Devin Bowles
Australian National University
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Cognitive Neuropsychology | 2009
Devin Bowles; Elinor McKone; Amy Dawel; Bradley Duchaine; Romina Palermo; Laura Schmalzl; Davide Rivolta; C. Ellie Wilson; Galit Yovel
The Cambridge Face Memory Test (CFMT) and Cambridge Face Perception Test (CFPT) have provided the first theoretically strong clinical tests for prosopagnosia based on novel rather than famous faces. Here, we assess the extent to which norms for these tasks must take into account ageing, sex, and testing country. Data were from Australians aged 18 to 88 years (N = 240 for CFMT; 128 for CFPT) and young adult Israelis (N = 49 for CFMT). Participants were unselected for face recognition ability; most were university educated. The diagnosis cut-off for prosopagnosia (2 SDs poorer than mean) was affected by age, participant–stimulus ethnic match (within Caucasians), and sex for middle-aged and older adults on the CFPT. We also report internal reliability, correlation between face memory and face perception, correlations with intelligence-related measures, correlation with self-report, distribution shape for the CFMT, and prevalence of developmental prosopagnosia.
Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine | 2015
Devin Bowles; Colin Butler; Neil Morisetti
Summary Future climate change is predicted to diminish essential natural resource availability in many regions and perhaps globally. The resulting scarcity of water, food and livelihoods could lead to increasingly desperate populations that challenge governments, enhancing the risk of intra- and interstate conflict. Defence establishments and some political scientists view climate change as a potential threat to peace. While the medical literature increasingly recognises climate change as a fundamental health risk, the dimension of climate change-associated conflict has so far received little attention, despite its profound health implications. Many analysts link climate change with a heightened risk of conflict via causal pathways which involve diminishing or changing resource availability. Plausible consequences include: increased frequency of civil conflict in developing countries; terrorism, asymmetric warfare, state failure; and major regional conflicts. The medical understanding of these threats is inadequate, given the scale of health implications. The medical and public health communities have often been reluctant to interpret conflict as a health issue. However, at times, medical workers have proven powerful and effective peace advocates, most notably with regard to nuclear disarmament. The public is more motivated to mitigate climate change when it is framed as a health issue. Improved medical understanding of the association between climate change and conflict could strengthen mitigation efforts and increase cooperation to cope with the climate change that is now inevitable.
Earth’s Future | 2014
Devin Bowles; Colin Butler; Sharon Friel
Threats to health from climate change are increasingly recognized, yet little research into the effects upon health systems is published. However, additional demands on health systems are increasingly documented. Pathways include direct weather impacts, such as amplified heat stress, and altered ecological relationships, including alterations to the distribution and activity of pathogens and vectors. The greatest driver of demand on future health systems from climate change may be the alterations to socioeconomic systems; however, these “tertiary effects” have received less attention in the health literature. Increasing demands on health systems from climate change will impede health system capacity. Changing weather patterns and sea-level rise will reduce food production in many developing countries, thus fostering undernutrition and concomitant disease susceptibility. Associated poverty will impede peoples ability to access and support health systems. Climate change will increase migration, potentially exposing migrants to endemic diseases for which they have limited resistance, transporting diseases and fostering conditions conducive to disease transmission. Specific predictions of timing and locations of migration remain elusive, hampering planning and misaligning needs and infrastructure. Food shortages, migration, falling economic activity, and failing government legitimacy following climate change are also “risk multipliers” for conflict. Injuries to combatants, undernutrition, and increased infectious disease will result. Modern conflict often sees health personnel and infrastructure deliberately targeted and disease surveillance and eradication programs obstructed. Climate change will substantially impede economic growth, reducing health system funding and limiting health system adaptation. Modern medical care may be snatched away from millions who recently obtained it.
Archive | 2014
Colin Butler; Devin Bowles; Lachlan McIver; Lisa Page
This chapter explores the links between mental health and climate change and describes the mental health effects (e.g., anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder) of the primary, secondary and tertiary manifestations of climate change. The cognitive obstacles to dealing with climate change and the cognitive solutions for addressing climate change are discussed.
Annals of global health | 2015
Devin Bowles
Low socioeconomic status contributes to poor health in disadvantaged populations globally. Poverty, limited education, poor diets, and higher exposure to other health risks are accepted as contributing factors. That these factors also impede physiologic and social adaptations to novel health stressors is less widely recognized, but will affect how humanity copes with the increasingly important health stressor of climate change. This viewpoint proposes a typology of health adaptations: physiologic, personal and household, and communityand state-level adaptation. This framework is used to examine likely effects of climate change and adaptation on the health of Indigenous Australians, a group with low socioeconomic status that shares many traits with other Indigenous people globally.
Archive | 2014
Devin Bowles; Rafael Reuveny; Colin Butler
Archive | 2014
Devin Bowles; Mark Braidwood; Colin Butler
South African Medical Journal | 2014
Devin Bowles; Colin Butler
Archive | 2012
Isabelle MacGregor; Devin Bowles
Archive | 2007
Devin Bowles