Academic literature on the topic 'Transference of uncertainty'

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Journal articles on the topic "Transference of uncertainty"

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Tyminski, Robert. "Medea, Jason, and their illusions of the Golden Fleece: a Jungian contribution to transference dreaming." International Journal of Jungian Studies 3, no. 1 (2011): 21–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19409052.2011.542370.

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Intense projections of love and power regularly occur in the transference relationship. They often objectify archetypal aspects that a client might be struggling to understand. The tale of the Golden Fleece, which stands as a symbol for an inappropriately overvalued attachment, reveals that Jason and Medea were too captivated by their own desires, which they projected onto the Golden Fleece. They failed to appreciate the unattainable – and sacred – nature of the object. The author uses this myth to draw a parallel with certain dynamics of the transference relationship, when the therapist becomes the obscure object of the client's desire or envy. Transference dreaming opens the door to a critical examination of this relationship. The dreamer frequently sees something in the dream that does not add up. This internal uncertainty within the dream indicates that the therapist needs to examine what is happening in the transference or countertransference that heretofore has been accepted uncritically. Three key questions about the analytic relationship are addressed as aspects of what merits further attention in order to be understood and processed collaboratively to make therapeutic space for doubt and illusion.
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Siegel, Marte L., Eva M. Gullestad Binder, Hanne Sofie J. Dahl, et al. "Therapeutic Atmosphere in Psychotherapy Sessions." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 11 (2020): 4105. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17114105.

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There is uncertainty concerning what the active ingredients in psychotherapy are. The First Experimental Study of Transference interpretations (FEST) was a randomized controlled trial of the effects of transference work (TW) in psychodynamic psychotherapy. Women with low quality of object relations (QOR) showed a large positive effect of transference work, while men with high QOR showed a slight negative effect. The present study aimed to expand the knowledge from the FEST by investigating the therapeutic atmosphere with Structural Analysis of Social Behavior (SASB). Two-way ANOVAs were conducted to investigate differences between SASB cluster scores between subgroups. The therapeutic atmosphere was characterized by Protect–Trust, Affirm–Disclose and Control–Submit. Multilevel modeling was used to assess the relationship between a therapist variable and outcomes for men and women. Contrary to expectations, no significant differences in therapeutic atmosphere between subgroups (with or without TW in women with low QOR and men with high QOR) were observed using the process measure SASB.
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Redig, Frank, and Florian Völlering. "Random walks in dynamic random environments: A transference principle." Annals of Probability 41, no. 5 (2013): 3157–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/12-aop819.

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Rachev, S. T. "The Monge–Kantorovich Mass Transference Problem and Its Stochastic Applications." Theory of Probability & Its Applications 29, no. 4 (1985): 647–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1137/1129093.

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Zhang, Yang, and Jing Shen. "Wetland Restoration Planning Approach Based on Interval Fuzzy Linear Programming under Uncertainty." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 18 (2021): 9549. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18189549.

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When planning wetland restoration projects, the planting area allocation and the costs of the restoration measures are two major issues faced by decision makers. In this study, a framework based on the interval fuzzy linear programming (IFLP) method is introduced for the first time to plan wetland restoration projects. The proposed framework can not only effectively deal with interval and fuzzy uncertainties that exist in the planning process of wetland restorations but also handle trade-offs between ecological environment benefits and economic cost. This framework was applied to a real-world wetland restoration planning problem in the northeast of China to verify its validity and examine the credibility of the constraints. The optimized results obtained from the framework that we have developed indicate that higher ecological and social benefits can be obtained with optimal restoration costs after using the wetland restoration decision-making framework. The optimal restoration measure allocation schemes obtained by IFLP under different credibility levels can help decision makers generate a range of alternatives, which can also provide decision suggestions to local managers to generate a satisfactory decision-making plan. Furthermore, a comparison was made between the IFLP model and ILP model in this study. The comparison results indicate that the IFLP model provides more information regarding ecological environment and economic trade-offs between the system objective, certainty, and reliability. This framework provides managers with an effective way to plan wetland restoration projects, while transference of the model may help solve similar problems.
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Lewis, Janet L., Elizabeth Haase, and Alexander Trope. "Climate Dialectics in Psychotherapy: Holding Open the Space Between Abyss and Advance." Psychodynamic Psychiatry 48, no. 3 (2020): 271–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1521/pdps.2020.48.3.271.

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The complexity, uncertainty and charged nature of climate change make it a unique stressor that is irreconcilable at an individual level. This experience of impossibility leads to splitting of reactions into polarities, or dialectics, which must be contained to reduce climate distress and held open for generative use towards climate adaptation. We present a dynamic model for addressing climate change material within psychotherapy, wherein these climate dialectics are identified, explored, and held open. Clinical vignettes* illustrate therapeutic work with the particular climate dialectics of Climate Reality–Social Reality, Individual Agency-Collective Agency, Hope-Hopelessness, Certainty-Uncertainty, and Nature as Comfort-Nature as Threat. Situations of climate anxiety, solastalgia, disavowal, and the climate dismissive patient are addressed, as is the therapeutic use of the wordlessness that accompanies our relationship with the natural world. We explore and emphasize how a focus on the containment and transformation of climate anxiety, rather than on its reduction, assists in aligning with new realities and in the reduction of distress. Use of a developmental stage metaphor, attention to climate-specific counter-transference enactments, and emphasis on authentic action are central to this process.
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van Asselt, Antoinette D. I., Carmen D. Dirksen, Arnoud Arntz, et al. "Out-patient psychotherapy for borderline personality disorder: Cost-effectiveness of schema-focused therapy v. transference-focused psychotherapy." British Journal of Psychiatry 192, no. 6 (2008): 450–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.bp.106.033597.

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BackgroundSchema-focused therapy (SFT) and transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP) for borderline personality disorder were recently compared in a randomised multicentre trial.AimsTo assess the societal cost-effectiveness of SFT v. TFP in treating borderline personality disorder.MethodCosts were assessed by interview. Health-related quality of life was measured using EQ-5D. Outcomes were costs per recovered patient (recovery assessed with the Borderline Personality Disorder Severity Index) and costs per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY).ResultsMean 4-year bootstrapped costs were $37826 for SFT and $46 795 for TFP (95% uncertainty interval for difference −21 775 to 3546); QALYs were 2.15 for SFT and 2.27 for TFP (95% UI −0.51 to 0.28). The percentages of patients who recovered were 52% and 29% respectively. The SFT intervention was less costly and more effective than TFP (dominant), for recovery; it saved $90457 for one QALY loss.ConclusionsDespite the initial slight disadvantage in QALYs, there is a high probability that compared with TFP, SFT is a cost-effective treatment for borderline personality disorder.
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Castán-Fernández, Carlos, Germán Marcos-Robredo, Miguel Ángel Rey-Ronco, and Teresa Alonso-Sánchez. "Design, Construction and Commissioning of an Apparatus for Measuring the Thermal Conductivity of Geothermal Grouting Materials Based on the Transient Hot Wire Method." Proceedings 2, no. 23 (2018): 1496. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2231496.

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The aim of the present study is to develop an apparatus for the measurement of the thermal conductivity of geothermal grouting materials. The apparatus, named MCT, is designed and constructed as a direct application of a mathematical model of heat transference for conduction in an infinite homogeneous isotropic medium using a linear heat source of infinite length, infinitesimal radius and radial heat flow. This application is known as the transient hot wire method. The apparatus mainly consists of a hot wire, a power supply, a temperature sensor and a datalogger. The commissioning of the developed apparatus is carried out by means of the calibration of the temperature sensor, as well as measurements of thermal conductivity using four reference samples whose thermal conductivity is known. Each of the reference samples is formed of two solid rectangular prisms of the same material and of the same dimensions. MCT is precise and accurate. In good experimental conditions the uncertainty of the measurements is within 10%. In addition, the MCT apparatus is light and with reduced dimensions.
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Kim, Min-Sung, Eul-Bum Lee, In-Hye Jung, and Douglas Alleman. "Risk Assessment and Mitigation Model for Overseas Steel-Plant Project Investment with Analytic Hierarchy Process—Fuzzy Inference System." Sustainability 10, no. 12 (2018): 4780. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su10124780.

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This paper presents an analytic hierarchy process (AHP)-fuzzy inference system (FIS) model to aid decision-makers in the risk assessment and mitigation of overseas steel-plant projects. Through a thorough literature review, the authors identified 57 risks associated with international steel construction, operation, and transference of new technologies. Pairwise comparisons of all 57 risks by 14 subject-matter experts resulted in a relative weighting. Furthermore, to mitigate human subjectivity, vagueness, and uncertainty, a fuzzy analysis based on the findings of two case studies was performed. From these combined analyses, weighted individual risk soring resulted in the following top five most impactful international steel project risks: procurement of raw materials; design errors and omissions; conditions of raw materials; technology spill prevention plan; investment cost and poor plant availability and performance. Risk mitigation measures are also presented, and risk scores are re-assessed through the AHP-FIS analysis model depicting an overall project risk score reduction. The model presented is a useful tool for industry performing steel project risk assessments. It also provides decision-makers with a better understanding of the criticality of risks that are likely to occur on international steel projects.
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Buck, R. P., S. Rondinini, A. K. Covington, et al. "Measurement of pH. Definition, standards, and procedures (IUPAC Recommendations 2002)." Pure and Applied Chemistry 74, no. 11 (2002): 2169–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.1351/pac200274112169.

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The definition of a “primary method of measurement ” has permitted a full consideration of the definition of primary standards for pH, determined by a primary method (cell without transference, Harned cell), of the definition of secondary standards by secondary methods, and of the question whether pH, as a conventional quantity, can be incorporated within the internationally accepted system of measurement, the International System of Units (SI, Système International d’ Unités). This approach has enabled resolution of the previous compromise IUPAC 1985 Recommendations [Pure Appl. Chem.57, 531 (1985)]. Furthermore, incorporation of the uncertainties for the primary method, and for all subsequent measurements, permits the uncertainties for all procedures to be linked to the primary standards by an unbroken chain of comparisons. Thus, a rational choice can be made by the analyst of the appropriate procedure to achieve the target uncertainty of sample pH. Accordingly, this document explains IUPAC recommended definitions, procedures, and terminology relating to pH measurements in dilute aqueous solutions in the temperature range 5-50 °C. Details are given of the primary and secondary methods for measuring pH and the rationale for the assignment of pH values with appropriate uncertainties to selected primary and secondary substances.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Transference of uncertainty"

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Villalba, Matamoros Martha Emelly. "Uncertainty in the Global Mean for Improved Geostatistical Modeling." Master's thesis, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10048/1942.

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Analysis of uncertainty in ore reserves impacts investment decisions, mine planning and sampling. Uncertainty is evaluated by geostatistical simulation and is affected by the amount of data and the modeling parameters. Incomplete uncertainty is given because the parameter uncertainty is ignored. Also, greater spatial continuity leads to more uncertainty. This increase is unreasonable in earth science. To address these problems, two approaches are proposed. The first approach is based on multiGaussian simulation where many realizations are performed at translated and/or rotated configurations and conditioned to the data. Variable configurations give different mean values that define uncertainty. The second approach is based on a stochastic trend; this approach randomizes the trend coefficients accounting for the fitted coefficients correlation. Variable set of coefficients provide different mean values. Furthermore, a methodology to account for parameter uncertainty is proposed. The uncertainty in the mean is transferred through simulation to deliver a more complete uncertainty.<br>Mining Engineering
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Conference papers on the topic "Transference of uncertainty"

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Vanegas, Jose Walter Prada, Clayton Vernon Deutsch, and Luciane Bonet Cunha. "Transference of Reservoir Uncertainty in Multi SAGD Well Pairs." In SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/124153-ms.

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Ocegueda-Miramontes, Violeta, Rafael Pimienta-Romo, Reyes Juarez-Ramirez, and Manuel Gomez-Ruelas. "Towards a formal model for knowledge transference: An initial proposal to support the adoption of process models." In 2011 International Conference on Uncertainty Reasoning and Knowledge Engineering (URKE). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/urke.2011.6007859.

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Gavi´n, Sergio D., and Maximiliano I. Gonella. "Custody Transfer Management in Pipelines." In 2008 7th International Pipeline Conference. ASMEDC, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/ipc2008-64515.

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This paper focuses on the technical study of metering systems involved in custody transfer (metering instruments and its patterns) in order to calculate a measurement uncertainty for each component and for the system as a whole. Based on this, a tolerance for the operating balance of each batch is established. This definition applies to monthly balances for all the quantity of product that travels into the pipeline and for kind of it (gasoline, diesel, etc.). This methodology, of managing the custody transfer for the global pipeline and by product, helps to early detections of failures at the metering systems. Also, valorizing the transferred product in the interface between two consecutive batches, the company counts on an economic indicator to improve the batch cut points. In addition, it makes possible to fix the Refinery’s ‘quality giveaway’ (“quality gift”) since the volume of the transferences is related closely to the quality of the transported product. The greater the quality ‘giveaway’, the lower the volume of transferences.
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