Category Archives: Human Behavior

Tampa poet Yuki Jackson reflects on the revolutionary and complicated concept of sharing and respecting space – Creative Loafing Tampa

yukijacksonpoet/Instagram

It is a revolutionary idea to share a space, which first requires asking permission. I notice how much of human behavior is to not respect the space of who you want to engage with or rather, take from. We take on this invasive tendency also in the form of encroaching and taking advantage of cultures, commodifying their lives, products and resources, with this whole sense of ownership, which seems to be the crux of white supremacy as well as general masculine energy.

Historically, the space we inhabit is of a woman. It starts from when we are in the womb, quite literally the first space we occupy. Is it any wonder that the deep disregard and violence towards women occurs as a perpetual expression of this first impulse we all possess as humans to occupy a woman then rip her apart.

Like rapper Chael Blinyas BLK Hole lyric, cause off rip, she got ripped off, the idea of a supreme male God who single-handedly created everything is a direct act of erasure on the role of the feminine side of life and is the root of disrespect towards women. In plain sight humanity has failed to cite its source.

I have been hosting a virtual poetry workshop series over the past couple months, the most recent installment themed Making Sense of Space. Together we explored space in different aspectsouter space, as in black holes and NASA, which seems to come foremost in our minds when we consider space, as well as space in terms of where we occupy and the space created when we experience loss in our lives.

This idea of the infinite void can feel at once hopeless and hopeful. While black holes could delete the universe, they also store information like the ultimate hard drive, they are like holograms in that everything inside is projected on its event horizon (Why Black Holes Could Delete the UniverseThe Information Paradox) We are projections directed towards an endless wall, a moving picture whirring constant, so we turn as much as we can, spinning the wheel, wondering how did we get here. And like the drive-in movie experience, we may discover that arriving in a space, the act of coming, is best when involving both of us.

Projection No.2 - First Showing

I got in trouble for letting the visitors write on my walls

we lived in Ichi-ban Tower which means first if it's all in order

the aftermath of when my mother invited people over to discuss world peace I should have watched the other kids closer

my room, my responsibility

a mistake I would be blamed and punished with a ruler measured in whats used to count distance everywhere but where I live

Ive been told Im in my own little world

an attempt to exhibit our first graffiti,watch how we leave our marks without apology

it's possible I may have even encouraged it

if we reflect the universe, it is her space and you enter

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Tampa poet Yuki Jackson reflects on the revolutionary and complicated concept of sharing and respecting space - Creative Loafing Tampa

The science of love The Stute – The Stute

Flushed cheeks, sweaty palms, increased libido, giddiness, or the need to cuddle up with someone special? Love has always felt like an inexplicable, mysterious force rooted in the heart. Its dictated centuries of human life and culture on Earth. In an instant, you can find your thoughts and impulses being influenced by the actions and existence of another individual.

But I assure you that thanks to science, one can quickly categorize the complicated concoction of chemicals that comprise our cravings for companionship.

According to American anthropologist and human behavior researcher Dr. Helen Fisher, the process of falling in love can be split into several stages: lust, attraction, and attachment. Each stage is identified by a different set of hormones and signals set off in your brain.

Lust has an evolutionary basis: our innate need to reproduce. Sex hormones, such as testosterone and estrogen, are produced by a small region located at the base of the brain, called the hypothalamus. Along with an increase in sex drive, the release of these hormones is capable of affecting your body temperature, appetite, sleep, and growth.

The next stage of love, known for being the honeymoon and crazed and cant-think-of-anything-but point of a relationship, is centered on attraction and passion. Dopamine and norepinephrine are neurotransmitters that flood your brain, acting as a chemical messenger between neurons, heightening your attention and producing feelings of bliss and excitement. Dopamine is especially known for playing a major role as a motivational component in reward-based behavior, which is why couples at this stage often desire to focus intently on their relationship.

Coupled with rising levels of dopamine and norepinephrine is a striking decrease in the amount of serotonin, a key hormone necessary for stabilizing moods, and promoting feelings of happiness. A lack of serotonin can ultimately impact an individuals well-being, causing depression, anxiety, or trouble sleeping.

In long-lasting relationships, the final stage of the process may lead to an increase in attachment, as infatuation dwindles with time. In a preliminary study by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, the release of the hormone oxytocin during this phase is reported to be associated with the ability to maintain healthy interpersonal relationships and healthy psychological boundaries with other people. Additionally, your endorphins may kick in, providing you with a sense of security and stress relief.

Despite sciences ability to help us explain all these sensations that make up love, there is still much speculation regarding the reasons we are attracted towards certain people rather than others and why love fades quickly or even lasts as long as it does. It would be a mistake to conclude that this animalistic impulse is in any way simple.

So perhaps for those of us lucky to experience some form of it this Valentines Day, whether it be romantic, familial, or selfward, one can learn to revel in loves intricate interplay within our minds and draw comfort from its chaos.

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The science of love The Stute - The Stute

2021 Reed Awards honor writing about the Southeast’s fragile coast – Southern Environmental Law Center

Two writers who have delved into the past and present challenges facing treasured places on the Southeast coast will receive SELCs 2021 Phillip D. Reed Environmental Writing Awards, presented March 25 during this years Virginia Festival of the Book.

The Reed Awards honor the late Phillip D. Reed, a distinguished attorney, committed environmental activist, and a founding trustee of SELC, by celebrating some of the best environmental writing on the South.

In the book category, former Georgia state legislator Paul Bolster will receive the Reed Award for Saving the Georgia Coast: A Political History of the Coastal Marshlands Protection Act. In the journalism category, Tony Bartelme of The Post and Courier in Charleston will receive the Reed Award for his in-depth reporting on South Carolinas coastal environment, including communities where the damaging impacts of climate change are happening now.

The featured speaker for the Reed Award presentation will be Lulu Miller, co-host of WNYC Studios Radiolab and author of the widely acclaimed Why Fish Dont Exist, a nonfiction scientific thriller and memoir. The free, online event will be at 2pm Eastern Time.

To register, visit http://www.southernenvironment.org/reedaward.

In Saving the Georgia Coast, published by the University of Georgia Press, Paul Bolster brings to life the unlikely coalition of local residents, wealthy landowners, hunters and anglers, garden club members, courageous politicians and others who came together more than 50 years ago to defend Georgias unspoiled coastal marshlands. At the same time, he traces the intricate legislative maneuvers that resulted in passage of the 1970 Coastal Marshlands Protection Act, a law that remains the most comprehensive protection of marshlands along the Atlantic seaboard.

Bolster, who served a diverse Atlanta district in the Georgia House of Representatives for 12 years, does more than look back at this landmark legislative achievement. He also examines the policy challenges facing the Georgia coast today, among them how to address unrelenting development pressures and how to deal with rising sea levels and other impacts of a warming planet. He continues to follow environmental legislation in the state capitol and feels that lawmakers could look to the lessons from 50 years ago as a guide to protecting Georgias fragile coast today.

A freelance writer and historian, Bolster holds a Ph.D. degree in history from the University of Georgia and a law degree from Georgia State University School of Law. He taught American history at Clark Atlanta University for 14 years and has worked as a lobbyist for the Georgia Hospital Association and the American Hospital Association. A tireless advocate for affordable housing, he ran a Health Care for the Homeless program in Atlanta and served for three years on Governor Nathan Deals Council on Criminal Justice Reform.

Tony Bartelme, a special projects reporter for The Post and Courier, is being recognized in part for his stories from the Rising Waters Project, a series documenting how the accelerating forces of climate change are affecting Charleston and the South Carolina Lowcountry. Bartelme explains not only the science behind wetter hurricanes, intense rain bomb events and flooding high tides, but also the policy issues they raise and how they are making life harder for many South Carolinians. In other pieces recognized by this years award, Bartelme displays a gift for linking science with sense of place. These include a story tracing the human and natural history of South Carolinas Santee Delta, and another on the quest by researchers to learn more about an elusive and rapidly disappearing marshland bird, the eastern black rail.

A graduate of Northwestern Universitys Medill School of Journalism, Bartelme is a three-time finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and has won some of the highest honors in journalism. He was awarded a prestigious Harvard University Nieman Fellowship in 2010. His investigative reporting has exposed government corruption and has explored subjects ranging from changes in ocean plankton to the global shortage of doctors. His latest book, A Surgeon in the Village: An American Doctor Teaches Brain Surgery in Africa, was published by Beacon Press.

Lulu Miller is a Peabody Award-winning science journalist who fell hard for radio when she joined the staff of WNYC Studios Radiolab, initially as a volunteer. She returned to the show as co-host this past year. She is also co-founder ofNPRsInvisibilia, a show about the invisible forces that shape human behavior. Her book Why Fish Dont Exist has been hailed as a wondrous debut and was listed among the best books of 2020 by The Washington Post, NPR, Chicago Tribune and Smithsonian. It follows the life of taxonomist David Starr Jordanthe first president of Stanford University and a proponent of the eugenics movementand reveals both the triumphs and the dark side of his relentless search for order in a chaotic world. Her book is also a deeply personal story about how to go on when everything seems lost. Miller is a graduate of Swarthmore College and earned an MFA in fiction writing from the University of Virginia.

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2021 Reed Awards honor writing about the Southeast's fragile coast - Southern Environmental Law Center

Bill Gates Has Always Sought Out New Reading Recommendations – The New York Times

Which subjects do you wish more authors would write about?

Im surprised more books havent been written about how the insights were gaining from big data could be used for good. I read Everybody Lies, by Seth Stephens-Davidowitz, last summer, which is all about what internet data and especially search engines reveal about human behavior. (Did you know that people who have pancreatic cancer often Google both back pain and yellowing skin before being diagnosed?) It was super interesting, but he didnt get into what we could do with these learnings. Id love to read a thoughtful book about how this information could make life better.

Which genres do you especially enjoy reading? And which do you avoid?

I think books are one of the best ways to learn about the world, so I love reading things that teach me something new. My reading list always includes a bunch of history and science books. Over a decade ago, I started reviewing books on my blog, but its only a small look at what I read every year, and it doesnt include things like the academic textbooks or research reports that I find really useful. I gravitate more toward nonfiction, although I wouldnt say I avoid fiction. I only read a couple novels each year. I usually end up loving them, though, so maybe I should try to read more.

What kind of reader were you as a child? Which childhood books and authors stick with you most?

Ive always liked getting recommendations from other people, even when I was a little kid. I used to ask my teachers what their favorite books were and make my way through the lists they gave me. Our school librarian used to suggest things for me to read, too. Shed often give me books that were supposed to be for kids older than I was, which was very exciting for me. The book I probably read the most growing up was The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress, a great science fiction book by Robert Heinlein.

How have your reading tastes changed over time?

I used to read a lot of science fiction when I was a kid, but not so much as an adult (although I rediscovered my love for the genre through Neal Stephensons incredible Seveneves a few years ago). These days, I reach for books about a much broader range of topics than I used to. I read Andy Puddicombes The Headspace Guide to Meditation and Mindfulness a couple years ago I dont think my 20-year-old self wouldve ever picked that one. As my kids have grown older, theyve introduced me to a lot of great books and authors that I wouldnt necessarily have come across by myself, like John Green. Thats been a lot of fun. And Melinda is always helping me expand my horizons she suggested I read Edith Eva Egers book The Choice last year, and I loved it.

What book would you recommend for Americas current political moment?

These Truths, by Jill Lepore. If youre going to solve a problem, you need to understand the context behind how it came to be. Lepore has written the most honest accounting of our countrys history that Ive ever read. The book is long, but it makes it clear how a lot of what we learned in school is simplified and ignores the less savory parts of American history.

What do you plan to read next?

I cant wait to read Walter Isaacsons new book, The Code Breaker, when it comes out in a couple weeks. Its about Jennifer Doudna, who won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry last year for her work on the CRISPR gene-editing platform.

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Bill Gates Has Always Sought Out New Reading Recommendations - The New York Times

This is why you have to watch out for the self-propelled pedestrian – Innovation Origins

The self-driving car is on its way and will be for some time to come. It works just fine on the highway or on main roads. As long as there are no cyclists busy sending apps, pizza delivery riders zipping by on their scooters or any inattentive pedestrians nearby, a self-driving car without a steering wheel can function well enough. If there are any out on the roads, they will only be able to drive at very low speeds in order to have enough brake in time for unexpected incidents. Also, a self-driving car will have a tough time crossing busy roads if there are pedestrians constantly crossing over. In short, traffic congestion will likely increase.

In order to explore what technological solutions can help with this, I came up with the term, the self-propelled pedestrian, a pleonasm somewhat similar to the self-driving car.

Back on March 7, 2015, I wrote the blog below, which, except for the future interconnectivity of cars, still has relevance today.

With some simple, existing technologies, the car will be able to drive itself, at least on the highway. If a car is equipped with lane-keeping assist, adaptive cruise control and automatic brake assist systems, the driver can calmly read a newspaper or take a nap on the highway. These types of self-driving cars are usually featured in the news, with the year 2017 or 2020 tacked on.

It is much more difficult to make a self-driving car for in city traffic, because cyclists, pedestrians and mobility scooters are very unpredictable and the robot car has absolutely no control over a pedestrians behavior. Besides, it is impossible for computer, radar, lidar, etc. systems to predict which intentions another road user may have. If a motorist is approaching on the left or right, it is the look in their eyes that is often the best predictor of their behavior. If their gaze is tense, then the road user intends to cross. If they are not staring so intensely or even seem a bit distracted, then they are willing to wait another round. Or they are under the influence of mind-altering substances. Systems that are installed on an automated car do not yet have this predictive capability. Albeit there are developments in this area as well.

Systems that can gauge car driver fatigue through eye movements have been around for quite a while. In such cases, the driver could be advised to go and grab a cup of coffee. Of course, the technology is already advanced enough that other drivers in the vicinity can be notified that a driver who is not well-rested is approaching from the left. Yet the right to privacy still takes precedence. A step further can measure breathing, muscle tension, heart rate, perspiration and skin temperature. These readings change under the influence of stress, and stress levels tend to increase when crossing complicated intersections.

Yet another step forward are predictions about human behavior that can be made by using a special MRI technique inside the brain. Neurologists at the University of Western Ontario (Canada) have been examining activity in several areas of the brain this way. By combining and interpreting that information, they can predict seconds in advance what movements a test subject will make next. Scientists at the University of Michigan have adapted this technology to make it mobile by inserting an implant into the skull that transmits signals to a small computer outside the body. This could also enable people with e.g. spinal cord injuries to still move their arms or legs. Technically speaking, this information could also be exchanged between cars and people so that trips around town would be slightly more comfortable.

Also read: A real-time signal from bicycles can reduce the number of serious accidents with cars

About this column

In a weekly column, written alternately byWendy van Ierschot,Bert Overlack,Eveline van Zeeland,Eugene Franken, Jan Wouters,Helen Kardan, Katleen Gabriels, Mary Fiersand Hans Helsloot, Innovation Origins tries to figure out what the future will look like. These columnists, occasionally joined by guest bloggers, are all working in their own way on solutions to the problems of our time. So that tomorrow is good. Here are all theprevious articles.

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This is why you have to watch out for the self-propelled pedestrian - Innovation Origins

How Congress might upend Section 230, the law big tech is built on – Livemint

More than 20 proposals to update Section 230 have surfaced on the Hill, originating from both sides of the aisle. Sens. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) and John Thune (R-S.D.), plan to reintroduce one of them, the PACT Act, in the coming weeks, says Sen. Thune. A competing bill was recently proposed by a trio of Democratic U.S. senators on Feb. 5. Its intention, as its backers wrote, is to make social-media companies accountable for enabling cyberstalking, targeted harassment and discrimination."

There is broad agreement among experts and politicians that Section 230 wont be eliminated, but thats where accord ends. While many believe an update of the law is necessary and imminent, many others think most attempts to alter it are dangerous. And despite a flurry of ideas for modernizing the law, its not clear where it falls in Congresss priorities in light of all the other challenges facing the country.

The heads of some Big Tech companies, notably Facebooks Mark Zuckerberg (in October) and Microsofts Satya Nadella (on Wednesday) have said they welcome more clarity on what sort of speech should be allowed under Section 230. Meanwhile, Twitter Chief Executive Jack Dorsey on Tuesday proposed a more market-driven" approach to addressing the desire to update Section 230. Even if legislation is passed, its not clear exactly what sort of cases will be brought to test the updated law, or what precedents those decisions will establish. And hashing it out in the courts could take years.

Section 230 touches on everything from election integrity to online social-media bias," says Klon Kitchen, who was until recently director of the Center for Technology Policy at the politically conservative Heritage Foundation. If we try to solve all the problems of the internet by making changes to this one law, he adds, well be overwhelmed by their unintended consequences.

Passed in 1996, Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act was explicitly intended to protect and promote Americas then-nascent internet industry. It is the foundational covenant between the state and internet platforms. It goes, roughly, like this: As long as sites arent knowingly helping their users commit crimes, what users share on these sites is the users own responsibility. Section 230 makes the business models of giants including Facebook and Google possible. Its the reason upstarts and competitors to these giants, from TikTok and MeWe to Parler and Gab, can exist. And it enables countless other businesses, too, such as Airbnb.

Much has changed since 1996. Then, there were 36 million people on the internet, most of them in the U.S. Now there are 4.8 billion, including 90% of Americans. And according to a survey by Pew published in July, 72% of U.S. adults say social-media companies have too much power and influence in politics.

Given the tech industrys power to determine what information we consumeand the apparent protection from scrutiny or recourse that Section 230 providesits no wonder a long and bipartisan list of politicians, appointed officials and career bureaucrats are concerned about the law.

Many Democrats are worried that platforms have used the protections of Section 230 as an excuse to let some kinds of speech run rampant; many Republicans believe theyve used it to police speech too much. Some want to add clarifying language to Section 230, while others want carve-outs," which make it explicit that companies only receive liability protections if they play by certain rules. A few, including Sens. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) and Ted Cruz (R-Texas), want Section 230gutted.

One of the reasons that hasnt happened is when legislators look at the implications of that, that juice isnt worth the squeeze," says Mr. Kitchen. The potential negative ramifications of wiping out Section 230 without having an adequate replacement would be considerable, and could seriously damage the U.S. economy, he adds.

Reverting to their pre-1996 legal status would mean websites and apps that act to moderate content in any way would be responsible for everything they host and disseminate. Services like Facebook and YouTube would either have to stop moderating and open the floodgates to spam, hate speech and other harmful content, or moderate and be potentially crushed by individual and class-action lawsuits for harms arising from what their users post. Most likely, theyd have to drastically narrow the scope and volume of whats permitted on their platforms.

For users on Twitter or Instagram, this could mean hitting share" and then hoping your post makes it past an army of automated filters and human reviewers that would put existing hurdles to shame. Meanwhile, someone would have to vet and vouch for every Google search result and Airbnb listing ahead of time. If this poses a crushing burden for Americas trillion-dollar tech behemoths, it would be infinitely worse for startups entering the industry.

Given that, most proposals focus on upgrading and expanding Section 230, not blowing it out an airlock.

Sens. Mark R. Warner (D-Va.), Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) and Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) proposed the SAFE TECH Act earlier this month. It does not appear to be the sort of bill that any Republicans will be eager to cosign. A grab bag of a half dozen proposals, it makes platforms liable for both ads they run and harassment they enable, and would allow (for example) Rohingya survivors to sue Facebook in U.S. court for what the United Nations has alleged is the companys role in the Myanmar genocide.

The act also incorporates changes to Section 230 proposed by legal scholars such as George Washington University law professor and former Obama administration Justice Department official Spencer Overton. He recommended a carve-out that would force online platforms to obey federal civil-rights laws. This would mean, among other things, platforms could not allow content or advertising intended to suppress voting by protected groups.

In addition, the bill would change what Section 230 protects from information" to speech," something proposed by law professors Danielle Keats Citron, of The University of Virginia, and Mary Anne Franks, of the University of Miami. This change would put all sorts of conduct outside the laws protection, from gun sales to fraudulent transactions, and force platforms to do something about them.

Courts are already establishing the limits of the existing language of Section 230 by, for example, ruling that it does not protect Airbnb from violations of local rental laws, which the company had argued it should.

With the SAFE TECH Act, were looking to shift the conversation around Section 230 away from Republicans debunked claims of anti-conservative bias to the real harms caused by internet platformsthings like civil rights violations, stalking, and harassment," says Sen. Hirono. This bill lays down a marker and signals to Facebook, Google, Twitter, and others that the days of burying your heads in the sand while your platforms are weaponized against innocent users are over," she adds.

Some scholars warn that the SAFE TECH Act could be nearly as threatening to the internet economy as eliminating Section 230 entirely. It is sloppily drafted to an irresponsible degree," says Daphne Keller, director of the Program on Platform Regulation at Stanford University, who was an associate general counsel at Google until 2015.

One provision enables claims against sites that receive or make payments for content. Ms. Keller says this could bring more lawsuits against entities such as Amazon Web Services, which could be liable for content shared by its customers users, and Bandcamp, which allows independent musicians to sell their tracks.

She says the law also loosely defines violations of peoples civil rights," and because it makes platforms liable for harassment or intimidation," it will be up to the courts to decide what constitutes harassment and intimidation of one user by another. The provisions intended to help victims of discrimination and harassment will be weaponized by trolls and white-supremecist organizations," she adds.

This legislation has some admirable goals," said Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), one of the original authors and sponsors of Section 230. Unfortunately, as written, it would devastate every part of the open internet, and cause massive collateral damage to online speech." The SAFE TECH Act would also cause web hosts and cloud storage companies to purge their networks of controversial speech, and harm and silence marginalized people whose speech might be considered controversial, he adds.

A Pew survey published last August says that 90% of Republicans believe social-media sites censor political viewpoints. Some researchers have found the opposite is true. A just-published report from researchers at New York University found that in general, social media privileges and amplifies the views of right-wing users.

The PACT Act, originally proposed in June 2020, would require online platforms to explain their content-moderation practices clearly, require quarterly reports on what content has been removed, and impose less stringent requirements on small online platforms, to avoid placing undue burdens on startups without the same resources as Big Tech.

Other legislative efforts like the SAFE TECH Act have taken a more targeted approach to address very specific issues," says Sen. Thune. The PACT Act brings more transparency to technology companies content moderation practices so we can hold them more accountableand there is bipartisan support for the outcomes the PACT Act seeks to achieve," he adds.

The question of how to fix the internet with updates to Section 230 is far-reaching and complex enough it could require leadership from the executive branch, says Nicol Turner Lee, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. President Biden could convene a commission on a handful of topics related to speech online, including the regulation of hate speech, harassment and incitement, she continues, and make updating Section 230 part of its agenda.

Such a committee could form soon. In a Jan. 26 hearing, President Bidens nominee for secretary of Commerce, Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo, said she would use the National Telecommunications and Information Administrations power to convene stakeholders to decide what is to be done about Section 230.

Whatever happens to Section 230, any changes to it cant possibly solve all of the problems of the modern internet which it has enabled.

Weve basically moved aspects of every kind of good and bad human behavior online, with consequences that are sometimes awful and very often complicated," says Ms. Keller. Now pundits and some people in D.C. have become convinced that we can tackle all of that by amending this one little law."

This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text.

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How Congress might upend Section 230, the law big tech is built on - Livemint

Relax, feeding the birds is fun – Valley Breeze

2/10/2021

One more Thing

By LAURENCE J. SASSO, JR.

Dont worry! Be happy!

You probably associate those reassuring words with a song by Bobby McFerrin. It was very popular in 1988. However, the phrase could also be the advice Kim Calcagno gives when it comes to feeding birds in your backyard.

Calcagno, who celebrated 16 years working for the Rhode Island Audubon Society last week, is the refuge manager for two of the organizations sites, including the headquarters in Smithfield.

She reassures bird lovers that it is OK to just enjoy their hobby. It isnt necessary to grow anxious about the dietary impact or lack thereof on the feathered consumers they attract.

For example, she points out that the notion you must continue putting out bird food for the entire winter once you begin supplying it to the winged visitors is something of a myth.

Birds dont depend on it. They have been feeding themselves for eons. They retain their instinct. They will find food. You can feed them regularly, but you dont have to. Birds will find things to eat. Running a bird restaurant with a never-ending source of food is not necessary. No matter what you do, birds only get about one quarter of their diet from feeders, so its OK to relax.

A sigh of relief is perfectly all right here, readers. Calcagno, 49, knows what she is talking about.

Her interest in birds and wildlife management began early in life. What spurred me on as a kid was volunteering at the Massachusetts Audubon Societys Blue Hills nature center. In fact, it led to her choice of career.

At Tufts University, she earned her bachelors degree in biology and environmental science and followed that with a masters in environmental studies and environmental education at Antioch University. Prior to her post at Rhode Island Audubon, she worked six years for the Massachusetts Audubon Society.

Asked exactly what her duties entail here in Rhode Island, she replies, a lot of different things, and she runs through a list that includes field work, wildlife management, teaching, lecturing, facility maintenance, speaking before community groups, keeping the trails open, etc.

In addition, she oversees the educational raptors that the society uses to teach the public about their behaviors. Currently, she reports, her latest charge is a peregrine falcon.

Returning to her observations about what homeowners and hobbyists new to bird feeding might expect to encounter, she says, a question we get fairly often is where did all the birds go.

She explains that people will call in bewilderment and ask if maybe they did something wrong or if there is a sickness depleting the flocks.

Usually, its just that the birds find some other source of food. They are always looking for new supplies, she notes, adding natural berries are attractive where options exist. Seeds that humans provide might be their second choice. So they go with the berries for a while.

She points out that sometimes there could be a temporary displacement caused by a predator such as a neighborhood cat or a Coopers hawk that is stalking the feeding area. Ultimately, though, the disappearance of the bird visitors is almost never a result of anything the host is doing.

However, Calcagno hastens to add that there are serious concerns about the larger environmental context that cannot be ignored.

Some statistics are pretty terrifying, she declares. In the last 60 to 70 years, she explains that the songbird population has dropped alarmingly.

According to Scientific American, there are some 3 billion fewer songbirds across North America than there were in 1970, a decrease of 29 percent.

Calcagno explains that the decimation is attributable to a number of factors, many of them due to human behavior such as the use of pesticides, the loss of habitat caused by agricultural and land development practices, and climate change.

The Audubon Society has been in the forefront of efforts to protect migratory birds. She notes that the organization helped to pass legislation establishing laws that regulate the treatment of affected species, although some of the restrictions were rolled back by the last administration.

Calcagno mentions that the work the Audubon Society does is supported by its members and donors. The three major functions of the organization are conservation, education, and advocacy.

One of the myths is that the society is a government agency. It is not, she says, adding we do need support.

Sometimes it comes in the form of material donations as well as monetary contributions and fees.

We have someone that I call the Tool Fairy. If a power drill is needed, it just shows up. There is this person who somehow finds out, and lo and behold there it is.

The cost of a family membership is $50. It helps fund activities and programs. Members get first dibs on offerings and discounts. Volunteers are also welcome.

During this time of COVID-19 access to the building is controlled, but there are outdoor activities, in which, says Calcagno, there is continuing participation.

The Wednesday morning bird walks are as popular as ever, and the Owl Prowls and hikes attract smaller numbers, but they are holding up.

After 16 years, her appetite for the job seems undiminished. She swells with enthusiasm in describing what motivates her.

When I teach folks and I see a transformative moment its stop and smell the roses for me. I say to myself this is why I do what I do. I have to have a job where I feel Im doing something important.

(Contact me at smithpublarry@gmail.com)

Bottom Lines

What Rhode Island institution of higher education kept its mascot at a Smithfield farm once owned by the family which donated the nearby land for the Audubon Societys headquarters and Powder Mill Ledges Wildlife Refuge in Smithfield? What was the animal? The first reader to respond gets a shout out here.

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Relax, feeding the birds is fun - Valley Breeze

San Joaquin County likely weeks away from seeing COVID-19 restrictions eased further – Stockton Record

Cassie Dickman|The Record

Coronavirus infections and hospitalizations are continuingon a downward trend in San Joaquin County following a post-holiday surge that lasted through the beginning of January. But that doesn't meanthe county is out of the woods just yet.

San Joaquin Countycould remain in the purple tier,the most restrictive ofthe COVID-19 pandemic classifications, for at least several more weeks, county Public Health Officer Maggie Park said.

"There's really no way to really predict because so much of it depends on human behavior," Park said told the county's Board of Supervisors at its meeting Tuesday.

There is also some concern about what might be coming in the next few weeks due to Super Bowl get-togethers, Park said.Variants in the virus that were recently discovered to have entered the country could also affect spring infection rates, she said.

California returned to its four-tiered system of county-by-county restrictions last month after a majority of the state was placed under strict lockdown orders in December to keep hospitals from being overrun.The color-coded tiers are part of the statewide Blueprint for a Safer Economy and indicate which activities and businesses are open based on local case rates and test positivity.

Park said the county's COVID-19 positivity case rate of 31.7 per 100,000 population was well above the state's threshold rate of 7 per 100,000 to move into the less-restrictive red tier.

"So we still have a ways to go," Park said.

California's purple tierallowsfor businesses such as restaurants to resume outdoor operations, while hair and nail salons are also allowed to reopen. Other local businesses, such as bars that only serve beverage, still cannot be open.The county has not qualified to be in the red tier since the middle of November.

But Park said the county has seen a drastic reduction in COVID-19 case rates in the last month.

The county saw an adjusted case rate in the 70s as recent as the week of Jan. 19. It has since dropped more than 40 points.

"We came down very rapidly actually," Park said. "So if we keep to progress, it could be in a month or two."

San Joaquin County saw an average weekly rate of more than 4,500 new COVID-19 cases from the end of November into the New Year, according to county public health data. The week ending Jan. 9 saw the highest number of COVID-19 cases since the pandemic began, soaring past 5,000 for the first time since the pandemic began.

In the weeks that followed, newly confirmed coronavirus cases have steadily continued to drop. Public health data reportsthe week ending Feb. 6 sawjust under 1,300 new cases.

"The surge that we had during the November to December timeframe is coming down nicely," Park said Tuesday.

Park also noted that hospitalization rates in the county have followed suit.

"We are finally below the number that we had in the hospital at the summertime peak," Park said.

The county's seven area hospitals are currently treating 130patients that have contracted the virus, the county's Emergency Medical Services Agency reported Wednesday afternoon. That's more than 130 less than the summertime high of 262 patients.

However, Park noted intensive care units are still at 0% bed capacity. County hospitals have a total of 99 licensed ICU beds, which have largely remained full for months.

As of Wednesday, county hospitalsreported treating 130 adult ICU patients, 56 of which have been diagnosed with COVID-19. Park said Tuesday that 41 patients being treated at county hospitals were on ventilators.

"We still have some quite sick people in our hospitals and the numbers are still higher than, of course, we would like them to be," Park said.

County EMS also reported four people had died from COVID-19 from Tuesday to Wednesday.

San Joaquin County has seen 64,396total cases of COVID-19 since the pandemic began and 929deaths from the disease, according to the county's COVID-19 information dashboard. About 3,646 of reported cases have still not yet recovered.

Record reporter Cassie Dickman covers Stockton and San Joaquin County government. She can be reached at cdickman@recordnet.com or on Twitter @byCassieDickman. Support local news, subscribe to The Stockton Record athttps://www.recordnet.com/subscribenow.

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San Joaquin County likely weeks away from seeing COVID-19 restrictions eased further - Stockton Record

[Full text] Disease Prevention Behavior During the COVID-19 Pandemic and the Role | PRBM – Dove Medical Press

Introduction

In 2020, the WHO reported1 that the number of COVID-19 cases had exceeded 65 million and that the number of COVID-19 deaths had exceeded 1.5 million. The COVID-19 outbreak has become a global pandemic and is the largest public health crisis in recent human history. In January 2020, Taiwan enhanced the efficacy of its disease surveillance and reporting system by including laboratory tests of respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2. The outbreak was temporarily controlled by sentinel surveillance of respiratory infection and severe or novel influenza infection.2 However, since no treatment or vaccine for COVID-19 is currently available, how to encourage the practice of effective prevention behaviors is a crucial issue.3

The extended parallel process model (EPPM)4 is a useful theoretical framework not only for understanding how and why a perceived threat and the perceived efficacy of a response to the threat potentially affect fear arousal, but also for understanding the mechanisms of change in the prevention and protection behaviors of an individual in response to the experience of fear.5 A perceived threat is cognition of a threat or a thought about a threat; perceived efficacy refers to the perceived feasibility and effectiveness of a recommended response to a threat.4 The high explanatory power of EPPM has been verified in many health and illness-related studies that have used this model to evaluate how individual perceptions of a threat and the efficacy of a response to the threat affect various human motivations, cognitions, and behaviors.68 Another important construct in EPPM is fear appeal because it can induce the internal physiological and emotional arousal needed to motivate behavioral change.4 Since the fear appeal is known to mediate the effects of the perceived threat and perceived efficacy on COVID-19 prevention behavior, this study investigated the mediating role of fear appeal rather than performing a more general investigation of fear arousal.

According to the EPPM, whether fear contributes to the success or failure of a response to a threat depends on two factors: perceived threat and perceived efficacy.4 The first factor, perceived threat, has two underlying dimensions: perceived severity of the threat and perceived susceptibility to the threat. Witte4 defined perceived severity as the beliefs of the subject regarding the significance or magnitude of the threat and defined perceived susceptibility as the beliefs and expectations of the subject regarding the risk of experiencing the threat or the risk that the threat will occur.4 The second factor, perceived efficacy, also has two underlying dimensions: perceived self-efficacy and perceived response efficacy.7 Perceived self-efficacy refers to the self-perceived ability of an individual to implement a recommended response,4 and perceived response efficacy refers to the extent to which the individual perceives that a recommended response is effective for averting a threat.4 Moreover, the EPPM proposes that the perception of a threat determines how an individual reacts in the physical environment, ie, the physical response to the threat whereas perceived efficacy determines how the individual reacts internally, ie, the emotional response to the threat.4 Based on the above discussion, we propose that EPPM is a useful theoretical perspective for understanding how the psychological mechanisms and the decision-making processes of individuals affect their disease prevention behavior in the context of the COVID-19 outbreak. In this study, fear arousal is defined as the physiological or psychological response aroused and/or experienced by an individual in response to fear;8 prevention behavior is defined as individual behaviors that are mainly motivated by the goal of decreasing or alleviating the risk of COVID-19 infection.9

Self-esteem is defined as the correspondence between the ideal and actual self-concept of an individual.10 Self-esteem is related to various psychological outcomes, including psychological adjustment and prosocial behavior11 and is classified as high self-esteem and low self-esteem.12 High self-esteem is characterized by strong confidence and belief in oneself and high satisfaction with oneself.13 Low self-esteem is characterized by lack of confidence and the tendency to feel badly about oneself.11 Studies have verified that low self-esteem is associated with unhealthy behaviors and practices. For example, Ramiro et al14 and Bermudez et al15 reported that people with low self-esteem tend to engage in high-risk sexual behavior. Kima et al16 also found that people with low self-esteem are more likely to experience mental health problems compared to people with high self-esteem.

Interestingly, some scholars have reported that self-esteem has little or no effect on disease prevention and treatment behaviors. For example, Yuan et al17 excluded self-esteem from their regression equation used for empirical analysis of self-perceived quality of life in Chinese patients with stoma. Arsandaux et al18 further noted the high heterogeneity of variables used to measure self-esteem in the literature and the high heterogeneity of approaches used to validate and implement measures of self-esteem. Although studies of the role of self-esteem in health status and health prevention behaviors are inconclusive, they do suggest a positive link. Thus, this study investigated the relationships among the perceived threat of COVID-19, the perceived efficacy of the response to the threat, and the fear aroused by the disease. The moderating effects of self-esteem characteristics (ie, high versus low self-esteem) on these relationships were also investigated.

Previous studies have investigated and compared health behaviors in populations with specific demographic characteristics, eg, age and gender. This study defined age as the period of time a person has been alive.19 Studies have reported salient differences between the health behaviors of adolescents and young adults. For example, Ames et al20 that different age groups exhibit different effects of age stereotypes on the sense-making process, which then results in differences in self-perceived health behaviors.21 In terms of gender, which refers to the physical condition of being male or female,22 sociodemographic data collected in Olson et al23 revealed gender differences in unhealthy behavior. In young adults in the US, for example, the authors reported unhealthy behavior (eg, poor diet) in 40% of males versus only 22% of females. Conversely, some scholars have reported no evidence of a link between gender and the practice of unhealthy behaviors.24 Given the link between gender and health behavior reported in these studies, both age and gender were used as independent control variables in the analysis of COVID-19 prevention behaviors of the participants in this study.

In sum, the aim of the present study was to improve understanding of underlying factors in the performance, improvement, and management of COVID-19 prevention behaviors by using EPPM as an explanatory framework. Context-specific factors considered in the analysis of COVID-19 prevention behaviors included self-esteem and demographic characteristics (ie, age and gender).

Escalation of the COVID-19 pandemic in the past year has motivated studies of disease prevention behaviors related to COVID-19. Three streams of research related to the COVID-19 pandemic have emerged in the behavioral science literature: recommended preventive behavior, comparative analysis, and cognitive behavior.

Studies of recommended preventive behavior during the COVID-19 pandemic include an empirical survey performed in China by Ye et al25 that compared the adoption of basic, advanced, and excessive preventive behaviors in different groups of demographic characteristics. They found that predictors of proper preventive behavior include perceived sensitivity, perceived severity, perceived benefits, cues to action, and knowledge levels whereas predictors of excessive prevention behavior included perceived sensitivity and knowledge levels. Goh et al26 investigated the problem of controlling COVID-19 transmission in Taiwan prisons. Their prison-specific guidelines for responding to COVID-1927 included supplying each inmate with two surgical masks per week, requiring the use of surgical masks during any social interaction, checking body temperature twice daily, and enforcing the practice of social distancing during all activities. Additionally, all prison staff were required to wear surgical masks and were required and perform health self-monitoring, including body temperature check. Equipment, fixtures, and areas of the prison accessible by the prison population were disinfected daily with a 75% alcohol solution. To minimize the effects of psychosocial risk factors (ie, stress and negative emotions), Ricci and colleagues28 recommend behavior strategy for prevention of global health and psychosocial stress during the current lockdown, including encouraging older persons to be physically active, and eating and sleeping on a regular schedule.

Comparative analysis, which is the second stream of research in COVID-19 prevention behavior, includes Lin et al29 who investigated factors associated with adoption of social distancing behaviors in China and Israel. The authors found that constraints are negatively related to the adoption of social distancing behaviors whereas confidence is positively related to these behaviors. Constraints and behaviors were directly related in Israel but were indirectly related in China. A possible explanation for the inconsistency is cultural differences.30 In another study by Chen and Chen,31 a comparison of COVID-19 prevention behaviors between urban and rural residents in China found that prevention behaviors were more likely in rural residents. However, urban and rural residents did not significantly differ in behavioral intention, subjective norms, or knowledge of preventive behaviors. The probable explanation is that rural residents have relatively less media exposure and less experience and skill in appraising the veracity of health-related information. Thus, health information regarding COVID-19 prevention behavior should consider the urbanization level of the target audience and should be tailored accordingly.

In the early stage of the pandemic, Meier and colleagues32 compared public belief in the effectiveness of protective measures and identified the communication channels commonly used to acquire COVID-19 information in three European countries (Netherlands, Germany, and Italy). The authors reported that the perceived effectiveness of a complete social lockdown was lower in the Netherlands compared to Germany, and Italy. Additionally, compared to residents of Germany and the Netherlands, residents of Italy practiced social distancing more frequently and were more likely to practice self-imposed hygiene measures and social distancing to avoid infection. Moreover, healthcare officials and professionals were the COVID-19 information sources most preferred by European residents. The least preferred information sources were social media, friends, and family.33 In contrast, for Hong Kong residents, most preferred sources of COVID-19 pandemic information are social media and the Internet.34 Although the populations of Norway and Sweden have similar ethic and sociodemographic profiles, similar age distributions, and similar healthcare systems, the public reaction to the COVID-19 pandemic differed between the two countries.35 According to Helsingen et al35, Swedes have relatively more trust in their healthcare authorities. In contrast, Norwegians tended to have a higher risk tolerance during the pandemic. The level of trust in the healthcare system and self-reported compliance with preventive measures were high in both countries despite the differences in infection control measures. Interestingly, they also found that compared to Swedes, Norwegians were more likely to adopt a sedentary lifestyle during the pandemic and were more likely to overeat.

The third stream of research in COVID-19 prevention behavior is cognitive behavior. Human behavior is shaped and controlled by personal cognition in a social environment.36 Cognitive behavior is a major focus of the previous literature on the adoption of preventive health behaviors. For example, Storopoli et al37 applied recreancy theory in a Brazil study of factors associated with the adoption of preventive behavior to cope with the pandemic crisis. They reported that the effect of perceived vulnerability depends on confidence in oneself and confidence in social institutions (ie, government, hospitals, the media, etc.);38 moreover, they found that risk perceptions are associated with the adoption of preventive behaviors. In contrast, another study by Bashirian et al39 applied Protection Motivation Theory to predict COVID-19 prevention behaviors practiced by healthcare workers. The authors concluded that threat perception and coping appraisal were predictors of protection motivation to practice COVID-19 prevention behaviors. Moreover, they suggested that hospital managers should support and encourage the development of self-efficacy in their staff and that training programs for hospital staff should provide knowledge in the effectiveness of protective behaviors.40 Furthermore, Li and Zheng41 applied a Risk Information Seeking and Processing model to identify the key determinants of online information-seeking behavior and disease prevention intent during the COVID-19 outbreak in China. Compared to younger respondents in their sample, older respondents were less likely to seek COVID-19 information on the Internet and had lower intention to adopt preventive behaviors. Therefore, they recommended that health authorities should specifically target older populations by using online communication platforms preferred by this age group (eg, WeChat for social media).

Generally, the recent literature has not only substantially enhanced understanding of how intrinsic and extrinsic factors impact individual behaviors and attitudes associated with the adoption of disease prevention behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Figure 1 is the research model (plus or minus signs in parentheses indicate positive or negative relationships, respectively, between two constructs in research hypotheses). To understand the relationships among several constructs, all hypotheses were posited and examined.

Figure 1 Research model.

Empirical studies by Chen & Yang8 found that a fear appeal can motivate individuals to engage in disease prevention behavior by increasing the perceived threat of the disease and by arousing fear of the threat. A subsequent study by Ellis et al42 reported similar results in a population of HPV patients, ie, a public health campaign effectively motivated HPV patients to undergo regular testing by arousing their fear of death from HPV. These studies indicate that threat orientation impacts how an individual responds to a fear appeal.43 Thus, we hypothesize the following:

H1. Perceived threat is positively related to the fear aroused by the threat of a disease.

Previous research supports the notion that perceived efficacy is an important determinant of preventive health behaviors. Perceived efficacy is also an important determinant of the fear aroused by the threat of a disease, ie, ability to control fear increases as perceived efficacy increases.43,44 An empirical study by Shi & Smith4 found that people engage in danger control processes (ie, fear control processes) when they perceive that their self-efficacy is higher than the threat. Thus, we propose the following hypothesis:

H2: Perceived efficacy is negatively related to fear arousal by the threat of a disease.

Achar et al44 reported that the purpose of a fear appeal during a disease outbreak is to encourage the practice of disease prevention behavior by individuals. Moreover, Smith et al45 and Kotowski et al46 used the EPPM to evaluate the effectiveness of a fear appeal for encouraging the use of hearing protection, eg, hearing protection in construction workers. They found that, when a fear appeal was used to encourage the use of hearing protection, use of hearing protection was more likely in individuals who perceived that the threat of noise-induced hearing loss was high and had high self-efficacy compared to those who perceived that the threat was low and had low self-efficacy. Thus, we propose the following hypothesis:

H3. Fear aroused by a fear appeal is positively related to COVID-19 prevention behavior.

Holahan and Suzuki47 and Levy and Myers48 found that, compared to younger people, elderly people (especially those classified as young-old, ie, age 6574 years) were more likely to take action to prevent health problems because they were more focused on achieving health maintenance goals. Ek49 supported the general view that older people are generally viewed as being more health conscious compared to younger people, and who tend to less concerned about the health consequences they will experience later in life. These age differences in health behavior patterns tend to increase as age increases.

In terms of gender, Ek49 reported that women have more interest in and pay more attention to potential global pandemics compared to men. Compared to men, women usually have better health-promoting practices and behaviors compared to men. Moreover, women tend to engage in prosocial behavior more frequently than men do.50 Therefore, women may be more likely to practice COVID-19 prevention behavior compared to men. Thus, we propose the following hypotheses:

H4a: The practice of COVID-19 prevention behavior is better in the elderly than in the young.

H4b: The practice of COVID-19 prevention behavior is better in women than in men.

Self-esteem is a personal trait. Blank et al51 reported that people with high self-esteem have a high tolerance for risks associated with unhealthy behavior (eg, frequent and/or heavy drinking) because they tend to perceive that the risk of such behaviors is low. Kavussanu and Harnisch52 reported that high self-esteem is significantly associated with high task-orientation as well as high perceived efficacy. Furthermore, people with high self-esteem tend to engage in risky behavior to cope with fear, anxiety, and failure or to satisfy their need for excitement. People with high self-esteem are also characterized by excessive optimism, a sense of invulnerability, and a tendency to set unrealistic goals.53 Based on the above literature, we hypothesized that high self-esteem was a moderating variable in the associations among perceived threat, perceived efficacy, and fear arousal.

Regarding low self-esteem characteristics, van der Heijden et al54 investigated the interaction between self-esteem and outcome cognition and concluded that people with low self-esteem tend to have either a negative or neutral self-concept. Thus, compared to people with high self-esteem, those with low self-esteem are relatively less likely to exhibit positive cognition (eg, high perceived efficacy) about themselves but are more sensitive to negative cognition and more likely to exhibit negative cognition (eg, high perceived threat) than positive cognition.55 In brief, self-esteem is a moderating variable regardless of self-esteem.56,57 Thus, we propose the following hypotheses:

H5a: High self-esteem decreases the positive impact of perceived threat on fear arousal.

H5b: High self-esteem increases the negative impact of perceived efficacy on fear arousal.

H5c: Low self-esteem increases the positive impact of perceived threat on fear arousal.

H5d: Low self-esteem decreases the negative impact of perceived efficacy on fear arousal.

This study adopted an approach of convenience and cross-sectional sampling for data collection. Empirical data were collected by an online questionnaire survey performed from May 24 to June 10, 2020. Google Doc was used to construct an online questionnaire. All participants were adults on the friend community lists in the LINE app used by the authors. Those who received the survey message were asked to send it to others in their friend community. Out of 1013 questionnaires retrieved, 1012 were valid and complete. Of the 1012 participants with valid and complete questionnaires, 623 (61.6%) were men, and 389 (38.4%) were women. The largest age cohort was 5059 years (344, 34.0%) followed by 4049 years (208, 20.5%). The age and gender of the participants were consistent with the demographic data for LINE mobile app users reported by LINE Corporation Taiwan in the year 2019 (58% male and 42% female).58 In terms of age and gender, therefore, the sample was considered representative of the overall population of LINE users in Taiwan. Monthly income was 8341666 USD in 29.0% (293) of the participants and 16672666USD in 28.0% (283) of the participants. Additionally, 50.1% (507) of the participants had a bachelor's degree, and 42.3% (428) had a graduate degree. Table 1 shows the demographic and socioeconomic characteristics of the respondents in this study.

Table 1 Demographic and Socioeconomic Characteristics of Respondents (n=1012)

To ensure scale validity, measurement items were adapted from the literature. Three experts in public health, medical informatics, and nursing were invited to review the measurement items before the survey was performed. Specifically, the experts evaluated the logical consistency, ease of understanding, and sequence of the questionnaire items and evaluated their relevance in the context of the COVID-19 outbreak. Based on their suggestions, minor modifications of the questionnaire were made. Next, a pilot test of the questionnaire was performed in 55 participants. Based on their comments and suggestions, the measurement items were further modified. All survey items were measured using a 7-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (strongly disagree) to 7 (strongly agree).

The questionnaire was divided into two parts. The first part collected basic demographic and socioeconomic data such as gender, age, income, and education. The second part collected data used for measurements of the study variables. This instrument contained 23 items in five main constructs: the trait self-esteem was measured with four items adapted from Altmann and Roth.59 Two aspects of perceived threat were surveyed: perceived severity and perceived susceptibility. Perceived severity was measured with three items and perceived susceptibility was measured with two items adapted from Gerend et al60. Perceived efficacy included perceived self-efficacy and perceived response efficacy. Perceived self-efficacy was measured with four items adapted from Gerend et al60 whereas perceived response efficacy was measured with three items adapted from Cooper et al61. Fear of death was measured with three items adapted from Ingrid and Michael62. Prevention behavior was measured with four items adapted from Cooper et al61.

The SmartPLS 3 and SPSS version 22 software were used for statistical analyses. The SmartPLS software was used because it supported partial least square (PLS) structural equation modeling (SEM) techniques and their objectives, such as predicting key target constructs and exploring or extending an existing structural theory.63 Hair et al63 suggested that a minimum sample size of 100150 is needed to perform SEM techniques. The total sample size in this study met the requirement for SEM with maximum likelihood assessment.

Data analysis was performed using the two-step approach suggested by Anderson and Gerbing:64 estimating a measurement model and then examining structural relationships among latent constructs. The main purpose of the two-step approach was to assess the reliability and validity of the measures before applying them in the full model.

The measurement model was evaluated by reliability and validity analyses. Table 2 shows Cronbach , combined reliability (CR), and average variance extracted (AVE) values for the measurement model. In reliability tests, Cronbach values for all indicators exceeded 0.7, which indicated acceptable construct reliability.65 Convergent validity was tested according to factor loadings, AVE and CR. All factor loadings exceeded 0.5. Factor loadings for two items (SE1: 0.551, FA2: 0.578) were lower than the standardized threshold of 0.7,65 and both items were excluded from the analysis. All AVE values exceeded 0.5, and all CR values exceeded 0.7. Thus, the scale had high convergent validity and validity.

Table 2 Measurement Model Statistics

Discriminant validity was tested by comparing the square root of AVE with the correlation coefficient between the indicators. Table 3 shows the discriminant validity results. For all indicators, correlation coefficients were less than the square root of AVE, which indicated good discriminant validity as defined in Fornell and Larcker.66 Generally, the questionnaire in this study had high reliability and validity.

Table 3 Construct Correlations and Square Roots of Average Variance Extracted (AVE)

Since smartPLS does not provide a measure of the overall goodness of fit to the data, R-square value was used to measure the goodness of fit.67 The R-square values were 31.5% for fear arousal and 19.0% for prevention behavior. An R-square value below 10% implies a poor model fit to the data.68 All R-square values for the research model in the current study exceeded 10%.

Figure 2 shows the normalized path coefficients and path significance values (ns: non-significant, *p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.001). Perceived threat had a significant positive effect on fear arousal (=0.268, t=9.007, p<0.001), which supported H1. Perceived efficacy did not significantly affect fear arousal (=0.019, t=0.619, p>0.05), which did not support H2. Fear arousal had a significant positive effect on prevention behavior (=0.119, t=4.603, p<0.001), which supported H3. Regarding relationships between demographic characteristics and prevention behavior, age had a significant positive association with prevention behavior (=0.136, t=4.990, p<0.001), which supported H4a. Gender did not have a significant association with prevention behavior (=0.045, t=1.418, p>0.05), which did not support H4b.

Figure 2 Structural equation modeling analysis results for research model.Notes:***p<0.001; ns, non-significant.

This study used hierarchical regression analysis to verify the moderating effect of self-esteem characteristics on the relationship between individual perceptions of the COVID-19 epidemic (ie, perceived threat of the disease, perceived efficacy of the response, and fear arousal). Figure 3 shows that high self-esteem had a significant negative moderating effect on the relationship between perceived threat and fear arousal (=0.472, t=17.694, p<0.001). However, high self-esteem did not have a significant moderating effect on the relationship between perceived efficacy and fear arousal; hence, H5a was supported, but H5b was not.

Figure 3 Moderating effects of self-esteem characteristics on the relationship between perceived threat and fear arousal.

On the other hand, low self-esteem had a significant moderating effect on the relationship between perceived threat and fear arousal (=0.606, t=26.303, p<0.001) while a low self-esteem had no moderating effect on the relationship between perceived efficacy and fear arousal; thus, H5c was supported, but H5d was not.

In this study, a theoretical model based on EPPM was used to explore psychological response mechanisms and prevention behavior in individuals in the context of the COVID-19 outbreak. This study had several meaningful findings.

First, the applicability of the EPPM perspective of disease prevention behavior during the COVID-19 epidemic was verified. Two critical psychological dimensions of perceptions were examined in the participants: perceived threat and perceived self-efficacy. According to the results of this study, perceived threat increases fear arousal while perceived efficacy decreases fear arousal. In the context of the COVID-19 outbreak, perceived threat is a key factor in fear arousal. This finding is partially supported by Ellis et al42 in a study of HPV patients, who reported that a high perceived threat of HPV triggers a high fear of death whereas high perceived efficacy decreases fear of death.

Steinhart and Jiang69 used Terror Management Theory to explore how perceived environment threat and perceived efficacy affect mortality salience. They found that, in a high-threat situation, fear and anxiety about the threat may intrude on the decision-making process; additionally, egotism may decrease self-knowledge. According to Social Cognitive Theory developed by Bandura,36 individuals are unlikely to perform a specific behavior (eg, a COVID-19 prevention behavior) if they lack confidence in their ability to perform the behavior (ie, if they have low self-efficacy), particularly in the case of a voluntary behavior. Therefore, we speculate that these results may be explained by the unique circumstances of the emergence of COVID-19, a novel infectious disease that has high mortality and transmission rates and has no known medication treatment or vaccines. Thus, the typical psychological response to the high perceived threat of COVID-19 disease was low self-confidence in the ability to cope with the disease.

Secondly, the results demonstrate that fear arousal has a significant positive association with COVID-19 prevention behavior. This finding is consistent with Cooper et al61 who reported that fear arousal is a strong predictor of individual health-related behavior. The current study provides additional empirical evidence that fear arousal in response to a health threat is positively associated with an action to protect against the threat.

Regarding the role of demographic characteristics, our results revealed that age had significant positive associations with COVID-19 prevention behaviors. That is, the practice of COVID-19 prevention behavior tended to be better in older participants compared to younger participants.

The survey results are consistent with the finding by Yu70 that the COVID-19 prevention behavior of elderly people in South Korea reduced infection risk not only in their own age group, but in all age groups. The finding that prevention behavior is better in older participants has important healthcare implications because people in older age groups are generally more health conscious than those in younger age groups.49 Notably, however, our survey results revealed no significant gender difference in COVID-19 prevention behaviors. In contrast, prior studies, eg, Hayashi et al51, Ek50, Yu et al71 have reported that women tend to practice health-promoting behaviors more frequently than men do. Since the perceived health threat of COVID-19 was generally much higher than that of other chronic or infectious diseases, we speculate that, regardless of gender, all participants who perceived a high COVID-19 threat were motivated to practice disease prevention behavior.

Finally, regarding the role of personal characteristics, this study found that self-esteem is a moderating variable in the relationship between perceived threat and fear arousal. Participants with high self-esteem had a lower perceived risk of COVID-19 infection and lower fear arousal compared to those with low self-esteem. Additionally, improvements in perceived risk and fear arousal were larger in participants who had high self-esteem. These findings were expected since high self-esteem is associated with good self-management.69

A theoretical contribution of this study is the use of the EPPM framework to investigate the psychological response and the disease prevention behavior of individuals during a COVID-19 outbreak. Expanding the scope of the EPPM framework for application in the context COVID-19 confirmed that, in terms of fear arousal, perceived threat is more important than perceived efficacy. This study also revealed the roles of demographic characteristics (ie, age and gender) in disease prevention behavior, which has not been discussed in the previous literature on COVID-19. Finally, this study revealed that self-esteem has a moderating effect on the relationship between perceived threat and fear arousal. Clarification of the moderating role of this personality trait enriches the theoretical framework and improves understanding of the roles of psychological and behavioral attributes in the ability of individuals to cope with the COVID-19 epidemic.

Regarding practical implications, this study found that perceived threat, fear arousal, and prevention behavior were lower in people with high self-esteem compared to those with low self-esteem. Thus, people with high self-esteem are at higher risk of COVID-19 infection and transmission, and the designs of healthcare interventions for a COVID-19 outbreak should specifically target this group. Self-esteem was also positively associated with socioeconomic characteristics such as education and income.72 Moreover, people with high self-esteem tend to overestimate their knowledge and competence, which limits their ability to recognize the need for behavioral change and limits their commitment to behavioral change.13 Hence, we suggest that public health policymakers consider these personal and socioeconomic characteristics when establishing regulations for monitoring and controlling the transmission of COVID-19 during this epidemic. Additionally, self-esteem should be considered in the design of public health campaigns to encourage disease prevention behavior such as mask-wearing.

On the other hand, low self-esteem has a positive moderating effect on the relationship between perceived threat and fear arousal. From a terror management perspective,73 we suggest that public health communications should be designed to increase the perceived threat of COVID-19 and fear arousal in people with low self-esteem in order to promote disease prevention behavior in this group.

Finally, since our results demonstrated that COVID-19 prevention behavior was better in the elderly than in the young, we suggest that education, training programs, and public communications related to disease prevention should specifically target young people. For example, public health information campaigns during a COVID-19 outbreak can target young people by recruiting television and internet celebrities to act as government spokespersons for epidemic prevention policies.74

This study has some limitations. First, the investigated participants were mainly recruited from friends communities of LINE app users in Taiwan. The findings might not be applicable in other countries/regions. For example, the perceptions and psychological responses of the participants may have been affected by cultural characteristics unique to Taiwan. Another limitation is the potential for sample selection bias. That is, the analytical results for the constructs in this research would likely differ between a sample of LINE users and a sample of the general public. Finally, in accordance with Pfattheicher et al75 and Lunn et al76 fear arousal was measured primarily in relation to fear of death. However, the likelihood of death from COVID-19 is not constant across the population. For example, older people who contract COVID-19 are likely to exhibit a fear of death since COVID-19 mortality is highest in older age groups whereas younger people who contract COVID-19 are most likely to have a fear of spreading the virus to others. Thus, this limitation should be considered when interpreting and applying the results of this study.

In summary, the EPPM model in this study obtained clear evidence that self-esteem and demographic characteristics are predictors of COVID-19 prevention behaviors. We expect the analytical results of this study to be useful for helping healthcare professionals and administrators understand the need for a systematic, multi-faceted, and integrated approach to promoting COVID-19 prevention behavior.

This study complied with the Declaration of Helsinki guidelines for research involving human subjects. The study protocol was certified by the ethics committee of Taizhou University Hospital (No. 2020 079). All participants in the online-based questionnaire survey gave written informed consent to the study. All participants in the online survey gave informed consent by completing an online form designed by the authors. The study brief informed them that they were free to withdraw at any time, should they wish to do so. Survey data were stored on a password-protected computer, which housed all data.

The research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or non-profit sectors. Dr. Hsien Cheng Lin has recently become affiliated with College of Cultural Tourism & Comprehensive Health, Taizhou University, Taizhou City, Zhejiang Province, China.

The authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

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[Full text] Disease Prevention Behavior During the COVID-19 Pandemic and the Role | PRBM - Dove Medical Press

Clinical Hypnotherapist Janene Verabian Featured as Contributing Writer for Addicted2Success.com – PRNewswire

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif., Feb. 9, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --Respected for her tender but direct guidance, Clinical Hypnotherapist and Relationship Expert Janene Verabian calls out common ways we hold ourselves back in her just released article on Addicted2Success.com. Self-Sabotage: How to Stop Holding Yourself Hostage outlines 8 ways in which many people hold themselves back from their goals both personally and professionally. The article also highlights 3 distinct ways that you can get out of your own way and on to living your best life. With over a decade of experience, Janene believes that when your motivating factor is strong enough, you will take intentional steps to create real change. Her professional goal is to help her clients stop the cycle of endless therapy and instead, create sustainable real change that is empowering.

"I don't speak from the cheap seats and value being able to provide straight talk that empowers people to move through past trauma once and for all." Janene Verabian CHt, CLC, CWK

About Janene Verabian CHt, CLC, CWK:Janene Verabian is recognized as Southern California's Premier Certified Clinical Hypnotherapist and Relationship Expert. She has dedicated her career to helping others move through past trauma in order to live happy, fulfilled, and meaningful lives. She is a graduate of the prestigious Hypnotherapy Academy of America - an approved school of the American Council of Hypnotist Examiners which sets the highest standards for hypnotherapists. It is also considered the most advanced hypnotherapy institute in the world, as the curriculum features an extensive program on the study of human behavior and the mind. Specializing in past trauma healing through Clinical Hypnotherapy and Relationship coaching, Janene has earned a reputation for results through over a decade of personalized guidance for men and women. Consistently strengthening her professional "toolbox" she regularly pursues advanced education and holds additional certifications as a Wholistic Kinesiology Practitioner, Certified Life Coach, Gottman Institute Certified Level Two Couples Therapist and is currently working on advanced studies through Harvard University.

Learn More:JaneneVerabian.com | Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn

Contact: Paula SteurerSterling Public RelationsDirect: 949. 200. 6566[emailprotected]

SOURCE Janene Verabian

http://JaneneVerabian.com

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Clinical Hypnotherapist Janene Verabian Featured as Contributing Writer for Addicted2Success.com - PRNewswire