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1.
Percept Mot Skills ; 49(1): 171-80, 1979 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-503733

ABSTRACT

Two hearing-impaired children were taught to speechread the names of 18 objects divided into three sets. A multiple baseline across sets of objects was obtained for each subject. Tokens presented contingent upon correct responses to certain sets of names increased the frequencies of those correct responses. Both subjects exhibited positive behavioral contrast during the acquisition of speechreading; correct responses to one set increased above the previously established level when the contingencies for a second set changed from token reinforcement to extinction. The obtained contrast effect was conductive to learning and the procedure was effective in teaching the children to speechread the training words.


Subject(s)
Behavior Therapy/methods , Deafness/rehabilitation , Lipreading , Child , Deafness/psychology , Discrimination Learning , Education of Intellectually Disabled , Female , Generalization, Response , Humans , Male , Token Economy
2.
J Speech Hear Disord ; 41(2): 226-32, 1976 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1271783

ABSTRACT

Operant techniques were used to develop lipreading in a nine-year-old deaf boy who had failed to respond appropriately to previous speechreading training. Remediation was initiated with two experiments: the first entailed a reversal and the second a multiple baseline. A component analysis revealed that both tokens and social reinforcers presented simultaneously or separately were effective in shaping lipreading. In addition, the child learned to lip-read either voiced or nonvoiced names of objects.


Subject(s)
Deafness/rehabilitation , Education, Special , Lipreading , Affective Symptoms/complications , Child , Conditioning, Operant , Deafness/complications , Humans , Intellectual Disability/complications , Male , Michigan , Reinforcement, Social , Token Economy
3.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab ; 41(2): 339-45, 1975 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-169280

ABSTRACT

Studies were carried out to evaluate whether skeletal resistance to acute increments in endogenous parathyroid hormone exists in patients with mild to moderate renal insufficiency. Hypocalcemia was induced with the infusion of ethyl-enediamine-tetra-acetate (EDTA) in 10 normal subjects and 13 patients with mild renal failure. After the induction of hypocalcemia, the concentration of serum calcium increased gradually and reached preinfusion levels by 22 h in the normal subjects; in contrast, the levels of serum calcium in patients with mild renal insufficiency were significantly lower than the preinfusion values even at the end of 26 h following the EDTA infusion. This delayed recovery occurred despite significantly higher levels of serum immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (IPTH) in the patients than in the normal subjects. The increase in the levels of IPTH reflect elevations in the concentrations of biologically active hormone since urinary cyclic AMP increased significantly. Urinary calcium excretion following the EDTA infusion was not different in both groups and, therefore, could not account for the delayed recovery of serum calcium values in the patients with renal insufficiency. These results indicate that secondary hyperparathyroidism exists early in patients with renal failure and such patients have exaggerated parathyroid hormone secretion in response to acute hypocalcemia. The data are consistent with the concept that skeletal resistance to increments in endogenous parathyroid hormone is present in such patients. This abnormality is, at least partly, responsible for the hypocalcemia and secondary hyperparathyroidism of renal insufficiency.


Subject(s)
Bone and Bones/physiology , Hyperparathyroidism/etiology , Kidney Failure, Chronic/complications , Parathyroid Hormone/physiology , Calcium/metabolism , Creatinine/metabolism , Cyclic AMP/urine , Edetic Acid , Female , Humans , Hyperparathyroidism/metabolism , Hyperparathyroidism/physiopathology , Hypocalcemia/chemically induced , Kidney Failure, Chronic/metabolism , Kidney Failure, Chronic/physiopathology , Male , Parathyroid Hormone/blood , Parathyroid Hormone/immunology , Time Factors
7.
Science ; 167(3918): 577-80, 1970 Jan 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17781503

ABSTRACT

The (7)Be, (22)Na, (26)Al, (44)Ti, (46)SC, (48)V (51)Cr, (54)Mn, (56)Co, (57)Co, (57)CO, (40)K, (238)U, and (232)Th were measured in lunar fines and portions of three rocks. Major production of cosmogenic radionuclides is due to solar protons, thus their concentrations are far different than those in meteorites. Surface exposures of the rocks and fines are long compared with the 0.74 million year half-life of (26)Al. Lunar fines show substantially higher concentrations of low energy reaction products. The ratios of thorium to uranium are extremely constant at 3.8, which indicates very little geochemical differentiation and are in good agreement with a common nucleosynthesis for lunar and earth materials.

8.
Science ; 166(3910): 1269-72, 1969 Dec 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17759948

ABSTRACT

The concentrations of beryllium-7, sodium-22, aluminum-26, potassium-40, scandium-46, vanadium-48, chromium-51, manganese-54, cobalt-57, cobalt-60, and thorium-232 (thallium-208) have been measured in the Allende meteorite by nondestructive gamma-ray spectrometry. The high cobalt-60 content of the meteorite is indicative of a preatmospheric body with a minimum effective radius of 50 centimeters and a weight of 1650 kilograms; the aluminum-26 activity indicates a minimum exposure age of 3 million years.

9.
J Appl Behav Anal ; 1(4): 307-14, 1968.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16795189

ABSTRACT

Social greeting responses of three withdrawn, chronic schizophrenics were experimentally modified. Initially, none of the subjects spoke to an experimenter. Prompts and cigarette reinforcement were employed to produce increases in the rates of greetings. Then, the prompts were faded so that the greetings came under the control of the presence of the experimenter. Reversal and subsequent reinforcement procedures were employed to demonstrate that the responses were controlled by their consequences. Next, the schedule of cigarette reinforcement was leaned out so that greetings continued to occur in the absence of cigarette reinforcement. However, low or zero rates of greetings occurred in the presence of a second experimenter. Five new experimenters employed the prompting, fading, reinforcement, and schedule-leaning procedures. Subsequently, all subjects emitted appropriately high rates of greetings in the presence of the second experimenter. Without further application of the experimental procedures, greetings were still occurring in the presence of both the first and second experimenters almost three months later.

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