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1.
BMC Public Health ; 24(1): 1485, 2024 Jun 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38831431

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The prevalence of, and risk factors for, genital Human Papillomavirus (HPV) infections within the young adult population are well-established; the same is not known for oral HPV. This observational study aimed to determine oral HPV prevalence and abundance within a UK young adult population, and examine if sexual practices and established risk factors of oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinomas (OPSCCs) (such as smoking and alcohol consumption) influenced HPV prevalence. METHODS: Convenience sampling was used to recruit a small sample of 452 UK-based young adults studying at a higher education (HE) institution to the study; the study was not powered. A highly sensitive real-time PCR HPV screening method was developed for the detection of multiple HPV subtypes from oral swabs. HPV-positive samples were subsequently screened by qPCR for viral subtypes HPV-6, HPV-11, HPV-16, HPV-18. Results were analysed by univariate and multivariate methods and stratified for gender, with lifestyle behaviour data collected via questionnaire. Socio-economic status was not captured within the questionnaire. RESULTS: We found a high oral HPV prevalence of 22.79%, with a dominance of high-risk viral type HPV-16 (prevalence 19.12%; abundance average 1.08 × 105 copies/million cells) detected within healthy young adults. Frequent smoking (p = .05), masturbation (p = .029), and engagement in multiple sexual activities (p = .057), were found to be associated with oral HPV prevalence, and HPV-16 prevalence, whilst behaviours traditionally associated with genital HPV were not. CONCLUSIONS: Our results strengthen the link between sexual practices and oral HPV transmission. We suggest that young adults should be considered high-risk for the contraction of oral HPV, although acknowledge that this sample of HE students may not be representative of the wider population. We show that high-risk HPV-16 is prevalent in the healthy population, as well as dominating within OPSCC; this study is one of the first to determine the dominance of oral HPV-16 prevalence and abundance within this population, presenting a clear need for greater awareness of oral HPV infections, and the risk factors for HPV-positive OPSCC within young adults.


Assuntos
Infecções por Papillomavirus , Comportamento Sexual , Humanos , Infecções por Papillomavirus/epidemiologia , Masculino , Feminino , Fatores de Risco , Prevalência , Adulto Jovem , Reino Unido/epidemiologia , Comportamento Sexual/estatística & dados numéricos , Adulto , Adolescente , Neoplasias Orofaríngeas/epidemiologia , Neoplasias Orofaríngeas/virologia , Papillomaviridae/isolamento & purificação , Papillomaviridae/genética , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase em Tempo Real , Papillomavirus Humano
2.
J Viral Hepat ; 29(6): 474-486, 2022 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35278339

RESUMO

Achieving global elimination of hepatitis C virus requires a substantial scale-up of testing. Point-of-care HCV viral load assays are available as an alternative to laboratory-based assays to promote access in hard to reach or marginalized populations. The diagnostic performance and lower limit of detection are important attributes of these new assays for both diagnosis and test of cure. Therefore, our objective was to determine an acceptable LLoD for detectable HCV viraemia as a test for cure, 12 weeks post-treatment (SVR12). We assembled a global data set of patients with detectable viraemia at SVR12 from observational databases from 9 countries (Egypt, the United States, United Kingdom, Georgia, Ukraine, Myanmar, Cambodia, Pakistan, Mozambique) and two pharmaceutical-sponsored clinical trial registries. We examined the distribution of HCV viral load at SVR12 and presented the 90th, 95th, 97th and 99th percentiles. We used logistic regression to assess characteristics associated with low-level virological treatment failure (defined as <1000 IU/mL). There were 5973 cases of detectable viraemia at SVR12 from the combined data set. Median detectable HCV RNA at SVR12 was 287,986 IU/mL. The level of detection for the 95th percentile was 227 IU/mL (95% CI 170-276). Females and those with minimal fibrosis were more likely to experience low-level viraemia at SVR12 compared to men (adjusted odds ratio AOR = 1.60 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.30-1.97 and those with cirrhosis (AOR = 1.49 95% CI 1.15-1.93). In conclusion, an assay with a level of detection of 1000 IU/mL or greater may miss a proportion of those with low-level treatment failure.


Assuntos
Hepatite C Crônica , Hepatite C , Antivirais/uso terapêutico , Feminino , Genótipo , Hepacivirus/genética , Hepatite C/complicações , Hepatite C/diagnóstico , Hepatite C/tratamento farmacológico , Hepatite C Crônica/complicações , Hepatite C Crônica/diagnóstico , Hepatite C Crônica/tratamento farmacológico , Humanos , Limite de Detecção , Masculino , RNA Viral , Resposta Viral Sustentada , Resultado do Tratamento , Carga Viral , Viremia/diagnóstico , Viremia/tratamento farmacológico
4.
Annu Rev Psychol ; 71: 499-515, 2020 01 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31514579

RESUMO

Deceptive claims surround us, embedded in fake news, advertisements, political propaganda, and rumors. How do people know what to believe? Truth judgments reflect inferences drawn from three types of information: base rates, feelings, and consistency with information retrieved from memory. First, people exhibit a bias to accept incoming information, because most claims in our environments are true. Second, people interpret feelings, like ease of processing, as evidence of truth. And third, people can (but do not always) consider whether assertions match facts and source information stored in memory. This three-part framework predicts specific illusions (e.g., truthiness, illusory truth), offers ways to correct stubborn misconceptions, and suggests the importance of converging cues in a post-truth world, where falsehoods travel further and faster than the truth.


Assuntos
Enganação , Julgamento/fisiologia , Humanos
5.
J Virol ; 93(2)2019 01 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30333178

RESUMO

Rhinoviral infection is a common trigger of the excessive inflammation observed during exacerbations of asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Rhinovirus (RV) recognition by pattern recognition receptors activates the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways, which are common inducers of inflammatory gene production. A family of dual-specificity phosphatases (DUSPs) can regulate MAPK function, but their roles in rhinoviral infection are not known. We hypothesized that DUSPs would negatively regulate the inflammatory response to RV infection. Our results revealed that the p38 and c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) MAPKs play key roles in the inflammatory response of epithelial cells to RV infection. Three DUSPs previously shown to have roles in innate immunity (DUSPs 1, 4, and 10) were expressed in primary bronchial epithelial cells, and one of them, DUSP10, was downregulated by RV infection. Small interfering RNA-mediated knockdown of DUSP10 identified a role for the protein in negatively regulating inflammatory cytokine production in response to interleukin-1ß (IL-1ß), alone and in combination with RV, without any effect on RV replication. This study identifies DUSP10 as an important regulator of airway inflammation in respiratory viral infection.IMPORTANCE Rhinoviruses are one of the causes of the common cold. In patients with asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, viral infections, including those with rhinovirus, are the commonest cause of exacerbations. Novel therapeutics to limit viral inflammation are clearly required. The work presented here identifies DUSP10 as an important protein involved in limiting the inflammatory response in the airway without affecting immune control of the virus.


Assuntos
Brônquios/virologia , Fosfatases de Especificidade Dupla/metabolismo , Interleucina-1beta/farmacologia , Fosfatases da Proteína Quinase Ativada por Mitógeno/metabolismo , Rhinovirus/patogenicidade , Brônquios/citologia , Brônquios/imunologia , Células Cultivadas , Regulação para Baixo , Fosfatases de Especificidade Dupla/genética , Células Epiteliais/citologia , Células Epiteliais/imunologia , Células Epiteliais/virologia , Técnicas de Silenciamento de Genes , Humanos , Sistema de Sinalização das MAP Quinases , Fosfatases da Proteína Quinase Ativada por Mitógeno/genética , Rhinovirus/imunologia
6.
Eur J Neurosci ; 48(11): 3389-3396, 2018 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30290029

RESUMO

Depending on a person's goals, different aspects of stored knowledge are accessed. Decades of behavioral work document the flexible use of knowledge, but little neuroimaging work speaks to these questions. We used representational similarity analysis to investigate whether the relationship between brain activity and semantic structure of statements varied in two tasks hypothesized to differ in the degree to which knowledge is accessed: judging truth (semantic task) and judging oldness (episodic task). During truth judgments, but not old/new recognition judgments, a left-lateralized network previously associated with semantic memory exhibited correlations with semantic structure. At a neural level, people activate knowledge representations in different ways when focused on different goals. The present results demonstrate the potential of multivariate approaches in characterizing knowledge storage and retrieval, as well as the ways that it shapes our understanding and long-term memory.


Assuntos
Mapeamento Encefálico , Objetivos , Conhecimento , Memória/fisiologia , Adulto , Encéfalo/fisiologia , Feminino , Humanos , Julgamento/fisiologia , Masculino , Semântica
7.
Development ; 141(3): 715-24, 2014 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24449846

RESUMO

Zebrafish transgenesis is increasingly popular owing to the optical transparency and external development of embryos, which provide a scalable vertebrate model for in vivo experimentation. The ability to express transgenes in a tightly controlled spatio-temporal pattern is an important prerequisite for exploitation of zebrafish in a wide range of biomedical applications. However, conventional transgenesis methods are plagued by position effects: the regulatory environment of genomic integration sites leads to variation of expression patterns of transgenes driven by engineered cis-regulatory modules. This limitation represents a bottleneck when studying the precise function of cis-regulatory modules and their subtle variants or when various effector proteins are to be expressed for labelling and manipulation of defined sets of cells. Here, we provide evidence for the efficient elimination of variability of position effects by developing a PhiC31 integrase-based targeting method. To detect targeted integration events, a simple phenotype scoring of colour change in the lens of larvae is used. We compared PhiC31-based integration and Tol2 transgenesis in the analysis of the activity of a novel conserved enhancer from the developmentally regulated neural-specific esrrga gene. Reporter expression was highly variable among independent lines generated with Tol2, whereas all lines generated with PhiC31 into a single integration site displayed nearly identical, enhancer-specific reporter expression in brain nuclei. Moreover, we demonstrate that a modified integrase system can also be used for the detection of enhancer activity in transient transgenesis. These results demonstrate the power of the PhiC31-based transgene integration for the annotation and fine analysis of transcriptional regulatory elements and it promises to be a generally desirable tool for a range of applications, which rely on highly reproducible patterns of transgene activity in zebrafish.


Assuntos
Efeitos da Posição Cromossômica/genética , Marcação de Genes , Mutagênese Insercional/genética , Transgenes/genética , Peixe-Zebra/genética , Animais , Animais Geneticamente Modificados , Sequência de Bases , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Elementos Facilitadores Genéticos/genética , Regulação da Expressão Gênica , Técnicas de Transferência de Genes , Genes Reporter/genética , Loci Gênicos/genética , Genoma/genética , Integrases/metabolismo , Cristalino/metabolismo , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Xenopus laevis/genética
8.
Memory ; 25(2): 220-230, 2017 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26915399

RESUMO

People frequently miss contradictions with stored knowledge; for example, readers often fail to notice any problem with a reference to the Atlantic as the largest ocean. Critically, such effects occur even though participants later demonstrate knowing the Pacific is the largest ocean (the Moses Illusion) [Erickson, T. D., & Mattson, M. E. (1981). From words to meaning: A semantic illusion. Journal of Verbal Learning & Verbal Behavior, 20, 540-551]. We investigated whether such oversights disappear when erroneous references contradict information in one's expert domain, material which likely has been encountered many times and is particularly well-known. Biology and history graduate students monitored for errors while answering biology and history questions containing erroneous presuppositions ("In what US state were the forty-niners searching for oil?"). Expertise helped: participants were less susceptible to the illusion and less likely to later reproduce errors in their expert domain. However, expertise did not eliminate the illusion, even when errors were bolded and underlined, meaning that it was unlikely that people simply skipped over errors. The results support claims that people often use heuristics to judge truth, as opposed to directly retrieving information from memory, likely because such heuristics are adaptive and often lead to the correct answer. Even experts sometimes use such shortcuts, suggesting that overlearned and accessible knowledge does not guarantee retrieval of that information.


Assuntos
Ilusões , Conhecimento , Memória , Competência Profissional , Humanos
9.
J Cogn Neurosci ; 28(5): 739-46, 2016 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26765947

RESUMO

The "illusory truth" effect refers to the phenomenon whereby repetition of a statement increases its likelihood of being judged true. This phenomenon has important implications for how we come to believe oft-repeated information that may be misleading or unknown. Behavioral evidence indicates that fluency, the subjective ease experienced while processing information, underlies this effect. This suggests that illusory truth should be mediated by brain regions previously linked to fluency, such as the perirhinal cortex (PRC). To investigate this possibility, we scanned participants with fMRI while they rated the truth of unknown statements, half of which were presented earlier (i.e., repeated). The only brain region that showed an interaction between repetition and ratings of perceived truth was PRC, where activity increased with truth ratings for repeated, but not for new, statements. This finding supports the hypothesis that illusory truth is mediated by a fluency mechanism and further strengthens the link between PRC and fluency.


Assuntos
Mapeamento Encefálico , Ilusões/fisiologia , Julgamento/fisiologia , Córtex Perirrinal/fisiologia , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Masculino , Oxigênio/sangue , Córtex Perirrinal/diagnóstico por imagem , Tempo de Reação/fisiologia , Adulto Jovem
10.
Mem Cognit ; 44(3): 403-12, 2016 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26576564

RESUMO

Memory can be unreliable. For example, after reading The new baby stayed awake all night, people often misremember that the new baby cried all night (Brewer, 1977); similarly, after hearing bed, rest, and tired, people often falsely remember that sleep was on the list (Roediger & McDermott, 1995). In general, such false memories are difficult to correct, persisting despite warnings and additional study opportunities. We argue that errors must first be detected to be corrected; consistent with this argument, two experiments showed that false memories were nearly eliminated when conditions facilitated comparisons between participants' errors and corrective feedback (e.g., immediate trial-by-trial feedback that allowed direct comparisons between their responses and the correct information). However, knowledge that they had made an error was insufficient; unless the feedback message also contained the correct answer, the rate of false memories remained relatively constant. On the one hand, there is nothing special about correcting false memories: simply labeling an error as "wrong" is also insufficient for correcting other memory errors, including misremembered facts or mistranslations. However, unlike these other types of errors--which often benefit from the spacing afforded by delayed feedback--false memories require a special consideration: Learners may fail to notice their errors unless the correction conditions specifically highlight them.


Assuntos
Retroalimentação Psicológica/fisiologia , Aprendizagem/fisiologia , Rememoração Mental/fisiologia , Adulto , Humanos , Adulto Jovem
11.
Mem Cognit ; 43(2): 193-205, 2015 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25201690

RESUMO

Marginal knowledge refers to knowledge that is stored in memory, but is not accessible at a given moment. For example, one might struggle to remember who wrote The Call of the Wild, even if that knowledge is stored in memory. Knowing how best to stabilize access to marginal knowledge is important, given that new learning often requires accessing and building on prior knowledge. While even a single opportunity to restudy marginal knowledge boosts its later accessibility (Berger, Hall, & Bahrick, 1999), in many situations explicit relearning opportunities are not available. Our question is whether multiple-choice tests (which by definition expose the learner to the correct answers) can also serve this function and, if so, how testing compares to restudying given that tests can be particularly powerful learning devices (Roediger & Karpicke, 2006). In four experiments, we found that multiple-choice testing had the power to stabilize access to marginal knowledge, and to do so for at least up to a week. Importantly, such tests did not need to be paired with feedback, although testing was no more powerful than studying. Overall, the results support the idea that one's knowledge base is unstable, with individual pieces of information coming in and out of reach. The present findings have implications for a key educational challenge: ensuring that students have continuing access to information they have learned.


Assuntos
Comportamento de Escolha/fisiologia , Avaliação Educacional , Aprendizagem/fisiologia , Rememoração Mental/fisiologia , Adulto , Humanos , Adulto Jovem
12.
Memory ; 23(2): 167-77, 2015.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24499200

RESUMO

People often pick up incorrect information about the world from movies, novels and other fictional sources. The question asked here is whether such sources are a particularly potent source of misinformation. On the one hand, story-reading involves transportation into a fictional world, with a possible reduction in access to one's prior knowledge (likely reducing the chances that the reader will notice errors). On the other hand, stories encourage relational processing as readers create mental models, decreasing the likelihood that they will encode and remember more peripheral details like erroneous facts. To test these ideas, we examined suggestibility after readers were exposed to misleading references embedded in stories and lists that were matched on a number of dimensions. In two experiments, suggestibility was greater following exposure to misinformation in a list of sentences rather than a coherent story, even though the story was rated as more engaging than the list. Furthermore, processing the story with an item-specific processing task (inserting missing letters) increased later suggestibility, whereas this task had no impact on suggestibility when misinformation was presented within a list. The type of processing used when reading a text affects suggestibility more than engagement with the text.


Assuntos
Comunicação , Compreensão , Aprendizagem , Literatura Moderna , Humanos , Sugestão
13.
J Virol ; 87(17): 9463-72, 2013 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23804647

RESUMO

Human papillomavirus (HPV) E6 proteins of high-risk alpha types target a select group of PSD95/DLG1/ZO1 (PDZ) domain-containing proteins by using a C-terminal PDZ-binding motif (PBM), an interaction that can be negatively regulated by phosphorylation of the E6 PBM by protein kinase A (PKA). Here, we have mutated the canonical PKA recognition motif that partially overlaps with the E6 PBM in the HPV18 genome (E6153PKA) and compared the effect of this mutation on the HPVl8 life cycle in primary keratinocytes with the wild-type genome and with a second mutant genome that lacks the E6 PBM (E6ΔPDZ). Loss of PKA recognition of E6 was associated with increased growth of the genome-containing cells relative to cells carrying the wild-type genome, and upon stratification, a more hyperplastic phenotype, with an increase in the number of S-phase competent cells in the upper suprabasal layers, while the opposite was seen with the E6ΔPDZ genome. Moreover, the growth of wild-type genome-containing cells was sensitive to changes in PKA activity, and these changes were associated with increased phosphorylation of the E6 PBM. In marked contrast to E6ΔPDZ genomes, the E6153PKA mutation exhibited no deleterious effects on viral genome amplification or expression of late proteins. Our data suggest that the E6 PBM function is differentially regulated by phosphorylation in the HPV18 life cycle. We speculate that perturbation of protein kinase signaling pathways could lead to changes in E6 PBM function, which in turn could have a bearing on tumor promotion and progression.


Assuntos
Proteínas Quinases Dependentes de AMP Cíclico/metabolismo , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/química , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/metabolismo , Papillomavirus Humano 18/fisiologia , Proteínas Oncogênicas Virais/química , Proteínas Oncogênicas Virais/metabolismo , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Diferenciação Celular , Linhagem Celular , Proliferação de Células , Proteínas de Ligação a DNA/genética , Genoma Viral , Interações Hospedeiro-Patógeno , Papillomavirus Humano 18/genética , Papillomavirus Humano 18/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Humanos , Queratinócitos/citologia , Queratinócitos/enzimologia , Queratinócitos/virologia , Mutagênese Sítio-Dirigida , Proteínas Oncogênicas Virais/genética , Domínios PDZ , Plasmídeos/genética , Fase S , Transdução de Sinais , Replicação Viral
14.
Mem Cognit ; 42(8): 1239-49, 2014 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24972561

RESUMO

Surprisingly, people incorporate errors into their knowledge bases even when they have the correct knowledge stored in memory (e.g., Fazio, Barber, Rajaram, Ornstein, & Marsh, 2013). We examined whether heightening the accessibility of correct knowledge would protect people from later reproducing misleading information that they encountered in fictional stories. In Experiment 1, participants studied a series of target general knowledge questions and their correct answers either a few minutes (high accessibility of knowledge) or 1 week (low accessibility of knowledge) before exposure to misleading story references. In Experiments 2a and 2b, participants instead retrieved the answers to the target general knowledge questions either a few minutes or 1 week before the rest of the experiment. Reading the relevant knowledge directly before the story-reading phase protected against reproduction of the misleading story answers on a later general knowledge test, but retrieving that same correct information did not. Retrieving stored knowledge from memory might actually enhance the encoding of relevant misinformation.


Assuntos
Conhecimento , Aprendizagem/fisiologia , Rememoração Mental/fisiologia , Adulto , Humanos , Fatores de Tempo , Adulto Jovem
15.
Memory ; 22(5): 481-92, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23705952

RESUMO

Many people respond "two" to the question "How many animals of each kind did Moses take on the ark?", even though they know the reference should be to Noah. The Moses Illusion demonstrates a failure to apply stored knowledge (Erickson & Mattson, 1981). Of interest was whether older adults' robust knowledge bases would protect them from vulnerability to this illusion. Of secondary interest were any age differences in the memorial consequences of the illusion, and whether older adults' prior knowledge would protect them from later reproducing information from distorted questions (e.g., later saying that Moses took two animals of each kind on the ark). Surprisingly, older adults fell for the Moses Illusion more often than did younger adults. However, falling for the illusion did not affect older adults' later memory; they were less suggestible than young adults. Most importantly, older adults were more likely to recover from exposure to distorted questions and respond correctly. Explanations of these findings, drawing on theories of cognitive ageing, are discussed.


Assuntos
Envelhecimento/psicologia , Ilusões/psicologia , Memória , Adulto , Idoso , Feminino , Humanos , Conhecimento , Masculino , Adulto Jovem
16.
PLoS One ; 19(2): e0295631, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38394182

RESUMO

A growing body of research demonstrates the potential of mindfulness to reduce employee stress. However, with work increasingly migrating from the physical to the digital workplace, evidence is lacking on how mindfulness might help employees live healthy digital working lives. In addition, employees' confidence when using the digital workplace is seen as important for productivity but may also play a role in reducing well-being impacts from digital working. Using the Job-Demands Resources model as a theoretical foundation, 142 workers were surveyed regarding their levels of trait mindfulness and digital workplace confidence, along with their experiences of the dark side effects (stress, overload, anxiety, Fear of Missing Out and addiction) and well-being outcomes (burnout and health). 14 workers were also interviewed to provide qualitative insights on these constructs. Results from regression analyses indicated that more digitally confident workers were less likely to experience digital workplace anxiety, while those with higher mindfulness were better protected against all of the dark side of digital working effects. Interview data indicated ways in which digital mindfulness helps protect well-being, as well as how digital workplace confidence enables healthier digital habits.


Assuntos
Esgotamento Profissional , Local de Trabalho , Humanos , Inquéritos e Questionários
17.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove) ; : 17470218241231575, 2024 Feb 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38290856

RESUMO

The Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) paradigm has been at the centre of false memory research. Whereas most work with this paradigm has examined memory at the long term and with semantically associated lists, the present study examines phonological and semantic false memories at both short- and long-term delays. In two experiments, participants studied short lists containing six (Experiment 1) or four (Experiment 2) items, either semantically or phonologically related to the same non-studied critical items (CI). Following each list, participants completed 36 trials of an immediate recognition task (short-term memory [STM]-only condition) only or they also completed a surprise recognition test after a 1-min delay after all 36 STM trials (STM + long-term memory [LTM] condition). In STM, false alarms were higher in phonological lists, whereas after the delay, false alarms were higher in semantic lists, reflecting differential sensitivity to the type of association as a function of delay. A third experiment examined LTM performance after controlling for prior testing and yielded highly similar results. Both the activation-monitoring framework (AMF) and fuzzy-trace theory (FTT) can explain the majority of the findings, with some remaining issues. These results confirm that information from the knowledge base (LTM) does influence accuracy in an STM task, albeit less so than perceptual level similarity.

18.
medRxiv ; 2024 May 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38798609

RESUMO

Objective: This study sought to identify magnetoencephalography (MEG) power spectra patterns associated with cerebrovascular damage (white matter hyperintensities - WMH) and their relationship with cognitive performance and brain structure integrity in aging individuals without cognitive impairment. Methods: We hypothesized a "slowness" pattern characterized by increased power in δ and θ bands and decreased power in the ß band associated with the severity of vascular damage. MEG signals were analyzed in cognitively healthy older adults to investigate these associations. Results: Contrary to expectations, we did not observe an increase in δ and θ power. However, we found a significant negative correlation between ß band power and WMH volume. This ß power reduction was linked to structural brain changes, such as larger lateral ventricles, reduced white matter volume, and decreased fractional anisotropy in critical white matter tracts, but not to cognitive performance. This suggests that ß band power reduction may serve as an early marker of vascular damage before the onset of cognitive symptoms. Conclusion: Our findings partially confirm our initial hypothesis by demonstrating a decrease in ß band power with increased vascular damage but not the anticipated increase in slow band power. The lack of correlation between the ßpow marker and cognitive performance suggests its potential utility in early identification of at-risk individuals for future cognitive impairment due to vascular origins. These results contribute to understanding the electrophysiological signatures of preclinical vascular damage and highlight the importance of MEG in detecting subtle brain changes associated with aging.

19.
Psychol Aging ; 38(6): 508-518, 2023 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36757964

RESUMO

In general, research on aging and decision-making has grown in recent years. Yet, little work has investigated how reliance on classic heuristics may differ across adulthood. For example, younger adults rely on the availability of information from memory when judging the relative frequency of plane crashes versus car accidents, but it is unclear if older adults are similarly reliant on this heuristic. In the present study, participants aged 20-90 years old made judgments that could be answered by relying on five different heuristics: anchoring, availability, recognition, representativeness, and sunk-cost bias. We found no evidence of age-related differences in the use of the classic heuristics-younger and older adults employed anchoring, availability, recognition, and representativeness to equal degrees in order to make decisions. However, replicating past work, we found age-related differences in the sunk-cost bias-older adults were more likely to avoid this fallacy compared to younger adults. We explain these different patterns by drawing on the distinctive roles that stored knowledge and personal experience likely play across heuristics. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).


Assuntos
Tomada de Decisões , Heurística , Humanos , Idoso , Adulto , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Envelhecimento , Julgamento , Reconhecimento Psicológico
20.
Sci Total Environ ; 873: 162315, 2023 May 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36805065

RESUMO

Public climatic data are rapidly growing in volume and complexity at global and national scales but these data remain underutilized for vulnerability assessment. We aim to explore how flood records from Dartmouth Flood Observatory, a global flood monitoring database, can be linked with a national disaster database maintained by the Indonesian National Board for Disaster Management, to aid local vulnerability assessment in Indonesia. We focused on physical damage to structures and agricultural crops from flooding and examined spatiotemporal patterns of a vulnerability metric derived from principal component analysis. We identified the most vulnerable areas based on emerging hot spot analysis and detected sporadic hotspots (i.e. on again then off again) of flooding in Jakarta and West Java. Using our derived metric, we identified oscillating cold spots (i.e. a cold spot that was previously a hot spot) of vulnerability in Banten, Jakarta, West Java, and Central Java. The detection of nonhomogeneous spatiotemporal trends in flooding and vulnerability demonstrate potential usability of public climate data and help to outline directions for novel research.

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