Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 52 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 13453 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 53 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 44 people 12 China 8 People 7 COVID-19 6 social 6 old 5 health 4 covid-19 4 chinese 4 SARS 4 Health 3 human 3 disability 3 care 3 Republic 3 Kong 3 Hong 2 work 2 system 2 participant 2 pandemic 2 need 2 indigenous 2 homeless 2 datum 2 USA 2 Taiwan 2 State 2 July 2 January 2 HIV 2 GDP 2 Ethics 2 Council 1 year 1 water 1 virus 1 variable 1 time 1 test 1 technology 1 symptom 1 study 1 security 1 scenario 1 safety 1 risk 1 right 1 research 1 psychological Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3074 people 1321 health 1167 % 827 system 739 risk 731 time 721 study 675 pandemic 669 life 623 care 616 community 583 disease 561 case 559 population 555 dementia 549 datum 546 level 532 year 530 government 481 disability 445 research 439 group 435 number 434 country 411 world 401 individual 389 food 385 term 385 impact 384 patient 378 example 376 effect 372 person 370 service 367 analysis 364 work 355 information 351 area 349 age 348 participant 343 way 342 use 338 need 338 family 329 factor 325 virus 319 problem 319 development 315 m 314 right Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1056 China 583 . 547 COVID-19 477 al 406 et 272 Health 251 AI 248 People 240 Hong 238 Kong 194 • 192 World 189 Hospital 187 SARS 177 m 151 Council 145 State 142 National 132 United 117 Republic 106 Alzheimer 105 TCM 102 March 98 Taiwan 97 USA 96 CoV-2 95 Chinese 90 CI 89 Coronavirus 83 States 83 Social 81 US 75 University 75 New 74 UK 74 Government 72 Harmony 71 OCD 70 Pandemic 69 Influenza 69 Commission 69 Central 67 Wuhan 67 Bangladesh 66 Public 66 Organization 66 May 64 Care 63 Beijing 61 International Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 1909 it 1551 we 1187 they 512 i 424 them 310 you 185 he 173 us 128 themselves 128 one 98 she 71 me 67 itself 25 him 17 her 15 ourselves 11 yourself 11 herself 11 's 10 himself 7 oneself 6 myself 1 ya 1 themand 1 att20 Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 14800 be 3641 have 1064 do 780 include 739 use 646 make 496 need 485 take 450 increase 449 provide 405 base 370 find 361 see 345 develop 342 work 338 give 314 associate 310 lead 306 become 302 help 298 follow 297 show 276 consider 272 report 271 live 260 reduce 258 relate 254 go 250 matter 248 know 245 create 235 identify 225 feel 220 support 220 suggest 220 get 217 come 216 affect 215 require 205 learn 203 improve 195 exist 176 understand 175 address 174 think 174 mean 174 allow 173 cause 170 compare 166 involve Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1969 not 1400 social 1153 more 989 also 933 other 814 well 698 high 690 such 672 old 554 - 500 public 462 many 441 human 426 most 421 as 393 local 377 only 366 however 365 different 361 important 361 first 357 large 352 new 329 economic 302 low 302 homeless 299 long 295 so 290 medical 285 even 274 up 266 chinese 262 deaf 256 often 254 e.g. 253 out 248 mental 244 very 244 good 241 positive 233 physical 224 global 218 likely 215 thus 213 general 210 then 210 cognitive 209 non 207 less 204 possible Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 150 most 106 large 95 high 78 good 67 least 45 Most 24 low 21 great 18 bad 16 big 14 late 12 busy 8 strong 6 old 6 early 5 long 3 weak 3 tough 3 near 2 slow 2 poor 2 healthy 2 fast 2 deadly 2 COVID-19 1 wide 1 wet 1 strict 1 short 1 sharp 1 rich 1 rad 1 protestssugg 1 postt 1 narrow 1 mainf 1 furth 1 common 1 close 1 broad 1 bold 1 -there 1 -cost Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 276 most 36 least 14 well 5 fast 2 worst 2 highest 1 lowest 1 hard 1 close Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 8 doi.org 1 www.sutd.edu 1 www.stoswaldsuk.org 1 www.mencap.org.uk 1 www.jmaj.jp 1 www.gov.mo 1 www.dovepress.com 1 www.direct.gov.uk 1 www.cbc.ca 1 www.bitre.gov.au 1 wq.zfwlxt.com 1 worldsavvy 1 tuoitre.vn 1 radiant.nhs.uk 1 osf.io 1 osf 1 opiac.org.co 1 montrealethics.ai 1 ies.ed.gov 1 healthcare-economist.com 1 goldstandardsframework.org.uk 1 github.com 1 emergingminds.org.uk 1 creativecommons.org 1 coronaminds.ku.dk 1 aspredicted.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 5 http://doi.org/10.1101/2020.04.01.20050229 1 http://www.sutd.edu 1 http://www.stoswaldsuk.org/ 1 http://www.mencap.org.uk/advice-and-support/health/healthguides 1 http://www.jmaj.jp/ 1 http://www.gov.mo 1 http://www.dovepress.com/testimonials.php 1 http://www.direct.gov.uk/ 1 http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/britishcolumbia/trans-mountain-pipeline-expansion-support-cost-survey-1 1 http://www.bitre.gov.au/national-cities-performance-framework 1 http://wq.zfwlxt.com/ 1 http://worldsavvy 1 http://tuoitre.vn/ha-noi-co-1-ca-duong-tinh-ncov-la-ca-thu-17-o-viet-nam- 1 http://radiant.nhs.uk 1 http://osf.io/rr/ 1 http://osf 1 http://opiac.org.co/en-riesgo-la-autonomia-y-gobierno-propio-del-pueblo-indigena-andoque-con-zona-minera-indigena-en-eldepartameno-del-amazonas/ 1 http://montrealethics.ai 1 http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/ 1 http://healthcare-economist.com/2008/08/ 1 http://goldstandardsframework.org.uk/ 1 http://github.com/danielgnt 1 http://emergingminds.org.uk/cospace-study-2ndupdate/ 1 http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3959131 1 http://doi.org/10.1101/2020.05.27.20115295 1 http://doi.org/10.1017/bpp 1 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ 1 http://coronaminds.ku.dk/ 1 http://aspredicted.org/ Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 m.guenther@tum.de 1 daniel.shek@polyu.edu.hk 1 d.guenther@tum.de 1 kn-covid@dlr.de Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 people are more 5 people do not 4 china has more 4 research did not 4 study did not 3 % reported moderate 3 data are available 3 data are mean 3 disabilities are more 3 disabilities are not 3 pandemic is likely 3 pandemic is over 3 people are safe 2 % were buddhists 2 % were worried 2 cases were recently 2 china are also 2 china does not 2 china is administratively 2 china is generally 2 china making china 2 china were rivals 2 countries do not 2 covid-19 have neurological 2 covid-19 is likely 2 dementia have complex 2 dementia have more 2 dementia is often 2 disabilities was significant 2 disability are key 2 diseases including infectious 2 government gives non 2 government has not 2 government is accountable 2 government is really 2 health was significantly 2 pandemic are likely 2 people are no 2 people are not 2 people are now 2 people are really 2 people are symptomatic 2 people are unable 2 people developing dementia 2 people did not 2 people going out 2 people have wireless 2 people were less 2 people were religiously 2 people working remotely Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 people are no longer 1 care are not topics 1 community are not part 1 countries has not yet 1 data has not yet 1 disabilities are not fatal 1 disease are not contagious 1 disease is not immediately 1 groups is not easy 1 life was not only 1 pandemic is no exception 1 pandemic provides no insight 1 people are not familiar 1 people had no say 1 people have no health 1 people have no recourse 1 peoples were not formally 1 population found no evidence 1 population has not yet 1 studies are not overly 1 study showed no significant 1 world is not malicious A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = cord-019057-3j2fl358 author = Afolabi, Michael Olusegun title = Pandemic Influenza: A Comparative Ethical Approach date = 2018-08-28 keywords = Ethics; Health; Influenza; Pandemic; Public; care; outbreak; people summary = doi = 10.1007/978-3-319-92765-7_3 id = cord-322660-bis2arbu author = Alexander, Regi title = Guidance for the Treatment and Management of COVID‐19 Among People with Intellectual Disabilities date = 2020-06-10 keywords = COVID-19; England; SARS; care; people summary = The guidelines cover specific issues associated with hospital passports, individual COVID‐19 care plans, the important role of families and carers, capacity to make decisions, issues associated with social distancing, ceiling of care/treatment escalation plans, mental health and challenging behavior, and caring for someone suspected of contracting or who has contracted SARS‐CoV‐2 within community or inpatient psychiatric settings. These teams provide a range of care and support to people with IDs, while during the current pandemic there will be an increased focus upon providing TABLE 1 Group at risk because they are clinically vulnerable due to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection who need particularly stringent social distancing measures Issues associated with diagnostic overshadowing, the views of parents, family members and carers, the required reasonable adjustments, communication needs, specialist mental health support, anticipatory care plans, any end-of-life or do not attempt cardiopulmonary resuscitation (DNACPR) discussions should be reported. doi = 10.1111/jppi.12352 id = cord-034561-ko7pmtig author = Amagasa, Shiho title = Mobility Trends Reports Revealed “Self-isolation Fatigue” in Japan: Use of Mobility Data for Coronavirus Disease Control date = 2020-07-08 keywords = people summary = doi = 10.31662/jmaj.2020-0031 id = cord-307709-o6biwypo author = Asai, Atsushi title = Should We Aim to Create a Perfect Healthy Utopia? Discussions of Ethical Issues Surrounding the World of Project Itoh’s Harmony date = 2020-10-13 keywords = Harmony; Tuan; World; health; medical; people summary = doi = 10.1007/s11948-020-00269-3 id = cord-259745-69wk591l author = Baerwolff, Guenter K.F. title = A Contribution to the Mathematical Modeling of the Corona/COVID-19 Pandemic date = 2020-04-06 keywords = people; preprint summary = doi = 10.1101/2020.04.01.20050229 id = cord-328045-12xr4mj4 author = Chan, Fong title = Company Characteristics, Disability Inclusion Practices, and Employment of People with Disabilities in the Post COVID-19 Job Economy: A Cross Sectional Survey Study date = 2020-11-02 keywords = company; disability; people summary = doi = 10.1007/s10926-020-09941-8 id = cord-128544-y8flcu8h author = Chen, Yu title = A Time Delay Dynamic System with External Source for the Local Outbreak of 2019-nCoV date = 2020-02-07 keywords = people summary = In this paper, we propose a novel time delay dynamic system with external source to describe the trend of local outbreak for the 2019-nCoV. The numerical simulations exhibit the dynamic system with the external source is more reliable than the one without it, and the rate of isolation is extremely important for controlling the increase of cumulative confirmed people of 2019-nCoV. In order to determine the impact of prevention and control of infection in different positions (i.e. provinces and cities), the strength and duration of isolation, the value for the rate of recovery, we propose a novel dynamic system with time delay and external source in this paper. The rest of paper is organized as follows: in section 2, we shall propose the notations, the assumptions and the corresponding novel time delay dynamic system with external source. In this section, we shall state a novel dynamic system with time delay and external source to describe the local outbreak of 2019-nCoV in China. doi = nan id = cord-288392-khjo6j8u author = Davern, Melanie title = How Can the Lived Environment Support Healthy Ageing? A Spatial Indicators Framework for the Assessment of Age-Friendly Communities date = 2020-10-21 keywords = AFC; Age; Health; indicator; old; people summary = doi = 10.3390/ijerph17207685 id = cord-311757-qbk4aapf author = Dawes, Piers title = Challenges of the COVID‐19 pandemic for social gerontology in Australia date = 2020-09-23 keywords = old; people summary = doi = 10.1111/ajag.12845 id = cord-332918-6kmbaswt author = Dwolatzky, Tzvi title = If Not Now, When? the Role of Geriatric Leadership as Covid-19 Brings the World to Its Knees date = 2020-05-15 keywords = care; old; people summary = doi = 10.3389/fmed.2020.00232 id = cord-012922-w9ue7wo3 author = Enns, Emily E. title = Examining the Relationship Between Genetic Counselors’ Attitudes Toward Deaf People and the Genetic Counseling Session date = 2010-03-05 keywords = attitude; deaf; genetic; people summary = doi = 10.1007/s10897-009-9272-6 id = cord-310556-ebh59adi author = Flett, Gordon L. title = Aging and Feeling Valued Versus Expendable During the COVID-19 Pandemic and Beyond: a Review and Commentary of Why Mattering Is Fundamental to the Health and Well-Being of Older Adults date = 2020-06-15 keywords = Flett; adult; health; matter; mattering; old; people summary = This work has also resulted in the creation of the first measure of suicide ideation tailored specifically to the needs and lives of older people, the Geriatric Suicide Ideation Scale (Heisel and Flett 2006) , which assesses sociocultural and existential factors (i.e., its "Loss of Personal and Social Worth" and "Perceived Meaning in Life" subscales) in addition to thoughts and wishes to die and for suicide. doi = 10.1007/s11469-020-00339-4 id = cord-356353-e6jb0sex author = Fourcade, Marion title = Loops, ladders and links: the recursivity of social and machine learning date = 2020-08-26 keywords = Bourdieu; Facebook; Twitter; datum; learning; machine; medium; people; platform; social; system summary = Both practices rely upon and reinforce a pervasive appetite for digital input or feedback that we characterize as "data hunger." They also share a propensity to assemble insight and make meaning accretively-a propensity that we denote here as "world or meaning accretion." Throughout this article, we probe the dynamic interaction of social and machine learning by drawing examples from one genre of online social contention and connection in which the pervasive influence of machine learning is evident: namely, that which occurs across social media channels and platforms. In such settings, the data accretion upon which machine learning depends for the development of granular insights-and, on social media platforms, associated auctioning and targeting of advertising-compounds the cumulative, sedimentary effect of social data, making negative impressions generated by "revenge porn," or by one''s online identity having been fraudulently coopted, hard to displace or renew. doi = 10.1007/s11186-020-09409-x id = cord-337889-90q4py0j author = Guan, Wei-jie title = Comorbidity and its impact on 1590 patients with Covid-19 in China: A Nationwide Analysis date = 2020-03-26 keywords = County; Hospital; People summary = doi = 10.1183/13993003.00547-2020 id = cord-125722-maclu8gh author = Gunther, Christoph title = Tracing Contacts to Control the COVID-19 Pandemic date = 2020-04-01 keywords = Gesundheitsamt; contact; people summary = doi = nan id = cord-257903-rnuslepe author = Guo, Rongxing title = Political and Administrative Systems date = 2012-07-12 keywords = CCP; China; Council; NPC; People; State summary = doi = 10.1016/b978-0-12-397826-4.00005-6 id = cord-146850-5x6qs2i4 author = Gupta, Abhishek title = The State of AI Ethics Report (June 2020) date = 2020-06-25 keywords = Ethics; datum; different; example; human; impact; information; lead; like; need; people; social; system; work summary = Another point brought up in the article is that social media companies might themselves be unwilling to tolerate scraping of their users'' data to do this sort of vetting which against their terms of use for access to the APIs. Borrowing from the credit reporting world, the Fair Credit Reporting Act in the US offers some insights when it mentions that people need to be provided with a recourse to correct information that is used about them in making a decision and that due consent needs to be obtained prior to utilizing such tools to do a background check. Given that AI systems operate in a larger socio-technical ecosystem, we need to tap into fields like law and policy making to come up with effective ways of integrating ethics into AI systems, part of which can involve creating binding legal agreements that tie in with economic incentives.While policy making and law are often seen as slow to adapt to fast changing technology, there are a variety of benefits to be had, for example higher customer trust for services that have adherence to stringent regulations regarding privacy and data protection. doi = nan id = cord-030877-o8noe6t2 author = Hurst, Tom title = Ten minutes with Tom Hurst, Medical Director, London’s Air Ambulance date = 2020-08-24 keywords = London; people summary = doi = 10.1136/leader-2020-000340 id = cord-016075-ind62t53 author = Hwang, Stephen W. title = Homeless People date = 2005 keywords = HIV; U.S.; health; homeless; homelessness; people summary = The prevalence of serious dermatologic conditions, while probably quite high among street-dwellers, appears to be relatively low among homeless people living in shelters that provide adequate clothing, laundry facilities, bathing facilities, and medical care. As noted previously, homeless people in cities with few shelter beds are more likely to live on the street or other places not intended for human habitation, with potentially adverse health effects. Some cities have free-care clinics or community health centers that provide ambulatory services for homeless persons as well as other low-income residents. Efforts to displace street youth and homeless people rather than offer them any meaningful help might have negative effects on health and in fact increase high-risk behaviors such as survival sex and unsafe injection drug use practices (O''Grady and Greene, 2003; Wood, et al., 2004) . doi = 10.1007/0-387-25822-1_2 id = cord-029863-f3bn550o author = Jassi, Amita title = OCD and COVID-19: a new frontier date = 2020-07-14 keywords = CBT; COVID-19; OCD; people summary = doi = 10.1017/s1754470x20000318 id = cord-294966-3jolt83r author = Joensen, L. E. title = Diabetes and COVID‐19: psychosocial consequences of the COVID‐19 pandemic in people with diabetes in Denmark—what characterizes people with high levels of COVID‐19‐related worries? date = 2020-05-29 keywords = covid-19; diabetes; people summary = doi = 10.1111/dme.14319 id = cord-274459-781by93r author = Khalifa, Shaden A. M. title = Comprehensive Overview on Multiple Strategies Fighting COVID-19 date = 2020-08-11 keywords = COVID-19; China; Health; SARS; people summary = doi = 10.3390/ijerph17165813 id = cord-019032-vdiaexbw author = Kshetri, Nir title = China date = 2020 keywords = China; Council; GDP; Hong; January; July; Kong; March; People; Taiwan; USA; chinese summary = Regarded as the steward of the Chinese economy, Li has aimed to focus on securing China''s long-term expansion and on the further provision of basic national health care, affordable housing, employment growth, regional development and cleaner energy. China is the world''s third largest exporter of arms after the USA and Russia, with 6Á2% of the global major weapons total over the period 2012-16. GDP growth declined to 6Á9% in 2015 (the slowest rate in 25 years) and fell again to 6Á7% in 2016 as China attempted to reduce its reliance on exports, increase domestic consumption and develop its service sector. China''s economy overheated in the early 1990s, leading to inflation rates of 14Á7% in 1993, 24Á1% in 1994 and 17Á1% in 1995 Of the total revenues in 2015 central government accounted for 6,926Á7bn. doi = 10.1057/978-1-349-95940-2_49 id = cord-258915-lgee3ers author = Liddle, Jennifer title = Connecting at Local Level: Exploring Opportunities for Future Design of Technology to Support Social Connections in Age-friendly Communities date = 2020-07-31 keywords = local; old; participant; people; social; technology summary = In drawing together participants'' ideas about spaces, processes and mechanisms that might address these local challenges, we conclude the paper with implications that offer scope for further exploration and consideration in terms of how technology might support the operationalisation of local people''s ideas for improving face-to-face connections in age-friendly community settings. As described earlier, the interview data were coded to explore (a) opportunities to improve connections at a local level, i.e., factors that had the potential to impact negatively on people''s geographically proximate social relationships in terms of quality, quantity or satisfaction; and (b) participants'' engagement with technology in relation to their social lives generally. As described earlier, the interview data were coded to explore (a) opportunities to improve connections at a local level, i.e., factors that had the potential to impact negatively on people''s geographically proximate social relationships in terms of quality, quantity or satisfaction; and (b) participants'' engagement with technology in relation to their social lives generally. doi = 10.3390/ijerph17155544 id = cord-269343-qwgmn06t author = Livingston, Gill title = Dementia prevention, intervention, and care: 2020 report of the Lancet Commission date = 2020-07-30 keywords = Alzheimer; Association; TBI; cognitive; dementia; people; risk; study; year summary = Overall, a growing body of evidence supports the nine potentially modifiable risk factors for dementia modelled by the 2017 Lancet Commission on dementia prevention, intervention, and care: less education, hypertension, hearing impairment, smoking, obesity, depression, physical inactivity, diabetes, and low social contact. 90 An individual-level meta-analysis of 19 observational studies of relatively younger adults included 404 840 participants'' data (mean baseline age 45·5 years; mean follow-up duration 14·9 years), reporting an increased incidence of all-cause dementia (HR 1·4, 95% CI 1·2-1·7) and clinically diagnosed Alzheimer''s disease (1·4, 1·1-1·7) in those who were physically inactive in the 10-year period before diagnosis. Little evidence of the effects of social interventions on dementia exists but a systematic review of low quality RCTs of 576 adults aged 60 or more years with normal cognition found facilitated meeting and discussion groups were associated with improved global cognition and increased brain volume at follow-up. doi = 10.1016/s0140-6736(20)30367-6 id = cord-322636-2vp32ffg author = Morgon Banks, Lena title = Disability-inclusive responses to COVID-19: Lessons learnt from research on social protection in low- and middle-income countries date = 2020-08-28 keywords = disability; people summary = doi = 10.1016/j.worlddev.2020.105178 id = cord-262085-y90w53xo author = Neto, Modesto Leite Rolim title = When basic supplies are missing, what to do? Specific demands of the local street population in times of coronavirus – a concern of social psychiatry date = 2020-04-13 keywords = homeless; people summary = BACKGROUND: Homeless experts and some federal housing officials are sounding the alarm that the patchwork of government efforts to address the coronavirus outbreak risks leaving out one group of acutely vulnerable people: the homeless. METHOD: The studies were identified using large-sized newspapers with international circulation RESULTS: With more cities suspecting community transmission of the novel coronavirus, people who sleep in shelters or hunker down outside already have a lower life expectancy and often have underlying health conditions that put them at greater risk if they develop COVID-19 (Global News, 2020). With more cities suspecting community transmission of the novel coronavirus, people who sleep in shelters or hunker down outside have a lower life expectancy and often have underlying health conditions that put them at greater risk if they develop COVID-19 (Global News, 2020) . doi = 10.1016/j.psychres.2020.112939 id = cord-323466-r0n7448g author = Núñez, Ana title = Responding to Healthcare Disparities and Challenges With Access to Care During COVID-19 date = 2020-04-14 keywords = community; health; need; people summary = doi = 10.1089/heq.2020.29000.rtl id = cord-255360-yjn24sja author = O''Connor, Daryl B. title = Research priorities for the COVID‐19 pandemic and beyond: A call to action for psychological science date = 2020-07-19 keywords = COVID-19; health; mental; pandemic; people; psychological; research; social summary = The most pressing need is to research the negative biopsychosocial impacts of the COVID‐19 pandemic to facilitate immediate and longer‐term recovery, not only in relation to mental health, but also in relation to behaviour change and adherence, work, education, children and families, physical health and the brain, and social cohesion and connectedness. Specifically, we have identified the shorter-and longerterm priorities around mental health, behaviour change and adherence, work, education, children and families, physical health and the brain, and social cohesion and connectedness in order to (1) frame the breadth and scope of potential contributions from across the discipline, (2) assist psychological scientists in focusing their resources on gaps in the literature, and (3) help funders and policymakers make informed decisions about the shorter-and longer-term COVID-19 research priorities to meet the needs of societies as they emerge from the acute phase of the crisis. doi = 10.1111/bjop.12468 id = cord-330956-692irru4 author = Pazos, F. A. title = A control approach to the Covid-19 disease using a SEIHRD dynamical model date = 2020-05-30 keywords = control; number; people summary = doi = 10.1101/2020.05.27.20115295 id = cord-311398-uheb2cvg author = Prior, Lindsay title = Talking about colds and flu: The lay diagnosis of two common illnesses among older British people date = 2010-11-24 keywords = cold; flu; lay; people; symptom summary = doi = 10.1016/j.socscimed.2010.09.054 id = cord-314084-gb7ggriv author = Qi, Fei title = Guaranteeing the Health Rights of People with Disabilities in the COVID-19 Pandemic: Perspectives from China date = 2020-10-30 keywords = China; disability; people summary = doi = 10.2147/rmhp.s273685 id = cord-321642-efv9ovx9 author = Reicher, Stephen title = On order and disorder during the COVID‐19 pandemic date = 2020-07-01 keywords = United; authority; people; social summary = doi = 10.1111/bjso.12398 id = cord-223560-ppu6idl2 author = Russo, Daniel title = Predictors of Well-being and Productivity among Software Professionals during the COVID-19 Pandemic -- A Longitudinal Study date = 2020-07-24 keywords = covid-19; people; productivity; time; variable; work summary = Results include (1) the quality of social contacts predicted positively, and stress predicted an individual''s well-being negatively when controlling for other variables consistently across both waves; (2) boredom and distractions predicted productivity negatively; (3) productivity was less strongly associated with all predictor variables at time two compared to time one, suggesting that software engineers adapted to the lockdown situation over time; and (4) the longitudinal study did not provide evidence that any predictor variable causal explained variance in well-being and productivity. Therefore, there is a compelling need for longitudinal applied research that draws on theories and findings from various scientific fields to identify variables that uniquely predict the well-being and productivity of software professionals during the 2020 quarantine, for both the current and potential future lockdowns. Second, this approach simultaneously allows us to test whether models developed in an organizational context such as the two-factor theory [48] can also predict people''s well-being in general and whether variables that were associated with well-being for people being quarantined also explain productivity. doi = nan id = cord-338189-j4hnldk4 author = Saadat, Saeida title = Environmental perspective of COVID-19 date = 2020-08-01 keywords = COVID-19; China; coronavirus; people summary = The easy spread of this virus made people to wear a mask as precautionary route, use gloves and hand sanitizer on a daily basis that resulted in generation of a massive amount of medical wastes in the environment. However, the lock down of the COVID-19 pandemic caused the air quality in many cities across the globe to improve and drop in water pollutions in some parts of the world. There are some factors that contribute to the risk of COVID-19 but they are probably felt differently by different socioeconomic groups (Lipsitch et al., 2020) -People who have had medical problems of diabetes, chronic respiratory disease, cardiovascular disease, or even high blood pressure and cancer are at higher risk from coronavirus (Giannis et al., 2020; Fang et al., 2020; Zheng et al., 2020) . The major death cases of coronavirus outbreak are happening mainly in old people probably because of a poor immune system that allows rapid growth of viral infections. doi = 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.138870 id = cord-306227-63qvvkvk author = Shammi, Mashura title = Strategic assessment of COVID-19 pandemic in Bangladesh: comparative lockdown scenario analysis, public perception, and management for sustainability date = 2020-07-18 keywords = Bangladesh; covid-19; increase; lockdown; pandemic; people; scenario summary = doi = 10.1007/s10668-020-00867-y id = cord-026130-ki7bn67o author = Sharma, Anand Kumar title = Novel Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) date = 2020-06-05 keywords = COVID-19; SARS; people; virus summary = doi = 10.1007/s12045-020-0981-3 id = cord-286705-biundkbv author = Shek, Daniel T. L. title = Protests in Hong Kong (2019–2020): a Perspective Based on Quality of Life and Well-Being date = 2020-03-13 keywords = China; Government; Hong; Kong; people; social summary = doi = 10.1007/s11482-020-09825-2 id = cord-022141-yxttl3gh author = Siegel, Frederic R. title = Progressive Adaptation: The Key to Sustaining a Growing Global Population date = 2014-08-23 keywords = Africa; HIV; disease; global; people; population; water summary = doi = 10.1007/978-3-319-09686-5_9 id = cord-256366-9qb1zrzh author = Spiegel, Samuel J. title = Climate injustice, criminalisation of land protection and anti-colonial solidarity: Courtroom ethnography in an age of fossil fuel violence date = 2020-10-08 keywords = Canada; TMX; court; courtroom; indigenous; injunction; legal; people summary = Reflecting on a courtroom ethnography and debates spanning legal geography, political ecology and social movements studies, this article explores embodied struggles around oil, ''justice'' and geographies of caring – discussing how Indigenous youth, grandmothers in their eighties and others were convicted of ''criminal contempt'' for being on a road near an oil pipeline expansion project. On August 15th, 2018, as part of a research programme on intergenerational environmental justice, I sat in this gallery with other courtroom observers as a seventeen-year old Indigenous boy was sentenced by a white male judge for violating an injunction against impeding construction of an oil pipeline expansion project on his ancestral territory. The elder argued that the boy should not be deemed "guilty" of anything, that forced appearance at nine court proceedings, causing repeated sleepless nights and anxiety, was already more than enough punishment, and that the "criminal contempt" label needed to be appealed, with the pipeline violating Indigenous people''s rights on land never ceded to the British colonisers before the creation of Canada nor to any Canadian government thereafter. doi = 10.1016/j.polgeo.2020.102298 id = cord-034296-8cl1jll8 author = Stanley, Phiona title = Problematizing “Activism”: Medical Volunteer Tourism in Central America, Local Resistance, and Academic Activism date = 2020-09-14 keywords = America; Central; Guatemala; Stanley; activism; people summary = title: Problematizing "Activism": Medical Volunteer Tourism in Central America, Local Resistance, and Academic Activism Second, the paper considers and critiques local norms (e.g., widespread homophobia) and materials (e.g., the use of short-handled agricultural hoes) that may be discursively constructed as resistance to western imperialism. Three years of ethnographic research inform the paper (2013–2015, predominantly in Guatemala and Nicaragua), including hundreds of hours of interviews and participant observational fieldwork, in Spanish and English, with local stakeholders (e.g., teachers and homestay hosts) and Western volunteer tourists. Against a potent, recent, and very bloody history of U.S. cultural imperialism in Guatemala, western sojourners and their local hosts array themselves along a continuum of positions, from wishing to invite/impose U.S. norms and practices (under rubrics of "helping" and "expertise") to subscribing to (agri)cultural relativism and not wishing to exacerbate axiological violence through the adoption/ imposition of foreign ways. doi = 10.1177/1940844720948066 id = cord-291924-1s1e6457 author = Sun, Mei title = The public health emergency management system in China: trends from 2002 to 2012 date = 2018-04-11 keywords = China; Health; People summary = CONCLUSIONS: Due to forceful leadership, sounder regulations, and intensive resources, China''s PHEMS has been improved at the preparation, readiness, and response stages; however, the recovery stage was still weak and could not meet the requirements of crisis management and preventive governance. We conducted a multistage sampling to select CDCs at different administration levels, selected all 32 provincial CDCs and used systematic random sampling to select municipal and county CDCs. As governmental funding is the most critical control point of public health emergency management for the CDCs [15] ,we used "governmental funding to CDCs per thousand people" as a basis to determine sample size [16] . In 2012, there were 3092 public health emergencies directly reported via the Disease Surveillance Information Management System, which accounted for 98.8%.The percentage of timely reporting by county CDCs emergency levels in 2012 was presented in Table 4 . doi = 10.1186/s12889-018-5284-1 id = cord-025556-oyfx3ij5 author = THUNSTRÖM, LINDA title = Testing for COVID-19: willful ignorance or selfless behavior? date = 2020-05-08 keywords = covid-19; participant; people; test summary = doi = 10.1017/bpp.2020.15 id = cord-305916-0pychvxi author = Thao, Nguyen Cong title = Life in Hanoi during the Coronavirus Pandemic date = 2020-05-14 keywords = Hanoi; people summary = doi = 10.1111/ciso.12283 id = cord-289846-i7xg1tpp author = Torres, Camilo title = Re-imagining environmental governance: Gold dredge mining vs Territorial Health in the Colombian Amazon date = 2020-10-15 keywords = Amazon; Andoke; State; colombian; environmental; governance; indigenous; people summary = doi = 10.1016/j.geoforum.2020.09.013 id = cord-300763-3ateeei3 author = Vannabouathong, Christopher title = Novel Coronavirus COVID-19: Current Evidence and Evolving Strategies date = 2020-05-06 keywords = COVID-19; China; People; Republic; SARS summary = doi = 10.2106/jbjs.20.00396 id = cord-300452-dqb6em7g author = Wang, Wan-Ying title = Current Policies and Measures on the Development of Traditional Chinese Medicine in China date = 2020-09-09 keywords = China; People; TCM summary = doi = 10.1016/j.phrs.2020.105187 id = cord-017225-6ofi6mg5 author = Wei, Yuwa title = Human Rights Issues date = 2018-12-10 keywords = China; People; Republic; chinese; food; human; right; safety summary = doi = 10.1007/978-981-13-3699-7_8 id = cord-019040-lj1r8ptb author = Xiao, Ren title = Human Security in Practice: The Chinese Experience date = 2018-12-07 keywords = China; chinese; human; people; security summary = doi = 10.1007/978-3-319-97247-3_3 id = cord-284972-61ayjej8 author = Zaki, Jamil title = Catastrophe Compassion: Understanding and Extending Prosociality Under Crisis date = 2020-05-14 keywords = disaster; people summary = doi = 10.1016/j.tics.2020.05.006 id = cord-318977-4ng6gxpv author = Zittoun, Tania title = The relevance of a sociocultural perspective for understanding learning and development in older age date = 2020-09-26 keywords = Zittoun; age; life; old; people summary = doi = 10.1016/j.lcsi.2020.100453 id = cord-023837-kenstpja author = nan title = China date = 2019 keywords = China; GDP; Hong; January; July; Kong; People; Republic; Taiwan; USA; chinese summary = In foreign affairs, regional concerns over China''s territorial and military intentions were raised in Nov. 2013 by the government''s declaration of a new ''air defence identification zone'' over a swathe of the East China Sea including disputed islands claimed by Japan and South Korea. Regarded as the steward of the Chinese economy, Li was expected to focus on securing China''s long-term expansion and on the further provision of basic national healthcare, affordable housing, employment growth, regional development and cleaner energy. China is the world''s third largest exporter of arms after the USA and Russia, with 6·2% of the global major weapons total over the period 2012-16. GDP growth declined to 6·9% in 2015 (the slowest rate in 25 years) and fell again to 6·7% in 2016 as China attempted to reduce its reliance on exports, increase domestic consumption and develop its service sector. doi = 10.1007/978-1-349-95321-9_204