keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30875163/-a-real-fear-of-voodoo-spirits
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nienke Fleuren, W F Scholte
Nigerian victims of human trafficking often fear revenge of voodoo spirits after escaping from their offenders. Human traffickers usually tell them that voodoo spirits will disturb their sleep and their peace of mind and eventually drive them crazy in case the victim would break the contract. In the Nigerian context, this fear is real and threatening. Western health care professionals should not consider this fear of voodoo as an anxiety disorder, especially because treatment would improperly challenge the validity of deeply rooted religious beliefs...
March 1, 2019: Nederlands Tijdschrift Voor Geneeskunde
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30581361/voodoo-software-and-boundary-objects-in-game-development-how-developers-collaborate-and-conflict-with-game-engines-and-art-tools
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer R Whitson
This article describes how game developers successfully 'pull off' game development, collaborating in the absence of consensus and working with recalcitrant and wilful technologies, shedding light on the games we play and those that make them, but also how we can be forced to work together by the platforms we choose to use. The concept of 'boundary objects' is exported from Science and Technology Studies (STS) to highlight the vital coordinating role of game development software. Rather than a mutely obedient tool, game software such as Unity 3D is depicted by developers as exhibiting magical, even agential, properties...
July 2018: New Media & Society
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30373575/-wherever-doctors-cannot-reach-the-sunshine-can-overcoming-potential-barriers-to-malaria-elimination-interventions-in-haiti
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thomas Druetz, Katherine Andrinopoulos, Louis-Marie Boulos, Michaelle Boulos, Gregory S Noland, Luccene Desir, Jean Frantz Lemoine, Thomas P Eisele
BACKGROUND: Haiti and the Dominican Republic, the only two Caribbean countries with endemic malaria transmission, are committed to eliminating malaria. With a Plasmodium falciparum prevalence under 1% and a highly focal transmission, the efforts towards elimination in Haiti will include several community-based interventions that must be tailored to the local sociocultural context to increase their uptake. However, little is known about local community perceptions regarding malaria and the planned elimination interventions...
October 29, 2018: Malaria Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29706664/implications-of-debunking-the-critical-positivity-ratio-for-humanistic-psychology-introduction-to-special-issue
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Harris L Friedman, Nicholas J L Brown
An extraordinary claim was made by one of the leading researchers within positive psychology, namely, there is a universal-invariant ratio between positive to negative emotions that serves as a unique tipping point between flourishing and languishing in individuals, marriages, organizations, and other human systems across all cultures and times. Known as the "critical positivity ratio," this finding was supposedly derived from the famous Lorenz equation in physics by using the mathematics of nonlinear dynamic systems, and was defined precisely as "2...
May 2018: Journal of Humanistic Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29643820/the-attribution-of-mental-health-problems-to-jinn-an-explorative-study-in-a-transcultural-psychiatric-outpatient-clinic
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anastasia Lim, Hans W Hoek, Samrad Ghane, Mathijs Deen, Jan Dirk Blom
Background: Among Muslim patients, a common cultural concept of distress is the notion that jinn may be the cause of mental health problems, especially in the presence of hallucinations. Objective: This study examines the frequency with which this attribution style is manifest in a specific psychiatric outpatient population with a Muslim background. Methods: Of all patients registered at an outpatient clinic specialized in transcultural psychiatry, data were collected on folk belief, religion, hallucinations (if present), and medical diagnosis...
2018: Frontiers in Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29512340/restricted-venous-access-after-lymph-node-dissection-no-evidence-voodoo
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hayden Snow, Bernhard Riedel, David Gyorki, Michael A Henderson, David Speakman
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 2018: ANZ Journal of Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29053789/voodoo-surgery-the-distinct-challenges-of-functional-neuroimaging-in-clinical-neurology
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Trevor T-J Chong
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
December 1, 2017: Brain
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28899026/dead-salmon-and-voodoo-correlations-should-we-be-sceptical-about-functional-mri
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Louisa Lyon
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
August 1, 2017: Brain
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28418727/poor-sleep-is-associated-with-greater-marital-aggression-the-role-of-self-control
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peggy S Keller, Eric A Haak, C Nathan DeWall, Claire Renzetti
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: Although sleep problems are linked to relationship difficulties, the mechanisms involved have not been empirically demonstrated. The present study considers self-control as such a mechanism. PARTICIPANTS: Data were collected from 342 predominantly white, middle-class, married adults. METHOD: Participants completed online questionnaires about sleep, marital aggression, and self-control, and a virtual voodoo doll task. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Sleep problems were associated with higher levels of aggression on all measures, and lower self-control mediated these associations...
April 18, 2017: Behavioral Sleep Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27292322/animating-brains
#30
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Cornelius Borck
A recent paper famously accused the rising field of social neuroscience of using faulty statistics under the catchy title 'Voodoo Correlations in Social Neuroscience'. This Special Issue invites us to take this claim as the starting point for a cross-cultural analysis: in which meaningful ways can recent research in the burgeoning field of functional imaging be described as, contrasted with, or simply compared to animistic practices? And what light does such a reading shed on the dynamics and effectiveness of a century of brain research into higher mental functions? Reviewing the heated debate from 2009 around recent trends in neuroimaging as a possible candidate for current instances of 'soul catching', the paper will then compare these forms of primarily image-based brain research with older regimes, revolving around the deciphering of the brain's electrical activity...
July 2016: Medical History
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26839734/validating-the-voodoo-doll-task-as-a-proxy-for-aggressive-parenting-behavior
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Randy J McCarthy, Julie L Crouch, Ariel R Basham, Joel S Milner, John J Skowronski
OBJECTIVE: Six studies ( N = 1,081 general population parents) assessed the validity of the Voodoo Doll Task (VDT) as a proxy for aggressive parenting behaviors. METHODS: Participants were given an opportunity to symbolically inflict harm by choosing to stick "pins" into a doll representing their child. RESULTS: Individual differences in parents' trait aggression (Studies 1, 2, and 6), state hostility (Study 3), attitudes towards the corporal punishment of children (Study 4), self-control (Study 6), depression (Study 6), and child physical abuse risk (Study 6) were associated with increased pin usage...
January 1, 2016: Psychology of Violence
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26600411/religious-beliefs-ptsd-depression-and-resilience-in-survivors-of-the-2010-haiti-earthquake
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Judite Blanc, Guitele J Rahill, Stéphanie Laconi, Yoram Mouchenik
BACKGROUND: This study examines relationships between religious beliefs regarding the origin of the 2010 earthquake in Haiti and posttraumatic symptomatology as well as depressive symptoms and resilience among its survivors. METHOD: We used convenient sampling to recruit participants (n=167). They completed six scales, which had been translated into Haitian Creole, including measures such as the Earthquake Experiences Exposure (EEE), the Peritraumatic Distress Inventory (PDI), the Peritraumatic Dissociative Experience Questionnaire (PDEQ), the PTSD Checklist (PTSD-CL), the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD- RISC) RESULTS: Among our participants, 51% were male, (mean age=30...
January 15, 2016: Journal of Affective Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26543516/integrative-health-and-healing-as-the-new-health-care-paradigm-for-the-military
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Richard P Petri
Background: The field of integrative health and healing (IH2 ) is emerging out of the dark recesses of "voodoo" stereotypes and into the light as a new and much needed health care paradigm. It is a philosophy of health and healing that seeks to place patients as the preeminent players in health management, disease prevention, and injury recovery. There is an emphasis of patient responsibility, which includes a holistic approach that merges allopathic with complementary medicine. Objective: The aim of this article is to explore the historical origins of integrative medicine and investigate the future role of the IH2 paradigm...
October 1, 2015: Medical Acupuncture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26162135/voodoo-correlations-are-everywhere-not-only-in-neuroscience
#34
REVIEW
Klaus Fiedler
A recent set of articles in Perspectives on Psychological Science discussed inflated correlations between brain measures and behavioral criteria when measurement points (voxels) are deliberately selected to maximize criterion correlations (the target article was Vul, Harris, Winkielman, & Pashler, 2009). However, closer inspection reveals that this problem is only a special symptom of a broader methodological problem that characterizes all paradigmatic research, not just neuroscience. Researchers not only select voxels to inflate effect size, they also select stimuli, task settings, favorable boundary conditions, dependent variables and independent variables, treatment levels, moderators, mediators, and multiple parameter settings in such a way that empirical phenomena become maximally visible and stable...
March 2011: Perspectives on Psychological Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26161887/neuroimaging-voodoo-new-phrenology-or-scientific-breakthrough-introduction-to-special-section-on-fmri
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ed Diener
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
November 2010: Perspectives on Psychological Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26158967/correlations-in-social-neuroscience-aren-t-voodoo-commentary-on-vul-et-al-2009
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew D Lieberman, Elliot T Berkman, Tor D Wager
Vul, Harris, Winkielman, and Pashler (2009), (this issue) claim that many brain-personality correlations in fMRI studies are "likely … spurious" (p. 274), and "should not be believed" (p. 285). Several of their conclusions are incorrect. First, they incorrectly claim that whole-brain regressions use an invalid and "nonindependent" two-step inferential procedure, a determination based on a survey sent to researchers that only included nondiagnostic questions about the descriptive process of plotting one's data...
May 2009: Perspectives on Psychological Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26028018/-brua-as-an-explanatory-model-for-diseases
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
E H M Minkenberg, J D Blom
A 26-year-old woman from the island of Aruba who had been living in the Netherlands for ten years felt she was misunderstood by the various health professionals she had consulted because of her fear that she was being poisoned and would soon die. Due to her background en her belief in brua, she attributed her symptoms and her illness to 'voodoo', allegedly practiced by members of her husband's family in connection with relationship problems. A culture-sensitive approach to the patient, along with thorough psychiatric and neurological tests, yielded a surprising result...
2015: Tijdschrift Voor Psychiatrie
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25470207/analysis-of-the-first-and-second-generation-raving-dragon-novelty-bath-salts-containing-methylone-and-pentedrone
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Justin L Poklis, Carl E Wolf, Omar I ElJordi, Kai Liu, Shijun Zhang, Alphonse Poklis
In recent years, a large number of designer drugs sold as "Bath Salts" have appeared on the market. In July of 2011, Raving Dragon Novelty Bath Salts was obtained over the Internet. This product became unavailable in October of that year coinciding with the DEA issuing a temporarily schedule of mephedrone, methylone, and MDPV. Four months later in February of 2012, a new product was released from the same company under the new name Raving Dragon Voodoo Dust. The contents of both products were identified using spectroscopy methods: nuclear magnetic resonance, infrared, UV-visible, tandem mass spectrometry, and high-resolution time-of-flight mass spectrometry...
January 2015: Journal of Forensic Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25377181/long-acting-local-anesthetic-agents-and-additives-snake-oil-voodoo-or-the-real-deal
#39
EDITORIAL
André P Boezaart, Yury Zasimovich, Hari K Parvataneni
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
January 2015: Pain Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25182071/recruitment-of-yoruba-families-from-nigeria-for-genetic-research-experience-from-a-multisite-keloid-study
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peter B Olaitan, Victoria Odesina, Samuel Ademola, Solomon O Fadiora, Odunayo M Oluwatosin, Ernst J Reichenberger
BACKGROUND: More involvement of sub-Saharan African countries in biomedical studies, specifically in genetic research, is needed to advance individualized medicine that will benefit non-European populations. Missing infrastructure, cultural and religious beliefs as well as lack of understanding of research benefits can pose a challenge to recruitment. Here we describe recruitment efforts for a large genetic study requiring three-generation pedigrees within the Yoruba homelands of Nigeria...
2014: BMC Medical Ethics
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