The authors examined career‐related uncertainties perceived by college students in Taiwan. Five hundred thirty‐two Taiwanese students responded to a free‐response instrument containing 3 questions related to career uncertainties: (a) the sources of career uncertainty, (b) the experiences at the moment of feeling uncertainty, and (c) coping efficacies toward the uncertainty. Responses were sorted into categories within each question based on the grounded theory methodology (B. G. Glaser & A. L. Strauss, 1967). A hypothetical model was developed to describe college students' perceptions of career uncertainties, experiences of feeling uncertainty, and coping efficacy toward the uncertainty.
The purpose of the study was to assess the reliability and validity of the Chinese version of the Attitudes Toward Dream measure (ATD) and examine the outcome of dream interpretation for college students in Taiwan. In a sample of 574 college students, factor analysis revealed a single factor for the ATD-Chinese. In the second stage, 60 volunteer clients were assigned randomly to an experimental or control condition. Significant differences were found between experimental and control conditions for postsession ATD-Chinese scores. Initial attitudes toward dreams did not influence perceived gains from dream sessions.
A modified Michelson interferometer was used to probe the electron density in plasma plumes produced by pulsed XeCl laser ablation of Al2O3. With one of the mirrors of the interferometer translating steadily, the phase angle of the sinusoidal interference signal was tracked and the XeCl laser was fired whenever the detected phase angle matched a predefined value. The transient interference waveform produced by the plasma plume was then synchronously captured. This moving-mirror interferometer features minimal vibration isolation, fast response time (∼10 ns), powerful noise rejection, and a detection limit of a thousandth of a fringe shift, or ∼1015 electrons per cm3 for mm size plumes.
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