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Dive into the research topics where Nirbhay N. Singh is active.

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Featured researches published by Nirbhay N. Singh.


International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction | 2014

Meditation Awareness Training (MAT) for Work-related Wellbeing and Job Performance: A Randomised Controlled Trial

Edo Shonin; William Van Gordon; Thomas J. Dunn; Nirbhay N. Singh; Mark D. Griffiths

Due to its potential to concurrently improve work-related wellbeing (WRW) and job performance, occupational stakeholders are becoming increasingly interested in the applications of meditation. The present study conducted the first randomized controlled trial to assess the effects of meditation on outcomes relating to both WRW and job performance. Office-based middle-hierarchy managers (nu2009=u2009152) received an eight-week meditation intervention (Meditation Awareness Training; MAT) or an active control intervention. MAT participants demonstrated significant and sustainable improvements (with strong effect sizes) over control-group participants in levels of work-related stress, job satisfaction, psychological distress, and employer-rated job performance. There are a number of novel implications: (i) meditation can effectuate a perceptual shift in how employees experience their work and psychological environment and may thus constitute a cost-effective WRW intervention, (ii) meditation-based (i.e., present-moment-focussed) working styles may be more effective than goal-based (i.e., future-orientated) working styles, and (iii) meditation may reduce the separation made by employees between their own interests and those of the organizations they work for.


Research in Human Development | 2013

Mindfulness Training for Teachers Changes the Behavior of their Preschool Students

Nirbhay N. Singh; Giulio E. Lancioni; Alan S. W. Winton; Bryan T. Karazsia; Judy Singh

We measured the effects of preschool teachers attending an 8-week mindfulness course on the behavior of the students in their classroom. Results showed that decreases in the students’ challenging behaviors and increases in their compliance with teacher requests began during mindfulness training for the teachers and continued to change following the training. While the students did not show a change in positive social interactions with peers, they did show a decrease in negative social interactions and an increase in isolate play. Our results indicate that mindfulness training for teachers was effective in changing teacher-student interactions in desirable ways.


Research in Developmental Disabilities | 2014

Persons with moderate Alzheimer's disease use simple technology aids to manage daily activities and leisure occupation.

Giulio E. Lancioni; Nirbhay N. Singh; Mark F. O’Reilly; Jeff Sigafoos; Caterina Renna; Katia Pinto; Floriana De Vanna; Alessandro O. Caffò; Fabrizio Stasolla

Two studies assessed technology-aided programs to support performance of daily activities and selection/activation of music items with patients with moderate Alzheimers disease. In Study I, four patients were presented with activity-related pictorial instructions via a computer fitted with inexpensive, commercial software. In Study II, four patients were (a) presented with different music options and (b) allowed to select and activate the preferred option via a microswitch response. Study I showed that each patient learned to perform the two activities available with percentages of correct responses exceeding 85 by the end of the intervention. Study II showed that all patients learned to choose and activate music options. Psychology students, employed in a social validation check, scored the patients behavior within the program better than their behavior in a control situation. The relevance and usability of simplified pictorial-instruction programs and music choice programs for patients with moderate Alzheimers disease were discussed.


Research in Developmental Disabilities | 2014

People with multiple disabilities learn to engage in occupation and work activities with the support of technology-aided programs.

Giulio E. Lancioni; Nirbhay N. Singh; Mark F. O’Reilly; Jeff Sigafoos; Gloria Alberti; Viviana Perilli; Dominga Laporta; Francesca Campodonico; Doretta Oliva; Jop Groeneweg

These two studies were aimed at assessing technology-aided programs to help persons with multiple disabilities engage in basic occupation or work activities. Specifically, Study I focused on teaching two participants (an adolescent and an adult) with low vision or total blindness, severe/profound intellectual disabilities, and minimal object interaction to engage in constructive object-manipulation responses. The technology monitored their responses and followed them with brief stimulation periods automatically. Study II focused on teaching three adults with deafness, severe visual impairment, and profound intellectual disabilities to perform a complex activity, that is, to assemble a five-component water pipe. The technology regulated (a) light cues to guide the participants through the workstations containing single pipe components and the carton for completed pipes and (b) stimulation events. The results of both studies were positive. The participants of Study I showed consistent and independent engagement in object-manipulation responses. The participants of Study II showed consistent and independent pipe assembling performance. General implications of the two programs and the related technology packages for intervention with persons with multiple disabilities are discussed.


Research in Developmental Disabilities | 2013

Technology-aided recreation and communication opportunities for post-coma persons affected by lack of speech and extensive motor impairment

Giulio E. Lancioni; Nirbhay N. Singh; Mark F. O’Reilly; Jeff Sigafoos; Francesca Buonocunto; Valentina Sacco; Jorge Navarro; Crocifissa Lanzilotti; Fiora D’Amico; Giovanni Sasanelli; Marina de Tommaso; Marisa Megna

This study assessed technology-aided intervention programs for two post-coma men who had re-acquired consciousness, but were unable to engage in personally or socially relevant occupations, given their lack of functional speech and their extensive motor disabilities. The microswitches used for accessing the program contents consisted of (a) a pressure sensor fixed in the palm of the first mans hand that could be activated with a small hand closure movement, and (b) an optic sensor fixed under the chin of the second man that could be activated by mouth opening movements. The programs content consisted of recreation and communication options, which involved activating music, videos, and basic requests, sending and receiving (listening to) text messages, and placing phone calls. The results showed that the men (a) used the technology-aided programs successfully to manage the recreation and communication options available and (b) showed consistent preference for the sessions with the technology-aided program over other daily events. Family and staff members interviewed about the participants programs (seven members for each participant) thought that the participants enjoyed the intervention sessions with the programs and that the programs had beneficial effects for them. Implications of the findings are discussed.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2014

Technology-based intervention programs to promote stimulation control and communication in post-coma persons with different levels of disability

Giulio E. Lancioni; Andrea Bosco; Marta Olivetti Belardinelli; Nirbhay N. Singh; Mark F. O'Reilly; Jeff Sigafoos; Doretta Oliva

Post-coma persons in a minimally conscious state and with extensive motor impairment or emerging/emerged from such a state, but affected by lack of speech and motor impairment, tend to be passive and isolated. A way to help them develop functional responding to control environmental events and communication involves the use of intervention programs relying on assistive technology. This paper provides an overview of technology-based intervention programs for enabling the participants to (a) access brief periods of stimulation through one or two microswitches, (b) pursue stimulation and social contact through the combination of a microswitch and a sensor connected to a speech generating device (SGD) or through two SGD-related sensors, (c) control stimulation options through computer or radio systems and a microswitch, (d) communicate through modified messaging or telephone systems operated via microswitch, and (e) control combinations of leisure and communication options through computer systems operated via microswitch. Twenty-six studies, involving a total of 52 participants, were included in this paper. The intervention programs were carried out using single-subject methodology, and their outcomes were generally considered positive from the standpoint of the participants and their context. Practical implications of the programs are discussed.


Research in Developmental Disabilities | 2013

Supporting daily activities and indoor travel of persons with moderate Alzheimer's disease through standard technology resources

Giulio E. Lancioni; Nirbhay N. Singh; Mark F. O’Reilly; Jeff Sigafoos; Caterina Renna; Marilisa Ventrella; Katia Pinto; Mauro G. Minervini; Doretta Oliva; Jop Groeneweg

These two studies were aimed at evaluating standard technology resources for supporting activity and travel among patients with moderate Alzheimers disease. Specifically, Study I assessed a pictorial instruction program relying on the use of a portable computer and a commercially available and inexpensive video editing software for supporting the performance of daily activities with three patients. Study II assessed the indoor travel performance of four patients (i.e., the three involved in Study I and a fourth patient with no previous research exposure) using a commercially available, basic doorbell system with sound and light cues. The percentages of correct activity steps obtained with the instruction program used in Study I were relatively high and largely similar to the percentages reported in previous studies using more sophisticated technology. During Study II, the percentages of correct travels of two patients matched the data of the most successful patients involved in previous studies with more sophisticated technology. The percentages of the other two patients tended to be lower than those obtained previously, but were still practically relevant. The implications of the results of the two studies and a number of issues for new research are discussed.


Research in Developmental Disabilities | 2014

Microswitch-aided programs to support physical exercise or adequate ambulation in persons with multiple disabilities

Giulio E. Lancioni; Nirbhay N. Singh; Mark F. O’Reilly; Jeff Sigafoos; Gloria Alberti; Viviana Perilli; Doretta Oliva; Serafino Buono

Three microswitch-aided programs were assessed in three single-case studies to enhance physical exercise or ambulation in participants with multiple disabilities. Study I was aimed at helping a woman who tended to have the head bending forward and the arms down to exercise a combination of appropriate head and arms movements. Study II was aimed at promoting ambulation continuity with a man who tended to have ambulation breaks. Study III was aimed at promoting ambulation with appropriate foot position in a girl who usually showed toe walking. The experimental designs of the studies consisted of a multiple probe across responses (Study I), an ABAB sequence (Study II), and an ABABB(1) sequence (Study III). The last phase of each study was followed by a post-intervention check. The microswitches monitored the target responses selected for the participants and triggered a computer system to provide preferred stimuli contingent on those responses during the intervention phases of the studies. Data showed that the programs were effective with each of the participants who learned to exercise head and arms movements, increased ambulation continuity, and acquired high levels of appropriate foot position during ambulation, respectively. The positive performance levels were retained during the post-intervention checks. The discussion focused on (a) the potential of technology-aided programs for persons with multiple disabilities and (b) the need of replication studies to extend the evidence available in the area.


International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction | 2014

A Randomized Controlled Trial of a Mindfulness-Based Smoking Cessation Program for Individuals with Mild Intellectual Disability

Nirbhay N. Singh; Giulio E. Lancioni; Rachel E. Myers; Bryan T. Karazsia; Alan S. W. Winton; Judy Singh

Smoking is a risk factor for death and dying for individuals who smoke and for those who inhale second hand smoke. Smokers struggle to quit smoking because of the negative affect associated with nicotine withdrawal. We assessed the efficacy of a mindfulness-based intervention for smoking cessation in individuals with mild intellectual disabilities. In addition to the basic concentration meditation, the mindfulness-based smoking cessation program included daily intention, mindful observation of thoughts, and Meditation on the Soles of the Feet. In a two-group randomized controlled trial, 51 protocol-eligible participants were randomly assigned to either the experimental group (mindfulness-based intervention) or the control group (treatment as usual). Results showed a statistically significant reduction in smoking commensurate with mindfulness-based training when compared to the treatment as usual condition. This finding was evident regardless of whether the analysis included only those who completed the study or the total sample in an intent-to-treat analysis. Furthermore, those receiving the mindfulness-based intervention were significantly more successful in abstaining from smoking during a 1-year follow-up than the treatment as usual group. These results suggest mindfulness-based interventions may be effective treatments for smoking cessation in individuals with mild intellectual disabilities.


Research in Developmental Disabilities | 2013

Persons with multiple disabilities increase adaptive responding and control inadequate posture or behavior through programs based on microswitch-cluster technology.

Giulio E. Lancioni; Nirbhay N. Singh; Mark F. O’Reilly; Jeff Sigafoos; Doretta Oliva; Adele Boccasini; Maria L. La Martire; Fiora D’Amico; Giovanni Sasanelli

Study I used typical microswitch-cluster programs to promote adaptive responding (i.e., object manipulation) and reduce inappropriate head or head-trunk forward leaning with a boy and a woman with multiple disabilities. Optic, tilt, and vibration microswitches were used to record their adaptive responses while optic and tilt microswitches monitored their posture. The study included an ABB(1)AB(1) sequence, in which A represented baseline phases, B represented an intervention phase in which adaptive responses were always followed by preferred stimulation, and B(1) represented intervention phases in which the adaptive responses led to preferred stimulation only if the inappropriate posture was absent. Study II assessed a non-typical, new microswitch-cluster program to promote two adaptive responses (i.e., mouth cleaning to reduce drooling effects and object assembling) with a man with multiple disabilities. Initially, the man received preferred stimulation for each cleaning response. Then, he received stimulation only if mouth cleaning was preceded by object assembling. The results of Study I showed that both participants had large increases in adaptive responding and a drastic reduction in inappropriate posture during the B(1) phases and a 2-week post-intervention check. The results of Study II showed that the man learned to control drooling effects through mouth cleaning and used object assembling to extend constructive engagement and interspace cleaning responses functionally. The practical implications of the findings are discussed.

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Jeff Sigafoos

Victoria University of Wellington

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Mark F. O’Reilly

University of Texas at Austin

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Mark F. O'Reilly

University of Texas at Austin

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Doretta Oliva

University College Dublin

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