de Araújo. “Criminalização da pobreza e situações-limite : considerações acerca do conflito e da justiça restaurativa sob um olhar sociopsicanalítico.” 2012. Thesis, Universidade do Rio Grande do Sul. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/10183/72778.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Pacheco, Marina de Araújo. “Criminalização da pobreza e situações-limite : considerações acerca do conflito e da justiça restaurativa sob um olhar sociopsicanalítico.” 2012. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Pacheco MdA. Criminalização da pobreza e situações-limite : considerações acerca do conflito e da justiça restaurativa sob um olhar sociopsicanalítico. [Internet] [Thesis]. Universidade do Rio Grande do Sul; 2012. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/10183/72778.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Pacheco MdA. Criminalização da pobreza e situações-limite : considerações acerca do conflito e da justiça restaurativa sob um olhar sociopsicanalítico. [Thesis]. Universidade do Rio Grande do Sul; 2012. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/10183/72778
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation

University of Rochester
18.
Baker, Jonathon L.
Acid and Oxidative Stress Responses in Streptococcus
mutans.
Degree: PhD, 2016, University of Rochester
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1802/31011
► S. mutans, the Gram-positive opportunistic oral pathogen most frequently associated with the development of dental caries, uses a robust acid-adaptive response to avoid becoming a…
(more)
▼ S. mutans, the Gram-positive opportunistic oral
pathogen most frequently associated
with the development of dental
caries, uses a robust acid-adaptive response to avoid
becoming a
victim of its own acidogenic metabolism. S. mutans also encounters
oxidative stress, stemming from oxygen gas present in the oral
cavity, as well as
bacteriocidal amounts of hydrogen peroxide,
produced by other oral streptococci
competing for the same
ecological niche. In this study, the responses of S. mutans to
acid stress, oxidative stress, and both stresses experienced
concurrently were
characterized at the transcriptomic level using
cDNA microarray analysis. These studies
have provided insight into
the adjustments S. mutans makes as a continuous culture
begins
growth at neutral pH, experiences glucose-shock and a rapid pH
drop, and
transitions into steady-state growth at low pH, similar
to conditions in the oral cavity
following intake of host dietary
carbohydrates and maturation of dental plaque.
Oxidative stress
was provided through addition of oxygen gas to the continuous
culture
or through deletion of the oxygen-metabolizing enzyme,
Nox. The acid and oxidative
stress responses appear to be
synergistic, as during these conditions, levels of
numerous
transcripts were elevated several fold higher than the additive
result of both
stresses experienced independently. Study of the S.
mutans transcriptome during
oxidative stress has also led to the
discovery of a novel regulatory loop, involving nox
and the
transcriptional regulators SpxA and Rex. In addition, the loss of
nox
unexpectedly resulted in a greatly elevated ratio of free,
intracellular NAD+/NADH. This
shift was at least in part due to
Rex-mediated up-regulation of lactate dehydrogenase.
Importantly,
the loss of nox rendered S. mutans defective in its ability to
compete directly
with two species of commensal Streptococci,
suggesting a role for nox in the pathogenic
potential of this
organism. The importance of all three genes in the tre operon
during
growth on trehalose was also confirmed and initial work
characterizing the regulon of the
TreR regulator is
presented.
Subjects/Keywords: Dental caries; Oxidative stress; Acid intolerance response; Oral streptococci
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Baker, J. L. (2016). Acid and Oxidative Stress Responses in Streptococcus
mutans. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of Rochester. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1802/31011
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Baker, Jonathon L. “Acid and Oxidative Stress Responses in Streptococcus
mutans.” 2016. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Rochester. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/1802/31011.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Baker, Jonathon L. “Acid and Oxidative Stress Responses in Streptococcus
mutans.” 2016. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Baker JL. Acid and Oxidative Stress Responses in Streptococcus
mutans. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. University of Rochester; 2016. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1802/31011.
Council of Science Editors:
Baker JL. Acid and Oxidative Stress Responses in Streptococcus
mutans. [Doctoral Dissertation]. University of Rochester; 2016. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1802/31011

Temple University
19.
Jakatdar, Tejal.
INTOLERANCE OF UNCERTAINTY FOR IDIOSYNCRATIC CONCERNS IN ANALOGUE GENERALIZED ANXIETY DISORDER, OBSESSIVE COMPULSIVE DISORDER, AND NORMAL CONTROLS.
Degree: PhD, 2010, Temple University
URL: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,97978
► Psychology
The overall goal of the present study was to demonstrate that intolerance of uncertainty (IU) is a key feature in both generalized anxiety disorder…
(more)
▼ Psychology
The overall goal of the present study was to demonstrate that intolerance of uncertainty (IU) is a key feature in both generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). More specifically, I wanted to test certain portions of the conceptual models proposed for the study suggesting that when participants with GAD or OCD are faced with situations that tap into their idiographic concerns, they experience an increase in IU and subsequently either worry or obsessing/ritualizing. College students who met predetermined cutoff scores on study measures were assigned to analogue GAD, OCD, or control groups. The stimuli consisted of scripts that were generated to induce a sense of uncertainty in participants. It was anticipated that, when faced with material related to their idiographic concerns, the experience of uncertainty would lead them to become intolerant of the uncertain thoughts and feelings, thereby leading to increased worry, obsessing and/or ritualizing, and/or negative affect. Each script was 349 words in length and described one of 20 GAD and OCD themes commonly occurring in the literature. Participants' levels of worry, obsessing and/or ritualizing, negative affect, and IU were assessed before and after the scripts were administered. The study design included three levels of group (GAD, OCD, Control) and two levels of script (matched vs. mismatched). Half the participants in analogue GAD and OCD groups were administered scripts associated with their specific concerns (i.e., matched), and the other half were administered scripts that were mismatched. Half of the Control group was administered scripts that were assigned to the GAD matched group and the other half received scripts assigned to the OCD matched group.
The study examined several different hypotheses. IU and negative affect increased from pretest to posttest assessment. However, worry and obsessing and/or ritualizing did not. Posttest IU significantly predicted worry and obsessing and/or ritualizing. However, there were no significant differences between the three groups, nor were there any significant differences as a function of matching vs. mismatching of idiographic concerns. The present study did not find any support for a hypothesized mediational role of IU in the relationship between type of script and worry, obsessing and/or ritualizing, or negative affect. Moreover, there were no significant differences between the GAD, OCD, and Control groups in worry, obsessing and/or ritualizing, negative affect, or IU. These findings did not provide support for the proposed mixed moderation-mediation model. IU was associated with worry, OC, and negative affect, but it may not be the motivational mechanism behind changes in those constructs.
Temple University – Theses
Advisors/Committee Members: Heimberg, Richard G., Giovannetti, Tania, Drabick, Deborah A.G., Conner, Bradley T., Ellman, Lauren, McCloskey, Michael.
Subjects/Keywords: Psychology, Clinical; Analogue; Generalized; Intolerance; Obsessive; Scripts; Uncertainty
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Jakatdar, T. (2010). INTOLERANCE OF UNCERTAINTY FOR IDIOSYNCRATIC CONCERNS IN ANALOGUE GENERALIZED ANXIETY DISORDER, OBSESSIVE COMPULSIVE DISORDER, AND NORMAL CONTROLS. (Doctoral Dissertation). Temple University. Retrieved from http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,97978
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Jakatdar, Tejal. “INTOLERANCE OF UNCERTAINTY FOR IDIOSYNCRATIC CONCERNS IN ANALOGUE GENERALIZED ANXIETY DISORDER, OBSESSIVE COMPULSIVE DISORDER, AND NORMAL CONTROLS.” 2010. Doctoral Dissertation, Temple University. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,97978.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Jakatdar, Tejal. “INTOLERANCE OF UNCERTAINTY FOR IDIOSYNCRATIC CONCERNS IN ANALOGUE GENERALIZED ANXIETY DISORDER, OBSESSIVE COMPULSIVE DISORDER, AND NORMAL CONTROLS.” 2010. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Jakatdar T. INTOLERANCE OF UNCERTAINTY FOR IDIOSYNCRATIC CONCERNS IN ANALOGUE GENERALIZED ANXIETY DISORDER, OBSESSIVE COMPULSIVE DISORDER, AND NORMAL CONTROLS. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Temple University; 2010. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,97978.
Council of Science Editors:
Jakatdar T. INTOLERANCE OF UNCERTAINTY FOR IDIOSYNCRATIC CONCERNS IN ANALOGUE GENERALIZED ANXIETY DISORDER, OBSESSIVE COMPULSIVE DISORDER, AND NORMAL CONTROLS. [Doctoral Dissertation]. Temple University; 2010. Available from: http://digital.library.temple.edu/u?/p245801coll10,97978

Universiteit Utrecht
20.
Dupré la Tour, C.M.S.
Intertitre et film narratif de fiction : Genèses, développements, et logiques d’un procédé filmographique, 1895-1916. L'exemple de la production aux Etats-Unis et le cas d’Intolerance (D. W. Griffith, 1916).
Degree: 2016, Universiteit Utrecht
URL: http://dspace.library.uu.nl:8080/handle/1874/331185
► The silent film intertitle has long been ignored by cinema history and theory, and by film archives; or regarded as an intruder, a palliative to…
(more)
▼ The silent film intertitle has long been ignored by cinema history and theory, and by film archives; or regarded as an intruder, a palliative to the absence of sound, which became obsolete after the invention of talking pictures. The teleology imbued in this historiographical trend, influenced by the intertitle’s contemporaneous controversies, sentenced it to silence. Even today, research only concedes a marginal space to its study. This thesis fits into the framework of studying cinema as an emerging medium around 1900. It constitutes the first comprehensive history of the intertitle in the early stages of cinematography, from its origins until 1916; that is, from spectacular attraction to discursive narration. The thesis’ approach finds its inspiration in historical pragmatics, and unites the conceptual tools of intermediality, narratology, semiology, filmology, and Russian formalism, to understand the logics of intermedial and discursive conjunctions of the text and the moving image. This research opens up historical and theoretical perspectives about the intertitle’s genesis, developments and impacts. It bases itself on rare existing studies and on media archeology: preserved copies, catalogues, corporate press articles, and manuals and archives from the period. The results show that the intertitle has been a key device in the transformations of cinematography between 1895 and 1916: from the first projections of animated views to the advent of the classical feature fiction film. The device’s genesis is rooted in the projection of film titles through magic lantern slides, which constitutes one of the oldest, if not the first, forms of editing on screen. Pivotal technological innovations of the title on film ensued and allowed for the rise of narrative fiction films around 1902-1903. Its subsequent developments, mostly composed of narrative innovations, as can be observed in American productions, were experimented with and discussed in the trade press. The device is a very controversial one: criticisms evoke it as interrupting the image flow, being exterior to the story, and hampering the suspense. However, the use of it spreads as its advantages are numerous: the intertitle allows for the narration of autonomous stories without lecturer, and of original and longer stories; more importantly, it allows to construct the character, to use dialogue, and to synchronize the latter with the character’s locution. The intertitle appears to be the written incarnation of the omniscient filmographic narrator. Together with the images, its configurations generate the spectator’s identification with the narrator and the characters. This device is also capable of enhancing the spectator’s expectations and of producing suspense. The very drafting of the intertitles is crucial, so that the film may be understood by the spectator, and in the way the filmmaker intended it to be. This is revealed in the case study of the writing phases of the complex feature by Griffith,
Intolerance (1916). The intertitle is one of the foundations of…
Advisors/Committee Members: Kessler, Frank.
Subjects/Keywords: Intertitle; Subtitle; Film History; Griffith; Intolerance; Early Silent Cinema; Intermediality
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Dupré la Tour, C. M. S. (2016). Intertitre et film narratif de fiction : Genèses, développements, et logiques d’un procédé filmographique, 1895-1916. L'exemple de la production aux Etats-Unis et le cas d’Intolerance (D. W. Griffith, 1916). (Doctoral Dissertation). Universiteit Utrecht. Retrieved from http://dspace.library.uu.nl:8080/handle/1874/331185
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Dupré la Tour, C M S. “Intertitre et film narratif de fiction : Genèses, développements, et logiques d’un procédé filmographique, 1895-1916. L'exemple de la production aux Etats-Unis et le cas d’Intolerance (D. W. Griffith, 1916).” 2016. Doctoral Dissertation, Universiteit Utrecht. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://dspace.library.uu.nl:8080/handle/1874/331185.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Dupré la Tour, C M S. “Intertitre et film narratif de fiction : Genèses, développements, et logiques d’un procédé filmographique, 1895-1916. L'exemple de la production aux Etats-Unis et le cas d’Intolerance (D. W. Griffith, 1916).” 2016. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Dupré la Tour CMS. Intertitre et film narratif de fiction : Genèses, développements, et logiques d’un procédé filmographique, 1895-1916. L'exemple de la production aux Etats-Unis et le cas d’Intolerance (D. W. Griffith, 1916). [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. Universiteit Utrecht; 2016. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://dspace.library.uu.nl:8080/handle/1874/331185.
Council of Science Editors:
Dupré la Tour CMS. Intertitre et film narratif de fiction : Genèses, développements, et logiques d’un procédé filmographique, 1895-1916. L'exemple de la production aux Etats-Unis et le cas d’Intolerance (D. W. Griffith, 1916). [Doctoral Dissertation]. Universiteit Utrecht; 2016. Available from: http://dspace.library.uu.nl:8080/handle/1874/331185

Universiteit Utrecht
21.
Rovers, M.S.J.M.
The contribution of intolerance of uncertainty to eating disorder pathology and anxiety symptoms in adolescents with Anorexia Nervosa.
Degree: 2016, Universiteit Utrecht
URL: http://dspace.library.uu.nl:8080/handle/1874/335502
► The objective of this study was to explore the contribution of intolerance of uncertainty (IU) to the level of eating disorder pathology and anxiety in…
(more)
▼ The objective of this study was to explore the contribution of
intolerance of uncertainty (IU) to the level of eating disorder pathology and anxiety in adolescent girls with anorexia nervosa (AN). The
Intolerance of Uncertainty Scale (IUS-12), the Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire (EDE-Q) and the Trait Scale of the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) were used to investigate this relationship. Participants were collected at Altrecht Eating Disorders Rintveld. The final sample consisted of 53 participants, we were able to examine the relationship between IU and eating disorder pathology in 44 participants and in 32 participants the relationship between IU and anxiety. In accordance with previous findings in adult studies, IU predicts higher levels of eating disorder pathology and anxiety in adolescents with AN. Uncertain situations had adolescents experience more severe eating attitudes and behaviors, and leads to more anxiety symptoms, like stress and discomfort. BMI and duration of illness did not have a significant influence on the correlation between IU and eating disorder pathology/anxiety. The current findings highlight the importance of IU as a construct in AN. To make treatment methods more beneficial, IU in adolescents with AN should be assessed and treated.
Advisors/Committee Members: Elburg, A. van.
Subjects/Keywords: anorexia nervosa; adolescence; intolerance of uncertainty; eating disorder pathology; anxiety
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Rovers, M. S. J. M. (2016). The contribution of intolerance of uncertainty to eating disorder pathology and anxiety symptoms in adolescents with Anorexia Nervosa. (Masters Thesis). Universiteit Utrecht. Retrieved from http://dspace.library.uu.nl:8080/handle/1874/335502
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Rovers, M S J M. “The contribution of intolerance of uncertainty to eating disorder pathology and anxiety symptoms in adolescents with Anorexia Nervosa.” 2016. Masters Thesis, Universiteit Utrecht. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://dspace.library.uu.nl:8080/handle/1874/335502.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Rovers, M S J M. “The contribution of intolerance of uncertainty to eating disorder pathology and anxiety symptoms in adolescents with Anorexia Nervosa.” 2016. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Rovers MSJM. The contribution of intolerance of uncertainty to eating disorder pathology and anxiety symptoms in adolescents with Anorexia Nervosa. [Internet] [Masters thesis]. Universiteit Utrecht; 2016. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://dspace.library.uu.nl:8080/handle/1874/335502.
Council of Science Editors:
Rovers MSJM. The contribution of intolerance of uncertainty to eating disorder pathology and anxiety symptoms in adolescents with Anorexia Nervosa. [Masters Thesis]. Universiteit Utrecht; 2016. Available from: http://dspace.library.uu.nl:8080/handle/1874/335502

University of Louisville
22.
Gramszlo, Colette Marie.
Behavioral and cognitive correlates of intolerance of uncertainty in children with and without anxiety disorders.
Degree: PhD, 2019, University of Louisville
URL: 10.18297/etd/3279
;
https://ir.library.louisville.edu/etd/3279
► Intolerance of Uncertainty (IU) has long been identified as a proximal risk factor for the development of anxiety disorders, and more recently has been…
(more)
▼ Intolerance of Uncertainty (IU) has long been identified as a proximal risk factor for the development of anxiety disorders, and more recently has been implicated in the development of emotional disorders broadly. However, little is known about how IU and psychopathology symptoms relate, limiting the degree to which IU can be identified prior to the development of emotional disorders and targeted during the intervention of disorder symptoms. The current study reviews several areas of literature to inform a model by which IU impacts anxiety symptoms. First, uncertainty processing and the development of uncertainty processing in childhood are reviewed. Next, IU is reviewed and model of the impact of IU on uncertainty processing is proposed. Finally, childhood IU is reviewed and current gaps in the childhood IU literature are identified. The current study hypothesized that IU contributes to uncertainty avoidance, which is reflected by cognitive and behavioral processes associated with decision-making under uncertainty. Specifically, this study tested the hypothesis that children with higher IU demonstrate less efficient information processing and decision-making, particularly in the presence of ambiguous information. Further, this study tested the hypotheses that the relation between IU and disorder symptoms would be moderate by individual differences in higher order cognitive control processes implicated in decision-making. The study recruited 47 children, 23 with anxiety disorders and 24 without, to test these hypotheses. Children completed a decision-making computer task and children and their parents completed questionnaires. Overall, the results partially supported the study hypotheses. IU predicted greater reaction time (RT) during the task but RT was not greater in the presence of ambiguous, as compared to neutral or threatening, stimuli for children with high IU. IU predicted greater distraction from the task target and distraction was increased in the presence of ambiguous stimuli for children with high IU. Accuracy was not related to IU. Exploratory analyses indicated that children with high IU demonstrated greater RT variability compared to children with low IU, and greater distractibility in earlier, compared to later, task trials. Results are discussed in terms of theoretical and clinical implications for future study and intervention of IU.
Advisors/Committee Members: Woodruff-Borden, Janet, Cashon, Cara, Cashon, Cara, Danovitch, Judith, Danovitch, Judith, Levinson, Cheri, Brady, Christine.
Subjects/Keywords: Developmental psychopathology; pediatric anxiety disorders; intolerance of uncertainty; Clinical Psychology
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APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
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APA (6th Edition):
Gramszlo, C. M. (2019). Behavioral and cognitive correlates of intolerance of uncertainty in children with and without anxiety disorders. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of Louisville. Retrieved from 10.18297/etd/3279 ; https://ir.library.louisville.edu/etd/3279
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Gramszlo, Colette Marie. “Behavioral and cognitive correlates of intolerance of uncertainty in children with and without anxiety disorders.” 2019. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Louisville. Accessed January 15, 2021.
10.18297/etd/3279 ; https://ir.library.louisville.edu/etd/3279.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Gramszlo, Colette Marie. “Behavioral and cognitive correlates of intolerance of uncertainty in children with and without anxiety disorders.” 2019. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Gramszlo CM. Behavioral and cognitive correlates of intolerance of uncertainty in children with and without anxiety disorders. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. University of Louisville; 2019. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: 10.18297/etd/3279 ; https://ir.library.louisville.edu/etd/3279.
Council of Science Editors:
Gramszlo CM. Behavioral and cognitive correlates of intolerance of uncertainty in children with and without anxiety disorders. [Doctoral Dissertation]. University of Louisville; 2019. Available from: 10.18297/etd/3279 ; https://ir.library.louisville.edu/etd/3279

Universidade Presbiteriana Mackenzie
23.
Lamartine Gaspar de Oliveira.
Intolerância, ética e alteridade no fundamentalismo: um estudo sobre a intolerância e a ética na matriz do fundamentalismo norte americano nos séculos xvii a xix.
Degree: 2008, Universidade Presbiteriana Mackenzie
URL: http://tede.mackenzie.com.br//tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=1198
► Esta pesquisa tem o objetivo de estudar a Intolerância, a ética e a alteridade na matriz do fundamentalismo norte-americano entre os séculos XVII e XIX.…
(more)
▼ Esta pesquisa tem o objetivo de estudar a Intolerância, a ética e a alteridade na matriz do fundamentalismo norte-americano entre os séculos XVII e XIX. Considerando que muito embora a sociedade americana tivesse a sua gênese pautada na liberdade religiosa e, ainda por conta disso, a independência fora proclamada também sob a mesma intencionalidade, àquela dos filósofos iluministas, no discorrer de sua historiografia o que se viu, principalmente em seu aspecto teológico baseado no pensamento de João Calvino, foi fazer prevalecer a intolerância. Assim, não respeitando o Outro, viveram muito longe do que se entende por alteridade. Porque a relação da ética com a alteridade é exatamente a afirmação da vida que brota da experiência de viver em comunidade, a relação de amor e de justiça entre irmãos. A nação americana sabia disso muito bem, pois eram oriundos de uma perseguição religiosa dentro da Inglaterra e fugiam para começar, ou melhor, recomeçar uma nova vida. Como eles definiram muito bem no Ato de Tolerância de Maryland, em abril de 1649, que diz: Que nenhuma pessoa ou grupo de pessoas seja quem for nos limites desta Província, ou das Ilhas, Portos, Embarcadouros, Hospedarias, ou Enseadas a ela pertencentes, que professam a crença de Jesus Cristo, devam de agora em diante ser perturbadas de qualquer modo, criticadas ou molestadas por ou em respeito de sua ou suas religiões, nem quanto ao livre exercício de culto dentro desta Província ou nas Ilhas a ela adjuntas, e nem poderão ser constrangidas de algum modo à crença ou prática de qualquer outra Religião, embora não tenham procedido assim. Por conta disso, entende-se que a intolerância mais perigosa é sempre aquela que, na ausência de qualquer doutrina, nasce dos impulsos elementares, de modo que, é difícil identificá-la e combatê-la com a ajuda de argumentos racionais. Sendo assim, evoca-se a alteridade para poder convocar a noção de identidade tanto quanto a de pluralidade e não enxergar mais o Outro como uma coisa, um objeto, ou talvez como o DEMÔNIO. Por fim, entender que a boa hermenêutica é um tópico relevante para o resultado final ao qual se quer chegar, mesmo reconhecendo que a interpretação é e sempre será uma coisa espinhosa, mas pela qual valerá a pena ponderar. Os fundamentalistas, por exemplo, têm sempre a tendência de historicizar o que não tem pretensão de historicidade. Daí o fato de serem denominados fundamentalistas. Uma das lições da hermenêutica textual de Paul Ricouer é respeitar melhor o equilíbrio entre a palavra e a escritura.
Advisors/Committee Members: Antônio Máspoli de Araújo Gomes, João Baptista Borges Pereira, Arthur Pinto Chaves.
Subjects/Keywords: alteridade; fundamentalismo; intolerance; ethics; upright; fundamentalism; CIENCIAS HUMANAS; ética; intolerância
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APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Oliveira, L. G. d. (2008). Intolerância, ética e alteridade no fundamentalismo: um estudo sobre a intolerância e a ética na matriz do fundamentalismo norte americano nos séculos xvii a xix. (Thesis). Universidade Presbiteriana Mackenzie. Retrieved from http://tede.mackenzie.com.br//tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=1198
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Oliveira, Lamartine Gaspar de. “Intolerância, ética e alteridade no fundamentalismo: um estudo sobre a intolerância e a ética na matriz do fundamentalismo norte americano nos séculos xvii a xix.” 2008. Thesis, Universidade Presbiteriana Mackenzie. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://tede.mackenzie.com.br//tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=1198.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Oliveira, Lamartine Gaspar de. “Intolerância, ética e alteridade no fundamentalismo: um estudo sobre a intolerância e a ética na matriz do fundamentalismo norte americano nos séculos xvii a xix.” 2008. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Oliveira LGd. Intolerância, ética e alteridade no fundamentalismo: um estudo sobre a intolerância e a ética na matriz do fundamentalismo norte americano nos séculos xvii a xix. [Internet] [Thesis]. Universidade Presbiteriana Mackenzie; 2008. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://tede.mackenzie.com.br//tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=1198.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Oliveira LGd. Intolerância, ética e alteridade no fundamentalismo: um estudo sobre a intolerância e a ética na matriz do fundamentalismo norte americano nos séculos xvii a xix. [Thesis]. Universidade Presbiteriana Mackenzie; 2008. Available from: http://tede.mackenzie.com.br//tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=1198
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation

Texas A&M University
24.
McKnight, Jason Ray.
Impacts of Maternal Obesity on Metabolic Profiles in Postpartum Ewes.
Degree: MS, Nutrition, 2011, Texas A&M University
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2010-08-8356
► This study determined the effects of gestational obesity on the long-term metabolic status of the mother and if obesity management during or after pregnancy could…
(more)
▼ This study determined the effects of gestational obesity on the long-term
metabolic status of the mother and if obesity management during or after pregnancy
could attenuate these effects. At 120 days prior to estrus, 8 ewes received 100 percent of NRC
nutrient requirements (control group) and 24 ewes had free access to feed (obesity
induction). Beginning on day 42 of gestation, 8 obese ewes were restricted to 65 percent of
NRC nutrient requirements. Following parturition, controls and all but one group of
obese ewes were fed 100 percent of NRC nutrient requirements. At postpartum days (PPD) 1
and 150, glucose tolerance tests were administered to ewes. At both PPD1 and PPD150,
obesity resulted in insulin resistance, impairment of whole-body glucose utilization,
increased levels of circulating leptin, and altered profiles of amino acids in plasma;
however, these effects were diminished in ewes receiving obesity management during or
after gestation. Additionally at PPD150, obesity increased the circulating levels of
ammonia and urea in ewes, which was prevented by realimentation to 100 percent NRC
requirements. These results indicate that weight reduction in obese dams during
pregnancy or after parturition can beneficially ameliorate the adverse effects of
gestational obesity on the mother.
Advisors/Committee Members: Wu, Guoyao (advisor), Bazer, Fuller (committee member), Spencer, Thomas (committee member), Satterfield, Michael (committee member).
Subjects/Keywords: Maternal Obesity; Insulin resistance; metabolic profiles; obese ewe; glucose intolerance
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
McKnight, J. R. (2011). Impacts of Maternal Obesity on Metabolic Profiles in Postpartum Ewes. (Masters Thesis). Texas A&M University. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2010-08-8356
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
McKnight, Jason Ray. “Impacts of Maternal Obesity on Metabolic Profiles in Postpartum Ewes.” 2011. Masters Thesis, Texas A&M University. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2010-08-8356.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
McKnight, Jason Ray. “Impacts of Maternal Obesity on Metabolic Profiles in Postpartum Ewes.” 2011. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
McKnight JR. Impacts of Maternal Obesity on Metabolic Profiles in Postpartum Ewes. [Internet] [Masters thesis]. Texas A&M University; 2011. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2010-08-8356.
Council of Science Editors:
McKnight JR. Impacts of Maternal Obesity on Metabolic Profiles in Postpartum Ewes. [Masters Thesis]. Texas A&M University; 2011. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2010-08-8356

Texas A&M University
25.
Kennis, Robert Allen.
Pathophysiology and evaluation of food intolerance to soy using an atopic dog model.
Degree: MS, Veterinary Microbiology, 2004, Texas A&M University
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/401
► The purpose of the study was to test the hypothesis that dogs sensitized to soy antigen would produce significantly greater amounts of antigen specific IgE…
(more)
▼ The purpose of the study was to test the hypothesis that dogs sensitized to soy antigen would produce significantly greater amounts of antigen specific IgE antibody compared to a control population before and after challenges with soy, hydrolyzed soy, and non-soy diets. Further, we sought to evaluate important allergenic components of soy using Western blot analysis. Lastly, absorption and mucosal function testing using inert sugars were evaluated for our sensitized and non-sensitized controls.
Eight dogs (6 female, 2 male) were sensitized to whole soy using an established protocol. Seven dogs (3 female, 4 male) roughly age matched were used as controls. The dogs were randomly split into three groups. All dogs were fed an elimination diet of egg and Brewer's rice for six weeks. Samples were collected and each group was fed a diet of soy and rice flour, hydrolyzed soy and rice flour, or corn and rice flour for three weeks. Samples were collected and each group was fed the elimination diet followed by challenge with each of the diets. Serum was collected and stored for allergen specific IgE semi-quantitation and Western blot analysis using whole soy fractionated into globulin and whey components. A solution of monosaccharide and disaccharide sugars was administered in a volume determined by weight. Six hours after administration the dogs were catheterized and the entire urine volume was collected for measurement of sugar recovery by high pressure chromatography, followed by pulsed amphometric detection.
There was a statistically significant difference in serum IgE between sensitized and control dogs after the elimination diet, and also for each of the challenged diets. There were differences detected by Western blot analysis for allergens within the soy globulin and whey fractions for sensitized dogs compared to control dogs. There were no significant differences between sensitized and control dogs for sugar recovery for any of the diets. We conclude that although there were significant differences in measurable IgE between sensitized and control dogs, we were unable to differentiate these groups using gastrointestinal mucosal permeability and function testing.
Advisors/Committee Members: Tizard, Ian (advisor), Smith, Roger, III (committee member), Zoran, Deb (committee member).
Subjects/Keywords: food intolerance; soy; atopic; dog
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Kennis, R. A. (2004). Pathophysiology and evaluation of food intolerance to soy using an atopic dog model. (Masters Thesis). Texas A&M University. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/401
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Kennis, Robert Allen. “Pathophysiology and evaluation of food intolerance to soy using an atopic dog model.” 2004. Masters Thesis, Texas A&M University. Accessed January 15, 2021.
http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/401.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Kennis, Robert Allen. “Pathophysiology and evaluation of food intolerance to soy using an atopic dog model.” 2004. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Kennis RA. Pathophysiology and evaluation of food intolerance to soy using an atopic dog model. [Internet] [Masters thesis]. Texas A&M University; 2004. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/401.
Council of Science Editors:
Kennis RA. Pathophysiology and evaluation of food intolerance to soy using an atopic dog model. [Masters Thesis]. Texas A&M University; 2004. Available from: http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/401

Penn State University
26.
Przeworski, Amy.
The Development and Psychometric Properties of the Intolerance of Uncertainty Scale for Children
.
Degree: 2008, Penn State University
URL: https://submit-etda.libraries.psu.edu/catalog/7272
► Intolerance of uncertainty has been demonstrated to be related to symptoms of Generalized Anxiety Disorder and Obsessive Compulsive Disorder in adults (Dugas, Freeston, & Ladouceur,…
(more)
▼ Intolerance of uncertainty has been demonstrated to be related to symptoms of Generalized Anxiety Disorder and Obsessive Compulsive Disorder in adults (Dugas, Freeston, & Ladouceur, 1997; Holaway, Heimberg, & Coles, 2006; Ladouceur, Talbot, & Dugas, 1997; Steketee, 2005; Taylor, McKay & Abramowitz, 2005). Despite the proliferation of theory and research on the role that
intolerance of uncertainty may play in anxiety, to date, the extant research has focused almost exclusively on
intolerance of uncertainty in adults.
Intolerance of uncertainty may play a similar role in the development and maintenance of anxiety in children. However, no studies have examined this construct in children and only one study has examined it in adolescents. Further, no measures exist for assessing
intolerance of uncertainty in children. The purpose of the current study was to develop a measure of
intolerance of uncertainty in children ages 7-14 and to examine its psychometrics. Parent and child versions of the
Intolerance of Uncertainty for Children Scale were developed and demonstrated good internal consistency. Both scales were highly correlated with symptoms of worry and OCD in children.
Advisors/Committee Members: Michelle Gayle Newman, Committee Chair/Co-Chair, Thomas D Borkovec, Committee Member, Brian A Rabian, Committee Member, Dennis Edward Heitzmann, Committee Member.
Subjects/Keywords: intolerance of uncertainty; child anxiety
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Przeworski, A. (2008). The Development and Psychometric Properties of the Intolerance of Uncertainty Scale for Children
. (Thesis). Penn State University. Retrieved from https://submit-etda.libraries.psu.edu/catalog/7272
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Przeworski, Amy. “The Development and Psychometric Properties of the Intolerance of Uncertainty Scale for Children
.” 2008. Thesis, Penn State University. Accessed January 15, 2021.
https://submit-etda.libraries.psu.edu/catalog/7272.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Przeworski, Amy. “The Development and Psychometric Properties of the Intolerance of Uncertainty Scale for Children
.” 2008. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Przeworski A. The Development and Psychometric Properties of the Intolerance of Uncertainty Scale for Children
. [Internet] [Thesis]. Penn State University; 2008. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: https://submit-etda.libraries.psu.edu/catalog/7272.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Przeworski A. The Development and Psychometric Properties of the Intolerance of Uncertainty Scale for Children
. [Thesis]. Penn State University; 2008. Available from: https://submit-etda.libraries.psu.edu/catalog/7272
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation

Brigham Young University
27.
Horner, Trenton W.
Beta Galactosidose Activity of Commercial Lactase Samples in Raw and Pasteurized Milk at Refrigerated Temperatures.
Degree: MS, 2010, Brigham Young University
URL: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3589&context=etd
► Many consumers are unable to enjoy the benefits of milk, due to lactose-intolerance. Lactose-free milk is available, but at about 2 times the cost…
(more)
▼ Many consumers are unable to enjoy the benefits of milk, due to lactose-intolerance. Lactose-free milk is available, but at about 2 times the cost of regular milk or greater, it may be difficult for consumers to afford. The high cost of lactose-free milk is in part due to the added cost of the lactose hydrolysis process. Hydrolysis at refrigerated temperatures, possibly in the bulk tank or package, could increase the flexibility of the process, and potentially reduce the cost. A rapid β-galactosidase assay was used to determine the relative activity of commercially available lactase samples at different temperatures. Four enzymes exhibited low-temperature activity and were added to refrigerated raw and pasteurized milk at various concentrations and allowed to react for various lengths of time. The degree of lactose hydrolysis by each of the enzymes as a function of time and enzyme concentration was determined by HPLC. The two most active enzymes, as determined by the β-galactosidase assay, hydrolyzed over 98% of the lactose in 24 hours at 2°C using the supplier recommended dosage. The other two enzymes hydrolyzed over 95% of the lactose in 24 hours at two times the supplier recommended dosage at 2°C. Results were consistent in all milk types tested. The results show that it is feasible to hydrolyze lactose during refrigerated storage of milk using currently available enzymes.
Subjects/Keywords: lactose-free milk; lactase; beta-galactosidase; lactose intolerance; Food Science; Nutrition
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MLA ·
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Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Horner, T. W. (2010). Beta Galactosidose Activity of Commercial Lactase Samples in Raw and Pasteurized Milk at Refrigerated Temperatures. (Masters Thesis). Brigham Young University. Retrieved from https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3589&context=etd
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Horner, Trenton W. “Beta Galactosidose Activity of Commercial Lactase Samples in Raw and Pasteurized Milk at Refrigerated Temperatures.” 2010. Masters Thesis, Brigham Young University. Accessed January 15, 2021.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3589&context=etd.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Horner, Trenton W. “Beta Galactosidose Activity of Commercial Lactase Samples in Raw and Pasteurized Milk at Refrigerated Temperatures.” 2010. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Horner TW. Beta Galactosidose Activity of Commercial Lactase Samples in Raw and Pasteurized Milk at Refrigerated Temperatures. [Internet] [Masters thesis]. Brigham Young University; 2010. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3589&context=etd.
Council of Science Editors:
Horner TW. Beta Galactosidose Activity of Commercial Lactase Samples in Raw and Pasteurized Milk at Refrigerated Temperatures. [Masters Thesis]. Brigham Young University; 2010. Available from: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3589&context=etd
28.
Costa, Ana.
Regulação da actividade da Na,K-ATPase por glucose em célula beta-pancreática na ausência e na presença de um estado de intolerância a esta.
Degree: 2012, Universidade de Évora
URL: https://www.rcaap.pt/detail.jsp?id=oai:dspace.uevora.pt:10174/5771
► A Na,K-ATPase é responsável pela manutenção dos gradientes transmembranares de iões K+ e Na+. Porém, o papel fisiológico da Na,K-ATPase em célula β-pancreática não está…
(more)
▼ A Na,K-ATPase é responsável pela manutenção dos gradientes transmembranares de iões K+ e Na+. Porém, o papel fisiológico da Na,K-ATPase em célula β-pancreática não está esclarecido. Já foi sugerido que a glucose contribui para uma regulação da Na,K-ATPase nestas células, embora os efeitos não estejam esclarecidos e se desconheçam os mecanismos subjacentes ou a sua relevância fisiológica. Foi objectivo deste trabalho estudar a acção da glucose na regulação da actividade enzimática da Na,K-ATPase em célula β-pancreática, na presença e ausência de intolerância à glucose. Concluiu-se que, em controlos, a glucose induziu uma inibição da actividade da Na,K-ATPase e que a AMPK e a PKC parecem participar na cascata de sinais intracelulares subjacente a esta regulação. Em intolerantes registou-se uma atenuação/abolição do efeito da glucose na actividade da Na,K-ATPase. Para estas diferenças contribuíram a expressão isoenzimática diferencial da Na,K-ATPase e alterações na
cascata de eventos responsáveis pela regulação.
Advisors/Committee Members: Cruz Morais, Júlio M, Antunes, Célia M.
Subjects/Keywords: Na,K-ATPase; pancreatic beta-cells; glucose intolerance
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Costa, A. (2012). Regulação da actividade da Na,K-ATPase por glucose em célula beta-pancreática na ausência e na presença de um estado de intolerância a esta. (Thesis). Universidade de Évora. Retrieved from https://www.rcaap.pt/detail.jsp?id=oai:dspace.uevora.pt:10174/5771
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Costa, Ana. “Regulação da actividade da Na,K-ATPase por glucose em célula beta-pancreática na ausência e na presença de um estado de intolerância a esta.” 2012. Thesis, Universidade de Évora. Accessed January 15, 2021.
https://www.rcaap.pt/detail.jsp?id=oai:dspace.uevora.pt:10174/5771.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Costa, Ana. “Regulação da actividade da Na,K-ATPase por glucose em célula beta-pancreática na ausência e na presença de um estado de intolerância a esta.” 2012. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Costa A. Regulação da actividade da Na,K-ATPase por glucose em célula beta-pancreática na ausência e na presença de um estado de intolerância a esta. [Internet] [Thesis]. Universidade de Évora; 2012. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: https://www.rcaap.pt/detail.jsp?id=oai:dspace.uevora.pt:10174/5771.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Costa A. Regulação da actividade da Na,K-ATPase por glucose em célula beta-pancreática na ausência e na presença de um estado de intolerância a esta. [Thesis]. Universidade de Évora; 2012. Available from: https://www.rcaap.pt/detail.jsp?id=oai:dspace.uevora.pt:10174/5771
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
29.
Verma, Ajay Kumar.
Assessment Of Blood Pressure Regulatory Controls To Detect Hypovolemia And Orthostatic Intolerance.
Degree: PhD, Electrical Engineering, 2018, University of North Dakota
URL: https://commons.und.edu/theses/2374
► Regulation of blood pressure is vital for maintaining organ perfusion and homeostasis. A significant decline in arterial blood pressure could lead to fainting and…
(more)
▼ Regulation of blood pressure is vital for maintaining organ perfusion and homeostasis. A significant decline in arterial blood pressure could lead to fainting and hypovolemic shock. In contrast to young and healthy, people with impaired autonomic control due to aging or disease find regulating blood pressure rather demanding during orthostatic challenge. This thesis performed an assessment of blood pressure regulatory controls during orthostatic challenge via traditional as well as novel approaches with two distinct applications 1) to design a robust automated system for early identification of hypovolemia and 2) to assess orthostatic tolerance in humans. In chapter 3, moderate intensity hemorrhage was simulated via lower-body negative pressure (LBNP) with an aim to identify moderate intensity hemorrhage (-30 and -40 mmHg LBNP) from resting baseline. Utilizing features extracted from common vital sign monitors, a classification accuracy of 82% and 91% was achieved for differentiating -30 and -40 mmHg LBNP, respectively from baseline. In chapter 4, cause-and-effect relationship between the representative signals of the cardiovascular and postural systems to ascertain blood pressure homeostasis during standing was performed. The degree of causal interaction between the two systems, studied via convergent cross mapping (CCM), showcased the existence of a significant bi-directional interaction between the representative signals of two systems to regulate blood pressure. Therefore, the two systems should be accounted for jointly when addressing physiology behind fall. Further, in chapter 5, the potential of artificial gravity (2-g) induced via short-arm human centrifuge at feet towards evoking blood pressure regulatory controls analogous to standing was investigated. The observation of no difference in the blood pressure regulatory controls, during 2-g centrifugation compared to standing, strongly supported the hypothesis of artificial hypergravity for mitigating cardiovascular deconditioning, hence minimizing post-flight orthostatic
intolerance.
Advisors/Committee Members: Kouhyar Tavakolian.
Subjects/Keywords: Astronauts; Blood Pressure; Causality; Hemorrhage; Hypovolemia; Orthostatic Intolerance
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MLA ·
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APA (6th Edition):
Verma, A. K. (2018). Assessment Of Blood Pressure Regulatory Controls To Detect Hypovolemia And Orthostatic Intolerance. (Doctoral Dissertation). University of North Dakota. Retrieved from https://commons.und.edu/theses/2374
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Verma, Ajay Kumar. “Assessment Of Blood Pressure Regulatory Controls To Detect Hypovolemia And Orthostatic Intolerance.” 2018. Doctoral Dissertation, University of North Dakota. Accessed January 15, 2021.
https://commons.und.edu/theses/2374.
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Verma, Ajay Kumar. “Assessment Of Blood Pressure Regulatory Controls To Detect Hypovolemia And Orthostatic Intolerance.” 2018. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Verma AK. Assessment Of Blood Pressure Regulatory Controls To Detect Hypovolemia And Orthostatic Intolerance. [Internet] [Doctoral dissertation]. University of North Dakota; 2018. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: https://commons.und.edu/theses/2374.
Council of Science Editors:
Verma AK. Assessment Of Blood Pressure Regulatory Controls To Detect Hypovolemia And Orthostatic Intolerance. [Doctoral Dissertation]. University of North Dakota; 2018. Available from: https://commons.und.edu/theses/2374

Iowa State University
30.
Lewis, Ann Marie.
One hill I'm willing to die on: Moral conviction as a catalyst for advocacy on behalf of controversial health- and public-policy-related attitudes.
Degree: 2020, Iowa State University
URL: https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/18038
► The grassroots spread of health and social movements is a highly important but largely understudied social process. Advocating on behalf of your beliefs to others…
(more)
▼ The grassroots spread of health and social movements is a highly important but largely understudied social process. Advocating on behalf of your beliefs to others violates the principles of Politeness Theory (Brown & Levinson, 1978) and therefore poses social risk. However, people do advocate for these beliefs, to a degree; as noted by Skitka (2002), people seem to select a limited number of positions to incorporate into their self-concept, choosing some to represent the self as a symbolic act. She argues that some of these attitudes most deeply ingrained and most motivating to act are those that are "moral mandates".
Within this work, I discussed this construct of morality in the context of attitude structure (e.g. Teeny & Petty, 2018), attitude strength (e.g. Skitka, Bauman, & Sargis, 2005), observed behavioral intentions and effects (e.g. Cole Wright, Cullum, & Schwab, 2008), the self (discussing implication of Skitka, 2002), and regulatory orientation (Zaal, Laar, Ståhl, Ellemers, & Derks, 2011), focusing the discussion and subsequent research on the latter two.
I then completed three empirical studies. In Study 1, I tested the factor structure of various operationalizations of morality, as well as attitude structure and strength, and their ability to predict outcomes previously associated with moral conviction. Moral conviction and moral acceptability were determined to be the most theoretically and predictively distinct conceptualizations, and evidence was found for basis being a significant interactor with morality in predicting the replicated outcomes.
In Study 2, I examined how morality interacts with perceived controversy and majority status, to elucidate the nature of morality as a counteractive force to social risk. I found that majority significantly increased the positive effect of morality on advocacy, but also found significant 2- and 3-way interactions with attitude bases.
In Study 3, I experimentally tested the effects of perceived morality on both intentions and actual advocacy behavior, manipulating the perceived regulatory orientation (i.e. risk sensitivity) and belief in the attitude as central to the self-concept. Alone, these manipulations had no significant effect. However, significant effects were found in interaction with basis.
Conclusions focused on several keys areas. First, range restriction and potential fragile effects appeared to undermine consistency in determining significant effects. I strongly suggest the attitudes research field expand its use of stimulus sampling. on the nature of morality in interaction with basis. Different conceptions of morality interacted differently with cognitive and affective basis. Future work into the effect of morality on attitude outcomes should incorporate basis as a primary variable. Secondly, morality and high affect generally increased intent to advocate, however, at maximum levels the opposite was found, suppressing advocacy not necessarily through social pressures but likely an untenable amount of dissonance or a change in perceived utility.…
Subjects/Keywords: advocacy; attitudes; intolerance; moral conviction; persuasion; public health
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Record Details
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❌
APA ·
Chicago ·
MLA ·
Vancouver ·
CSE |
Export
to Zotero / EndNote / Reference
Manager
APA (6th Edition):
Lewis, A. M. (2020). One hill I'm willing to die on: Moral conviction as a catalyst for advocacy on behalf of controversial health- and public-policy-related attitudes. (Thesis). Iowa State University. Retrieved from https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/18038
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Chicago Manual of Style (16th Edition):
Lewis, Ann Marie. “One hill I'm willing to die on: Moral conviction as a catalyst for advocacy on behalf of controversial health- and public-policy-related attitudes.” 2020. Thesis, Iowa State University. Accessed January 15, 2021.
https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/18038.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
MLA Handbook (7th Edition):
Lewis, Ann Marie. “One hill I'm willing to die on: Moral conviction as a catalyst for advocacy on behalf of controversial health- and public-policy-related attitudes.” 2020. Web. 15 Jan 2021.
Vancouver:
Lewis AM. One hill I'm willing to die on: Moral conviction as a catalyst for advocacy on behalf of controversial health- and public-policy-related attitudes. [Internet] [Thesis]. Iowa State University; 2020. [cited 2021 Jan 15].
Available from: https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/18038.
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
Council of Science Editors:
Lewis AM. One hill I'm willing to die on: Moral conviction as a catalyst for advocacy on behalf of controversial health- and public-policy-related attitudes. [Thesis]. Iowa State University; 2020. Available from: https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/18038
Note: this citation may be lacking information needed for this citation format:
Not specified: Masters Thesis or Doctoral Dissertation
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