View allAll Photos Tagged Behaviour

J42 rolling over her mum's back

Cartoon festival Knokke

Art by:Kroll

To tackle the high prevalence of HIV/AIDS, IOM Uganda has developed a Behaviour Change Campaign (BCC) to raise awareness not only on HIV/AIDS, but also sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and unplanned pregnancies. The sites selected to launch this pilot campaign are the fishing villages of Kasensero, Lyantonde and a temporary site being utilized by migrants expelled from Tanzania at Sango Bay. The slogan of the campaign is “You and I can prevent HIV/AIDS” and all activities have been implemented in cooperation with the Ugandan health district officials.

 

You don't have to suck dick to succeed!

You don't have to suck dick to succeed!

You don't have to suck dick to succeed!

You don't have to suck dick to succeed!

  

Neural control of metabolism and eating behaviour

02 Academy Leeds 19.02.11 - edfieldingphotography (C)

Neural control of metabolism and eating behaviour

the title pretty much gives it away..

Somehow it happens that groups of people band together to go out and run up hill and down dale on a hot day because they say (ahem...) they enjoy it and it is good for you,

 

We need to start an educational movement to save them from themselves...

Public Lecture on "Changing Consumer Behaviour: Are We Becoming More Demanding?" by Professor Moira Clark, Director, Henley Centre for Customer Management on 25 February 2015

Behaviour Zen provides you best Positive Behavior Support Strategies online to all age group. We have different behavioral strategies to encourage individuals. For more information visit on behaviourzen.com/

First time I've ever even observed this behaviour, and I had a camera to hand! Wrong lens and too far away of course, which is why this - heavily cropped - is the best of an out of focus bunch.

But I'm just so pleased to have seen, let alone photographed, it at all :0))

And all I have to add beyond that is that I am happy I am not a snail. That thrush is fearsomely efficient.

Does anyone know what is going on here?

Seals displaying their unusual fin clasping at the inlet to Narooma.

Public Lecture on "Changing Consumer Behaviour: Are We Becoming More Demanding?" by Professor Moira Clark, Director, Henley Centre for Customer Management on 25 February 2015

dipper on police no parking cone.

Neural control of metabolism and eating behaviour

To tackle the high prevalence of HIV/AIDS, IOM Uganda has developed a Behaviour Change Campaign (BCC) to raise awareness not only on HIV/AIDS, but also sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and unplanned pregnancies. The sites selected to launch this pilot campaign are the fishing villages of Kasensero, Lyantonde and a temporary site being utilized by migrants expelled from Tanzania at Sango Bay. The slogan of the campaign is “You and I can prevent HIV/AIDS” and all activities have been implemented in cooperation with the Ugandan health district officials.

 

The triangle of Thoughts, Feelings and Behaviour is greatly impacted by the Environment and our Biology when you suffer with bipolar disorder.

Anna Weston, Leanne Morrison, Lucy Yardley, Max Van Kleek and Mark Weal

 

Mobile digital behaviour changes interventions (mDBCIs) are becoming increasingly useful and necessary within healthcare and wellbeing. Health interventions need to close the gap between intention to behave and the behaviour itself. If apps fail to engage users, the behavioural intervention material is never seen. This paper investigates the measurements of engagement using a health based quiz app. Quiz questions were created using the NHS website and fell into the following six categories: “healthy eating”, “losing weight”, “sleep”, “fitness”, and “smoking”. Gamification features such as count down timers were used to encourage user participation. Notifications, with individual goals, were sent out to nudge the users to play the quiz. Engagement was measured in two ways. Firstly, a count of completed quiz questions to illustrate app engagement. Secondly, a participants learning was evaluated using a learning curve. This measured whether a participant understood and retained the health facts, illustrated by an improvement in their answers over time. A comparison between two participants using the first measurement (count of completed quiz questions) would have shown an identical rate of engagement, both answering 44 questions. However, the second measure (engagement with app content) showed a different rate of engagement. One participant improved producing the expected learning curve whilst the other consistently answered questions wrong, showing a lack of engagement with the intervention material. Participants were allowed to select their preferred category of question and in this case chose different areas. This was to encourage them to choose topics of interest to further improve their commitment to the study and provide a more personal experience. Future research would include more participants within each question category for further analysis and direct comparison. However, this research illustrates that these two types of engagement, app and intervention material, separately paint different pictures. To improve the design and effectiveness of mDBCIs engagement analysis, studies need to utilise more than one method of measurement.

 

 

“I never think of myself as an icon. What is in other people's minds is not in my mind. I just do my thing.”-Audrey Hepburn

Mute Swan - Courtship and Copulatory Behaviour

The Mute Swan (Cygnus olor) is a species of swan native to much of Europe and Asia.This large swan is wholly white in plumage with an orange bill bordered with black. The name 'mute' derives from it being less vocal than other swan species. The population in the UK has increased recently, perhaps due to better protection of this species. Around 5,800-7,000 pairs breeding annually in UK.

 

Mayesbrook Park (Barking), Britain’s first climate change park, is an attractive nature reserve with a newly restored river landscape. The Mayes brook has been brought back into the park within a widened meandering river channel creating an attractive river landscape to help the park to cope with more extreme changes in climate including heavy rainfall and drought. This new river system, with a gravel river bed and banks, provides an ideal wetland habitat for wildlife and at times of high rainfall it is able to rise in a controlled and natural way within a newly created floodplain.

 

The southern section of the park features two large lakes which are rich in wildlife. Aquatic plants such as reeds and rushes have been planted in ponds and backwaters, creating a rich habitat for wetland species. With over 40 hectares of open space, the park recently received a Mayor of London Safer Parks Silver award for high standards of site safety and policing.

1 2 ••• 50 51 53 55 56 ••• 79 80