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2.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34948581

BACKGROUND: The extent to which mountain biking impacts upon the environment is largely determined by rider behaviours. The purpose of this study was to gain a better understanding of how mountain bikers interact with the natural environment and explore their attitudes towards sustainability. METHODS: 3780 European mountain bikers completed an online cross-sectional survey. RESULTS: Connection to nature was an important source of motivation and the use of mountain bike trails has increased rider's appreciation of and willingness to protect nature, with a large majority having taken direct action to do so. Mountain bikers are prepared to contribute towards trail maintenance through the provision of labour or financially. Although most mountain bikers make use of wet trails and illegal trails, incidence of conflict is relatively low. A range of characteristics were identified as being fundamental elements of sustainable trails, both in relation to the sustainability of the trail itself and in terms of wider environmental sustainability. CONCLUSIONS: European mountain bikers care about the sustainability of the natural environment. Self-reported attitudes and behaviours suggest a willingness to reduce environmental impact and actively protect nature.


Bicycling , Motivation , Attitude , Cross-Sectional Studies , Environment , Humans
3.
Hear Res ; 410: 108350, 2021 10.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34534892

Subtracting the sum of left and right monaural auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) from the corresponding binaural ABR isolates the binaural interaction component (ABR-BIC). In a previous investigation (Ikeda, 2015), during auditory yet not visual tasks, tone-pips elicited a significant difference in amplitude between summed monaural and binaural ABRs. With click stimulation, this amplitude difference was task-independent. This self-critical reanalysis's purpose was to establish that a difference waveform (i.e., ABR-BIC DN1) reflected an auditory selective attention effect that was isolable from stimulus factors. Regardless of whether stimuli were tone-pips or clicks, effect sizes of the DN1 peak amplitudes relative to zero improved during auditory tasks over visual tasks. Auditory selective attention effects on the monaural and binaural ABR wave-V amplitudes were tone-pip specific. Those wave-V effects thus could not explain the stimulus-universal effect of auditory selective attention on DN1 detectability, which was thus entirely binaural. In a manner isolated from auditory selective attention, multiple mediation analyses indicated that the higher right monaural wave-V amplitudes mediated individual differences in how clicks, relative to tone-pips, augmented DN1 amplitudes. There are implications of these findings for advancing ABR-BIC measurement.


Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem , Acoustic Stimulation , Humans , Individuality
4.
J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn ; 47(7): 1054-1066, 2021 Jul.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33523694

Data on orienting and habituation to irrelevant sound can distinguish between task-specific and general accounts of auditory distraction: Distractors either disrupt specific cognitive processes (e.g., Jones, 1993; Salamé & Baddeley, 1982), or remove more general-purpose attentional resources from any attention-demanding task (e.g., Cowan, 1995). Tested here is the prediction that there is no further auditory distraction effect on immediate serial recall with increments in the number of distractors beyond the "changing-state point" of two discrete distractors. A Bayes factor analysis refutes this nil hypothesis: This prediction, a key element of the strong changing-state hypothesis, is shown to be less likely than two competing alternatives. Quantitative predictions for distraction as a function of the number of distracters are derived for an orienting-response (OR) and a stimulus-mismatch (SMM) hypothesis, representing general and task-specific accounts respectively. The data are shown to be more likely under the SMM hypothesis. Prospects for a parametric account of auditory distraction are considered. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).


Auditory Perception , Mental Recall , Attention , Bayes Theorem , Humans , Memory, Short-Term
5.
Atten Percept Psychophys ; 82(1): 350-362, 2020 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31290133

Classically, attentional selectivity has been conceptualized as a passive by-product of capacity limits on stimulus processing. Here, we examine the role of more active cognitive control processes in attentional selectivity, focusing on how distraction from task-irrelevant sound is modulated by levels of task engagement in a visually presented short-term memory task. Task engagement was varied by manipulating the load involved in the encoding of the (visually presented) to-be-remembered items. Using a list of Navon letters (where a large letter is composed of smaller, different-identity letters), participants were oriented to attend and serially recall the list of large letters (low encoding load) or to attend and serially recall the list of small letters (high encoding load). Attentional capture by a single deviant noise burst within a task-irrelevant tone sequence (the deviation effect) was eliminated under high encoding load (Experiment 1). However, distraction from a continuously changing sequence of tones (the changing-state effect) was immune to the influence of load (Experiment 2). This dissociation in the amenability of the deviation effect and the changing-state effect to cognitive control supports a duplex-mechanism over a unitary-mechanism account of auditory distraction in which the deviation effect is due to attentional capture whereas the changing-state effect reflects direct interference between the processing of the sound and processes involved in the focal task. That the changing-state effect survives high encoding load also goes against an alternative explanation of the attenuation of the deviation effect under high load in terms of the depletion of a limited perceptual resource that would result in diminished auditory processing.


Attention , Auditory Perception , Perceptual Masking/physiology , Task Performance and Analysis , Visual Perception/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Memory, Short-Term , Mental Recall , Noise , Sound , Young Adult
8.
Br J Nutr ; 119(12): 1355-1365, 2018 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29845905

Nighttime eating is often associated with a negative impact on weight management and cardiometabolic health. However, data from recent acute metabolic studies have implicated a benefit of ingesting a bedtime snack for weight management. The present study compared the impact of ingesting a milk snack containing either 10 (BS10) or 30 g (BS30) protein with a non-energetic placebo (BS0) 30 min before bedtime on next morning metabolism, appetite and energy intake in mildly overweight males (age: 24·3 (sem 0·8) years; BMI: 27·4 (sem 1·1) kg/m2). Next morning measurements of RMR, appetite and energy intake were measured using indirect calorimetry, visual analogue scales and an ad libitum breakfast, respectively. Bedtime milk ingestion did not alter next morning RMR (BS0: 7822 (sem 276) kJ/d, BS10: 7482 (sem 262) kJ/d, BS30: 7851 (sem 261) kJ/d, P=0·19) or substrate utilisation as measured by RER (P=0·64). Bedtime milk ingestion reduced hunger (P=0·01) and increased fullness (P=0·04) during the evening immediately after snack ingestion, but elicited no effect the next morning. Next morning breakfast (BS0: 2187 (sem 365) kJ, BS10: 2070 (sem 336) kJ, BS30: 2582 (sem 384) kJ, P=0·21) and 24 h post-trial (P=0·95) energy intake was similar between conditions. To conclude, in mildly overweight adults, compared with a non-energetic placebo, a bedtime milk snack containing 10 or 30 g of protein does not confer changes in next morning whole-body metabolism and appetite that may favour weight management.


Appetite/physiology , Milk , Overweight/diet therapy , Overweight/physiopathology , Snacks/physiology , Adult , Animals , Basal Metabolism , Cross-Over Studies , Diet, Reducing , Double-Blind Method , Energy Intake , Humans , Male , Milk/adverse effects , Overweight/blood , Sleep , Weight Reduction Programs , Young Adult
9.
IEEE Trans Neural Syst Rehabil Eng ; 25(11): 2169-2179, 2017 11.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28475062

Research into brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), which spell words using brain signals, has revealed that a desktop version of such a speller, the edges paradigm, offers several advantages: This edges paradigm outperforms the benchmark row-column paradigm in terms of accuracy, bitrate, and user experience. It has remained unknown whether these advantages prevailed with a new version of the edges paradigm designed for a mobile device. This paper investigated and evaluated in a rolling wheelchair a mobile BCI, which implemented the edges paradigm on small displays with which visual crowding tends to occur. How the mobile edge paradigm outperforms the mobile row-column paradigm has implications for understanding how principles of visual neurocognition affect BCI speller use in a mobile context. This investigation revealed that all the advantages of the edges paradigm over the row-column paradigm prevailed in this setting. However, the reduction in adjacent errors for the edges paradigm was unprecedentedly limited to horizontal adjacent errors. The interpretation offered is that dimensional constraints of visual interface design on a smartphone thus affected the neurocognitive processes of crowding.


Brain-Computer Interfaces , Communication Aids for Disabled , Wheelchairs , Adult , Algorithms , Cognition , Event-Related Potentials, P300 , Female , Healthy Volunteers , Humans , Male , Photic Stimulation , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Smartphone , Software , Visual Perception , Young Adult
11.
Front Neurosci ; 10: 136, 2016.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27242396

The rostral brainstem receives both "bottom-up" input from the ascending auditory system and "top-down" descending corticofugal connections. Speech information passing through the inferior colliculus of elderly listeners reflects the periodicity envelope of a speech syllable. This information arguably also reflects a composite of temporal-fine-structure (TFS) information from the higher frequency vowel harmonics of that repeated syllable. The amplitude of those higher frequency harmonics, bearing even higher frequency TFS information, correlates positively with the word recognition ability of elderly listeners under reverberatory conditions. Also relevant is that working memory capacity (WMC), which is subject to age-related decline, constrains the processing of sounds at the level of the brainstem. Turning to the effects of a visually presented sensory or memory load on auditory processes, there is a load-dependent reduction of that processing, as manifest in the auditory brainstem responses (ABR) evoked by to-be-ignored clicks. Wave V decreases in amplitude with increases in the visually presented memory load. A visually presented sensory load also produces a load-dependent reduction of a slightly different sort: The sensory load of visually presented information limits the disruptive effects of background sound upon working memory performance. A new early filter model is thus advanced whereby systems within the frontal lobe (affected by sensory or memory load) cholinergically influence top-down corticofugal connections. Those corticofugal connections constrain the processing of complex sounds such as speech at the level of the brainstem. Selective attention thereby limits the distracting effects of background sound entering the higher auditory system via the inferior colliculus. Processing TFS in the brainstem relates to perception of speech under adverse conditions. Attentional selectivity is crucial when the signal heard is degraded or masked: e.g., speech in noise, speech in reverberatory environments. The assumptions of a new early filter model are consistent with these findings: A subcortical early filter, with a predictive selectivity based on acoustical (linguistic) context and foreknowledge, is under cholinergic top-down control. A prefrontal capacity limitation constrains this top-down control as is guided by the cholinergic processing of contextual information in working memory.

12.
Front Psychol ; 6: 548, 2015.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26052289

A dynamic interplay is known to exist between auditory processing and human cognition. For example, prior investigations of speech-in-noise have revealed there is more to learning than just listening: Even if all words within a spoken list are correctly heard in noise, later memory for those words is typically impoverished. These investigations supported a view that there is a "gap" between the intelligibility of speech and memory for that speech. Here, the notion was that this gap between speech intelligibility and memorability is a function of the extent to which the spoken message seizes limited immediate memory resources (e.g., Kjellberg et al., 2008). Accordingly, the more difficult the processing of the spoken message, the less resources are available for elaboration, storage, and recall of that spoken material. However, it was not previously known how increasing that difficulty affected the memory processing of semantically rich spoken material. This investigation showed that noise impairs higher levels of cognitive analysis. A variant of the Deese-Roediger-McDermott procedure that encourages semantic elaborative processes was deployed. On each trial, participants listened to a 36-item list comprising 12 words blocked by each of 3 different themes. Each of those 12 words (e.g., bed, tired, snore…) was associated with a "critical" lure theme word that was not presented (e.g., sleep). Word lists were either presented without noise or at a signal-to-noise ratio of 5 decibels upon an A-weighting. Noise reduced false recall of the critical words, and decreased the semantic clustering of recall. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

13.
Int J Psychophysiol ; 95(3): 310-21, 2015 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25523346

Visual search and oddball paradigms were combined to investigate memory for to-be-ignored color changes in a group of 12 healthy participants. The onset of unexpected color change of an irrelevant stimulus evoked two reliable ERP effects: a component of the event-related potential (ERP), similar to the visual mismatch negativity response (vMMN), with a latency of 120-160 ms and a posterior distribution over the left hemisphere and Late Fronto-Central Negativity (LFCN) with a latency of 320-400 ms, apparent at fronto-central electrodes and some posterior sites. Color change of that irrelevant stimulus also slowed identification of a visual target, indicating distraction. The amplitude of this color-change vMMN, but not LFCN, indexed this distraction effect. That is, electrophysiological and behavioral measures were correlated. The interval between visual scenes approximated 1s (611-1629 ms), indicating that the brain's sensory memory for the color of the preceding visual scenes must persist for at least 600 ms. Therefore, in the case of the neural code for color, durable memory representations are formed in an obligatory manner.


Attention/physiology , Brain Mapping , Evoked Potentials, Visual/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Adult , Contingent Negative Variation/physiology , Electroencephalography , Female , Humans , Male , Memory/physiology , Photic Stimulation , Reaction Time/physiology , Time Factors , Young Adult
14.
Am J Pharm Educ ; 78(7): 131, 2014 Sep 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25258436

It is time for colleges and schools of pharmacy to examine and confront the rising costs of pharmacy education and the increasing student loan debt borne by graduates. These phenomena likely result from a variety of complex factors. The academy should begin addressing these issues before pharmacy education becomes cost-prohibitive for future generations. This paper discusses some of the more salient drivers of cost and student debt load and offers suggestions that may help alleviate some of the financial pressures.


Education, Pharmacy/economics , Students, Pharmacy , Training Support/economics , Career Choice , Humans
15.
Am J Pharm Educ ; 78(1): 5, 2014 Feb 12.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24558273

OBJECTIVE: To describe the current landscape within the profession of pharmacy regarding student tuition, indebtedness, salaries, and job potential. METHODS: Pharmacy tuition and student debt data were obtained through the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy Institutional Research website. Tuition was defined as average first-year tuition and fees for accredited schools. Debt was defined as the total average amount borrowed. Median salaries and numbers of jobs were obtained from the United States Department of Labor. RESULTS: In-state tuition at public schools rose an average of $1,211 ± 31 (r2 = 0.996), whereas out-of-state tuition at public schools rose significantly faster at $1,838 ± 80 per year (r2 = 0.988). The average tuition cost for pharmacy school has increased 54% in the last 8 years. The average pharmacist salary has risen from $75,000 to over $112,000 since 2002. The increase in salary has been nearly linear (r2 = 0.988) rising $4,409 ± $170 dollars per year. However, average salary in 2011 was $3,064 below the predicted value based upon a linear regression of salaries over 10 years. The number of pharmacist jobs in the United States has risen from 215,000 jobs in 2003 to 275,000 in 2010. However, there were 3,000 fewer positions in 2012 than in 2011. In 2011, average indebtedness for pharmacy students ($114,422) was greater than average first-year salary ($112,160). CONCLUSION: Rising tuition and student indebtedness is a multifaceted problem requiring attention from a number of parties including students, faculty members, universities, and accreditation and government entities.


Education, Pharmacy/economics , Salaries and Fringe Benefits/economics , Students, Pharmacy , Training Support/economics , Education, Pharmacy/trends , Humans , Pharmacists/economics , Pharmacists/trends , Salaries and Fringe Benefits/trends , Training Support/trends
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