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1.
Med Sci (Paris) ; 37(1): 81-88, 2021 Jan.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33492223

ABSTRACT

To respond to the social challenge of medical knowledge democratisation, numerous initiatives have been developed: information, training or consultation of patients or research applications funded by associations of patients. Only a few numbers of collaborations are initiated by the persons directly involved (patients and relatives) or fulfill association research need. We have adopted and tested such an approach with the French fibromyalgia association (Fibromyalgie France). Our work demonstrates the interest to use data collected by associations of patients to answer to their questioning or to rise further relevant research questions. Such participative approach will have a pertinent and significant impact on the knowledge of diseases and on the development of collaborative actions of research, providing a better answer to patient needs, while being methodologically rigorous.


TITLE: Production de savoirs à partir de données collectées par les associations de malades - L'exemple de la fibromyalgie. ABSTRACT: Pour répondre au défi sociétal de démocratisation de l'accès à la connaissance, différentes initiatives de recherches participatives se développent : actions d'information, de formation ou de consultation des citoyens ou par l'intermédiaire de demandes de financement par des chercheurs auprès des associations. Cependant, peu des collaborations chercheurs-malades sont à l'initiative des personnes concernées, les patients et leurs familles. Nous avons adopté et testé cette démarche à la demande et en coopération avec l'association Fibromyalgie France.


Subject(s)
Data Collection/methods , Fibromyalgia , Knowledge , Patient Participation , Databases, Factual/standards , Databases, Factual/supply & distribution , Fibromyalgia/epidemiology , Fibromyalgia/pathology , France/epidemiology , Humans , Patient Participation/methods , Peer Group
2.
Mem Cognit ; 46(5): 657-670, 2018 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29572787

ABSTRACT

In the present studies, we investigated inferences from an incompatibility statement. Starting with two propositions that cannot be true at the same time, these inferences consist of deducing the falsity of one from the truth of the other or deducing the truth of one from the falsity of the other. Inferences of this latter form are relevant to human reasoning since they are the formal equivalent of a discourse manipulation called the false dilemma fallacy, often used in politics and advertising in order to force a choice between two selected options. Based on research on content-related variability in conditional reasoning, we predicted that content would have an impact on how reasoners treat incompatibility inferences. Like conditional inferences, they present two invalid forms for which the logical response is one of uncertainty. We predicted that participants would endorse a smaller proportion of the invalid incompatibility inferences when more counterexamples are available. In Study 1, we found the predicted pattern using causal premises translated into incompatibility statements with many and few counterexamples. In Study 2A, we replicated the content effects found in Study 1, but with premises for which the incompatibility statement is a non-causal relation between classes. These results suggest that the tendency to fall into the false dilemma fallacy is modulated by the background knowledge of the reasoner. They also provide additional evidence on the link between semantic information retrieval and deduction.


Subject(s)
Logic , Thinking , Adult , Female , Humans , Male
3.
Chemosphere ; 84(1): 80-90, 2011 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21421251

ABSTRACT

The Marennes-Oléron Bay, hosting the largest oyster production in France, is influenced by the historic polymetallic pollution of the Gironde Estuary. Despite management efforts and decreasing emissions in the Gironde watershed, cadmium levels in oysters from the bay are close to the consumption limit (5 µg g(-1) dw, EC). From mid April to mid July 2009, we investigated the role of tidal resuspension and regional hydrodynamics on Cd speciation (seawater, SPM, phytoplankton, sediment, microphytobenthos) and bioaccumulation in 18 month-old oysters (gills, digestive glands, rests of tissues) reared under natural conditions (i) at ∼60 cm above the sediment and (ii) on the sediment surface. Dissolved and particulate Cd concentrations in surface and bottom waters were similar and constant over tidal cycle suggesting the absence of Cd release during sediment resuspension. Temporal dissolved and particulate Cd concentrations were closely related to Gironde Estuary water discharges, showing increasing concentrations during flood situations and decreasing concentrations afterwards. Cd depletion in the water column was associated with increasing Cd in the [20-100 µm] plankton fraction, suggesting Cd bioaccumulation. After 3 months, enrichment factors of Cd in tissues of oysters exposed in the water column and directly on the sediment were respectively 3.0 and 2.2 in gills, 4.7 and 3.2 in digestive glands and 4.9 and 3.4 in remaining tissues. Increasing Cd bioaccumulation in gills, digestive glands and remaining tissues can be related to elevated dissolved Cd in the bay, suggesting gill contamination via the direct pathway and subsequent internal redistribution of Cd to other organs and tissues. Elevated Cd contents in oysters reared on tables could be attributed to different trophic Cd transfer (phytoplankton versus microphytobenthos) or to different oyster metabolisms between the rearing conditions as suggested by metallothionein concentrations.


Subject(s)
Cadmium/metabolism , Food Chain , Ostreidae/metabolism , Seawater/chemistry , Water Movements , Water Pollutants, Chemical/metabolism , Animals , Cadmium/analysis , Environmental Monitoring , France , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , Gills/metabolism , Phytoplankton/metabolism
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