نتایج جستجو برای: people aged

تعداد نتایج: 536783  

Journal: :iranian rehabilitation journal 0
asghar dadkhah iranian research center on aging, university of social welfare and rehabilitation sciences, tehran, iran. susumu harizuka kyushu university, kyushu, japan. farin soleimani iranian research center on aging, university of social welfare and rehabilitation sciences, tehran, iran. sahel hemmati iranian research center on aging, university of social welfare and rehabilitation sciences, tehran, iran.

objectives: in this research we evaluate an individually family-based dohsa exercise programme of balance in the aged people and its effect on self confidence for performing common daily tasks with less falling could be influenced by training. methods: from a residential care center, five aged person were participated in this study. they were trained by dohsa method for six weeks. two types of ...

Journal: :Injury prevention : journal of the International Society for Child and Adolescent Injury Prevention 2000
M Bulajic-Kopjar

OBJECTIVE To investigate seasonal variations in the incidence of fall related fractures among people 65 years and older. POPULATION AND METHODS A prospective, population based cohort study was performed on people aged 65 years and older followed up from 1990 to 1997, a total of 459,904 person years. Cases were identified through a prospective registration system. RESULTS There were 10,992 (...

2007
Norman P. Li

People were given highly constrained low budgets of mate dollars to allocate across various characteristics pertaining to their ideal partners and to their ideal selves for longand short-term mating. First, results replicated findings from Li et al. (2002) and Li & Kenrick (2006). For ideal long-term mates, men prioritized physical attractiveness and women prioritized social status. For ideal s...

2008
Jeffrey R. Kling Marian V. Wrobel Jeffrey R. Brown JEFFREY R. BROWN JEFFREY R. KLING SENDHIL MULLAINATHAN MARIAN V. WROBEL

2017
Matthew Hanson Matthew A. Hanson Martin B. Schmidt Philip D. deCamp Radha Iyengar David Jaeger Jeff Jaworski Zubin Jelveh Dick Polin Chris Rohlfs Felix Salmon Martin Schmidt Thaddeus Templeton Patrick Warren Alanna Whytock

The U.S. military, despite spending over $13 billion, appears powerless to stop the Iraqi insurgency’s improvised explosive devices (IEDs), which cause most of the military’s casualties and prevent victory by showing lawlessness and insecurity. However, this view ignores substitution effects we consider here. Using rational choice and expectations models, we find a backward-bending supply curve...

2011
Tyler C. Schnieders Jonathan S. Gore

Despite the abundance of research linking frustration with prejudice, no research has examined the moderating role of personality. Two studies tested the prediction that narcissism would moderate the link between frustration and prejudice against immigrants in that individuals high in narcissism would show a stronger association than others. In Study 1 (n = 156), participants completed online s...

2013
Karl Gunnar Persson

We demonstrate that the agrarian unrest in the United States between 1870 and 1900 can be given an economic explanation, despite its association with increases in the real price of agricultural produce. It was not merely the result of nominal illusions as other scholars have suggested. Falling transportation costs allowed for the extension of the frontier and for more farmers to enter the inter...

2012
Howard Ehrlichman Dragana Micic

The saccadic eye movements that people make when thinking have been largely ignored in the eye-movement literature. Nevertheless, there is evidence that such eye movements are systematically related to internal thought processes. On average, people move their eyes about twice as often when searching through long-term memory as they do when engaged in tasks that do not require such search. This ...

2010
Krishna Savani Hazel Rose Markus Neha Berlia

People everywhere select among multiple alternatives, but are they always making choices? In five studies, we found that people in U.S. American contexts, where the disjoint model of agency is prevalent, are more likely than those in Indian contexts to construe their own and other individuals’ behaviors as choices, to construe ongoing behaviors and behaviors recalled from memory as choices, to ...

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