keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647549/-imaging-in-headache
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Armin Bachhuber
Headache is worldwide one of the leading reasons to consult a general practitioner or a neurologist. In addition to the medical history and results of laboratory parameters, imaging represents one of the most important diagnostic steps. As there is a myriad of possible causes, it is nearly impossible to cover the whole spectrum of this topic. This article summarizes the most important morphological imaging findings and their pitfalls.
April 22, 2024: Radiologie (Heidelb)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647532/diabetes-is-associated-with-longitudinal-declined-physical-performance-measures-in-persons-with-or-at-risk-of-knee-osteoarthritis-data-from-the-osteoarthritis-initiative
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aqeel M Alenazi, Bader A Alqahtani
BACKGROUND: The primary aim of this study was to longitudinally examine the impact of DM on physical performance measures including Gait Speed and Chair Stand tests over 8 years of follow up in people with or at risk of knee osteoarthritis (OA). DESIGN: A prospective longitudinal study. SETTING: Multisite community based. POPULATION: This study included participants with or at risk of knee OA aged from 45 to 79 years from the Osteoarthritis Initiative from baseline to 96 months follow-up...
April 22, 2024: European Journal of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647523/a-practical-strategy-to-reduce-surgical-overtreatment-of-intraductal-papillary-mucinous-neoplasms-of-the-pancreas
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jenny H Chang, Chase Wehrle, Mir Shanaz Hossain, Kimberly Woo, Kathryn Stackhouse, Toms Augustin, Robert Simon, Daniel Joyce, Jason B Fleming, Samer A Naffouje
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
October 17, 2023: Annals of Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647519/controlled-synthesis-of-unconventional-phase-alloy-nanobranches-for-highly-selective-electrocatalytic-nitrite-reduction-to-ammonia
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yunhao Wang, Yuecheng Xiong, Mingzi Sun, Jingwen Zhou, Fengkun Hao, Qinghua Zhang, Chenliang Ye, Xixi Wang, Zhihang Xu, Qingbo Wa, Fu Liu, Xiang Meng, Juan Wang, Pengyi Lu, Yangbo Ma, Jinwen Yin, Ye Zhu, Shengqi Chu, Bolong Huang, Lin Gu, Zhanxi Fan
The controlled synthesis of metal nanomaterials with unconventional phases is of significant importance to develop high-performance catalysts for various applications. However, it remains challenging to modulate the atomic arrangements of metal nanomaterials, especially the alloy nanostructures that involve different metals with distinct redox potentials. Here we report the general one-pot synthesis of IrNi, IrRhNi and IrFeNi alloy nanobranches with unconventional hexagonal close-packed (hcp) phase. Notably, the as-synthesized hcp IrNi nanobranches demonstrate excellent catalytic performance towards electrochemical nitrite reduction (NO2RR), with superior NH3 Faradaic efficiency and yield rate of 98...
April 22, 2024: Angewandte Chemie
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647494/it-s-time-to-stop-using-stepchild-as-a-pejorative-term-in-science
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Todd M Jensen
Despite their ubiquity, stepfamilies generally hold a stigmatized status. The scientific community at large has not been immune to the influence of stepfamily stigmatization. Misusing the term "stepchild" in science is unnecessary on several fronts. "Stepchild" is often intended to denote neglect, oversight, or mistreatment. Scholars should consider using more direct and precise language, especially considering that scientific writing benefits from clarity, parsimony, and precision. In any case, it's time to stop using "stepchild" as a pejorative term...
March 2024: Families, Systems & Health: the Journal of Collaborative Family Healthcare
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647487/an-8-week-community-based-resilience-group-intervention-for-chinese-parents-who-lost-their-only-child-a-two-armed-pragmatic-waitlist-control-trial
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anni Wang, Wen Zhang, Hui Li, Yufang Guo, Nancy Xiaonan Yu, Jingping Zhang
OBJECTIVE: This study developed and evaluated a structured, 8-week community-based resilience group intervention for Chinese parents who have lost their only child and exhibit extended bereavement and suboptimal levels of resilience. METHOD: Eighty parents were recruited from two communities and allocated to the intervention group ( n = 42) or the waitlist-control group ( n = 38). The 8-week community-based resilience group intervention was developed based on Kumpfer's resilience theory and previous studies...
April 22, 2024: Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice and Policy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647485/combinational-regularity-analysis-cora-an-introduction-for-psychologists
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alrik Thiem, Lusine Mkrtchyan, Zuzana Sebechlebská
Increasingly, psychologists make use of modern configurational comparative methods (CCMs), such as qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) and coincidence analysis (CNA), to infer regularity-theoretic causal structures from psychological data. At the same time, existing CCMs remain unable to reveal such structures in the presence of complex effects. Given the strong emphasis configurational methodology generally puts on the notion of complex causation, and the ubiquity of multieffect problems in psychological research, such as multimorbidity and polypharmacy, this limitation is severe...
April 22, 2024: Psychological Methods
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647484/the-plausibility-of-alternative-data-generating-mechanisms-comment-on-and-attempt-at-replication-of-dishop-2022
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jonas W B Lang, Paul D Bliese
Dishop (see record 2022-78260-001) identifies the consensus emergence model (CEM) as a useful tool for future research on emergence but argues that autoregressive models with positive autoregressive effects are an important alternative data-generating mechanism that researchers need to rule out. Here, we acknowledge that alternative data-generating mechanisms are possibility for most, if not all, nonexperimental designs and appreciate Dishop's attempts to identify cases where the CEM could provide misleading results...
April 22, 2024: Psychological Methods
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647482/people-s-beliefs-about-pronouns-reflect-both-the-language-they-speak-and-their-ideologies
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
April H Bailey, Robin Dembroff, Daniel Wodak, Elif G Ikizer, Andrei Cimpian
Pronouns often convey information about a person's social identity (e.g., gender). Consequently, pronouns have become a focal point in academic and public debates about whether pronouns should be changed to be more inclusive, such as for people whose identities do not fit current pronoun conventions (e.g., gender nonbinary individuals). Here, we make an empirical contribution to these debates by investigating which social identities lay speakers think that pronouns should encode (if any) and why. Across four studies, participants were asked to evaluate different types of real and hypothetical pronouns, including binary gender pronouns, race pronouns, and identity-neutral pronouns...
May 2024: Journal of Experimental Psychology. General
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647481/processing-of-fearful-faces-exhibits-characteristics-of-subcortical-functions
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kairui Yu, Junzhen Guo, Zhenjie Xu, Feiyang Shi, Xiaoqian Yu, Fang Fang, Yingying Wang
A subcortical pathway is thought to have evolved to facilitate fear information transmission, but direct evidence for its existence in humans is lacking. In recent years, rapid, preattentive, and preconscious fear processing has been demonstrated, providing indirect support for the existence of the subcortical pathway by challenging the necessity of canonical cortical pathways in fear processing. However, direct support also requires evidence for the involvement of subcortical regions in fear processing. To address this issue, here we investigate whether fear processing reflects the characteristics of the subcortical structures in the hypothesized subcortical pathway...
May 2024: Journal of Experimental Psychology. General
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647480/judging-robot-ability-how-people-form-implicit-and-explicit-impressions-of-robot-competence
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicholas Surdel, Yochanan E Bigman, Xi Shen, Wen-Ying Lee, Malte F Jung, Melissa J Ferguson
Robots' proliferation throughout society offers many opportunities and conveniences. However, our ability to effectively employ these machines relies heavily on our perceptions of their competence. In six studies (N = 2,660), participants played a competitive game with a robot to learn about its capabilities. After the learning experience, we measured explicit and implicit competence impressions to investigate how they reflected the learning experience. We observed two distinct dissociations between people's implicit and explicit competence impressions...
May 2024: Journal of Experimental Psychology. General
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647479/unconscious-prioritization-for-face-to-face-people
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yingtao Fu, Mei Zhou, Jifan Zhou, Mowei Shen, Hui Chen
One central question in the scientific and philosophical study of consciousness is regarding the scope of human consciousness. There is a lively debate as to whether high-level information integration is necessarily dependent on consciousness. This study presents a new form of unconscious integration based on the facingness between two individuals. Using a breaking continuous flash suppression paradigm, Experiments 1-3 found that two facing human heads got a privilege in breaking into awareness compared to nonfacing pairs...
May 2024: Journal of Experimental Psychology. General
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647478/equality-and-efficiency-shape-cooperation-in-multiple-public-goods-provision-problems
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laura C Hoenig, Ruthie Pliskin, Carsten K W De Dreu
The functioning of groups and societies requires that individuals cooperate on public goods such as healthcare and state defense. More often than not, individuals face multiple public goods and must choose on which to cooperate, if at all. Such decisions can be difficult when public goods are attractive on one dimension (e.g., being "efficient" in providing comparatively high returns) and unattractive on another (e.g., creating inequality by providing some group members greater returns than others). We examined how people manage such decision conflicts in five preregistered experiments (N = 900) that confronted participants with two public goods that varied in efficiency and (in)equality of returns...
May 2024: Journal of Experimental Psychology. General
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647477/efficiency-neglect-why-people-are-pessimistic-about-the-effects-of-increasing-population
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jason Dana, George E Newman, Guy Voichek
In six studies, we find evidence of efficiency neglect: when thinking about the effects of population growth, people intuitively focus on increased demand while neglecting the changes in production efficiency that occur alongside, and often in response to, increased demand. In other words, people tend to think of others solely as consumers, rather than as consumers as well as producers. Efficiency neglect leads to beliefs that the real costs of some consumer goods are rising when they are actually decreasing and may contribute to antiimmigration sentiments because of the fear that increasing local population creates competition for fixed resources...
May 2024: Journal of Experimental Psychology. General
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647476/so-much-for-plain-language-an-analysis-of-the-accessibility-of-u-s-federal-laws-over-time
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eric Martínez, Francis Mollica, Edward Gibson
Over the last 50 years, there have been efforts on behalf of the U.S. government to simplify legal documents for society at large. However, there has been no systematic evaluation of how effective these efforts-collectively referred to as the "plain-language movement"-have been. Here we report the results of a large-scale longitudinal corpus analysis (n ≈ 225 million words), in which we compared every law passed by congress with a comparably sized sample of English texts from four different baseline genres published during approximately the same time period...
May 2024: Journal of Experimental Psychology. General
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647475/machiavellian-behavior-and-social-emotional-functioning-in-middle-childhood-and-early-adolescence
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marc Jambon, Tyler Colasante, Tina Malti
Machiavellianism is an antisocial interpersonal style involving the use of manipulative, deceptive, and coercive behaviors in the pursuit of self-interest. Although widely studied as a "dark" personality trait in adults, relatively little is known about the developmental correlates of Machiavellian tendencies earlier in life. The present study addressed this knowledge gap by examining associations between Machiavellian behavior and three theoretically relevant social-emotional domains-prosocial emotions, emotion recognition skills, and self-control-in a community sample of 7- and 11-year-old Canadian children ( N = 300, 50% female)...
April 22, 2024: Developmental Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647472/a-process-model-of-parental-executive-functioning-as-a-spillover-mechanism-linking-interparental-conflict-and-parenting-difficulties-across-parenting-domains
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Justin Russotti, Cory R Platts, Melissa L Sturge-Apple, Patrick T Davies, Morgan J Thompson
There is a well-documented interdependency between destructive interparental conflict (IPC) and parenting difficulties (i.e., spillover effect), yet little is known about the mechanisms that "carry" spillover between IPC and parenting. Guided by a cascade model framework, the current study used a longitudinal, multimethod, multi-informant design to examine a process model of spillover that tested whether parental executive functioning (working memory, cognitive flexibility, inhibitory control) served as a mediator of the prospective associations between IPC and subsequent changes in parenting over a 2-year period...
April 22, 2024: Developmental Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647466/absence-of-differential-protection-from-extinction-in-human-causal-learning
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David N George, Josephine E Haddon, Oren Griffiths
Elemental models of associative learning typically employ a common prediction-error term. Following a conditioning trial, they predict that the change in the strength of an association between a cue and an outcome is dependent upon how well the outcome was predicted. When multiple cues are present, they each contribute to that prediction. The same rule applies both to increases in associative strength during excitatory conditioning and the loss of associative strength during extinction. In five experiments using an allergy prediction task, we tested the involvement of a common error term in the extinction of causal learning...
April 22, 2024: Journal of Experimental Psychology. Animal Learning and Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647460/determination-of-the-reference-interval-for-urine-kidney-injury-molecule-1-in-50-healthy-cats
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tori Brown, Alice Defarges, Gabrielle Monteith, Ryan Appleby, Dorothee Bienzle
OBJECTIVES: The aim of the present study was to establish a reference interval (RI) for urine kidney injury molecule-1 (KIM-1) in healthy cats. METHODS: History, physical examination, blood pressure, and feline immunodeficiency virus and feline leukemia virus serology status were determined. A complete blood cell count, serum biochemical profile, urinalysis and kidney ultrasound were performed, and N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide, total thyroxine (TT4) and urine KIM-1 were measured...
April 2024: Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647456/effects-of-environmental-diversity-on-exploration-and-learning-the-case-of-bilingualism
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Leher Singh, Rachel Barr, Paul C Quinn, Marina Kalashnikova, Joscelin Rocha-Hidalgo, Kate Freda, Dean D'Souza
Bilingual environments provide a commonplace example of increased complexity and uncertainty. Learning multiple languages entails mastery of a larger and more variable range of sounds, words, syntactic structures, pragmatic conventions, and more complex mapping of linguistic information to objects in the world. Recent research suggests that bilingual learners demonstrate fundamental variation in how they explore and learn from their environment, which may derive from this increased complexity. In particular, the increased complexity and variability of bilingual environments may broaden the focus of learners' attention, laying a different attentional foundation for learning...
April 22, 2024: Journal of Experimental Psychology. General
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