684 results on '"Flegr, Jaroslav"'
Search Results
252. Women's preference for dominant male odour: effects of menstrual cycle and relationship status
- Author
-
Havlicek, Jan, primary, Roberts, S. Craig, additional, and Flegr, Jaroslav, additional
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
253. The phylogenetic position of enteromonads: a challenge for the present models of diplomonad evolution
- Author
-
Kolisko, Martin, primary, Cepicka, Ivan, additional, Hampl, Vladimír, additional, Kulda, Jaroslav, additional, and Flegr, Jaroslav, additional
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
254. Influence of latent "asymptomatic" toxoplasmosis on body weight of pregnant women
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav, primary, Hrdá, Štěpánka, additional, and Kodym, Petr, additional
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
255. Evolutionary Genetics J. Maynard Smith
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav
- Published
- 2001
256. Use of Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA (RAPD) Analysis for the Identification of Giardia intestinalis Subtypes and Phylogenetic Tree Construction
- Author
-
SEDINOVA, JITKA, primary, FLEGR, JAROSLAV, additional, EY, PETER L., additional, and KULDA, JAROSLAV, additional
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
257. Increased risk of traffic accidents in subjects with latent toxoplasmosis: a retrospective case-control study
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav, primary, Havlícek, Jan, additional, Kodym, Petr, additional, Malý, Marek, additional, and Smahel, Zbyněk, additional
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
258. Bookreviews
- Author
-
Pyšek, Petr, primary, Skálová, Hana, additional, Flegr, Jaroslav, additional, Rychnovská, Milena, additional, Boukal, David, additional, Jarošík, Vojtěch, additional, Chrtek, Jindřich, additional, Hadincová, Věra, additional, and Businský, Roman, additional
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
259. Transient Nature of Toxoplasma gondii-Induced Behavioral Changes in Mice
- Author
-
Hrda, Stepanka, primary, Votypka, Jan, additional, Kodym, Petr, additional, and Flegr, Jaroslav, additional
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
260. Bookreviews
- Author
-
Chrtek, Jindřich, primary, Puntieri, Javier, additional, Pyšek, Petr, additional, Zima, Jan, additional, Chytrý, Milan, additional, Kotlaba, František, additional, Pouzar, Zdeněk, additional, Čámská, Klára, additional, Neuhäuslová, Zdenka, additional, Kolbek, Jiří, additional, Moravec, Jaroslav, additional, Křísa, Bohdan, additional, Simmer, Jan, additional, Višňáková, Meda, additional, Štěpánková, Jitka, additional, Skála, Zdeněk, additional, and Flegr, Jaroslav, additional
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
261. Correlation between aerobic and anaerobic resistance to metronidazole in trichomonads: application of a new computer program for permutation tests
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav, primary, Záboj, Pavel, additional, and Vaňáčov�, Štěpánka, additional
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
262. Molecular Phylogenetic Relatedness of Frenkelia spp. (Protozoa, Apicomplexa) to Sarcocystis falcatula Stiles 1893: Is the Genus Sarcocystis Paraphyletic?
- Author
-
Votypka, Jan, primary, Hypša, Vaclav, additional, Jirku, Milan, additional, Flegr, Jaroslav, additional, Vavra, Jiri, additional, and Lukes, Julius, additional
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
263. Two Distinct Types of Natural Selection in Turbidostat-like and Chemostat-like Ecosystems
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav, primary
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
264. Corrigendum to “Does a cell perform isoelectric focusing?” [BioSystems 24 (1990) 127]
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav, primary
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
265. Bookreviews
- Author
-
Chrtek, Jindřich, primary, Puntieri, Javier, additional, Pyšek, Petr, additional, Zima, Jan, additional, Chytrý, Milan, additional, Kotlaba, František, additional, Pouzar, Zdeněk, additional, Čámská, Klára, additional, Neuhäuslová, Zdenka, additional, Kolbek, Jiří, additional, Moravec, Jaroslav, additional, Křísa, Bohdan, additional, Simmer, Jan, additional, Višňáková, Meda, additional, Štěpánková, Jitka, additional, Skála, Zdeněk, additional, and Flegr, Jaroslav, additional
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
266. How and why Toxoplasma makes us crazy
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav
- Subjects
- *
TRANSMISSION of parasitic diseases , *TOXOPLASMA , *SCHIZOPHRENIA risk factors , *IMMUNOCOMPETENT cells , *DISEASE prevalence , *MANIPULATIVE behavior - Abstract
For a long time, a latent toxoplasmosis, the lifelong presence of dormant stages of Toxoplasma in various tissues, including the brain, was considered harmless for immunocompetent persons. Within the past 10 years, however, many independent studies have shown that this parasitic disease, with a worldwide prevalence of about 30%, could be indirectly responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths due to its effects on the rate of traffic and workplace accidents, and also suicides. Moreover, latent toxoplasmosis is probably one of the most important risk factors for schizophrenia. At least some of these effects, possibly mediated by increased dopamine and decreased tryptophan, are products of manipulation activity by Toxoplasma aiming to increase the probability of transmission from intermediate to definitive host through predation. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
267. Microevolutionary, macroevolutionary, ecological and taxonomical implications of punctuational theories of adaptive evolution.
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav
- Subjects
- *
MICROEVOLUTION , *BIOLOGICAL evolution , *SPECIES , *PHILOSOPHY of nature , *MOLECULAR evolution - Abstract
Punctuational theories of evolution suggest that adaptive evolution proceeds mostly, or even entirely, in the distinct periods of existence of a particular species. The mechanisms of this punctuated nature of evolution suggested by the various theories differ. Therefore the predictions of particular theories concerning various evolutionary phenomena also differ. Punctuational theories can be subdivided into five classes, which differ in their mechanism and their evolutionary and ecological implications. For example, the transilience model of Templeton (class III), genetic revolution model of Mayr (class IV) or the frozen plasticity theory of Flegr (class V), suggests that adaptive evolution in sexual species is operative shortly after the emergence of a species by peripatric speciation - while it is evolutionary plastic. To a major degree, i.e. throughout 98-99% of their existence, sexual species are evolutionarily frozen (class III) or elastic (class IV and V) on a microevolutionary time scale and evolutionarily frozen on a macroevolutionary time scale and can only wait for extinction, or the highly improbable return of a population segment to the plastic state due to peripatric speciation. The punctuational theories have many evolutionary and ecological implications. Most of these predictions could be tested empirically, and should be analyzed in greater depth theoretically. The punctuational theories offer many new predictions that need to be tested, but also provide explanations for a much broader spectrum of known biological phenomena than classical gradualistic evolutionary theories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
268. Latent toxoplasmosis reduces gray matter density in schizophrenia but not in controls: Voxel-based-morphometry (VBM) study.
- Author
-
Horacek, Jiri, Flegr, Jaroslav, Tintera, Jaroslav, Verebova, Karin, Spaniel, Filip, Novak, Tomas, Brunovsky, Martin, Bubenikova-Valesova, Vera, Holub, David, Palenicek, Tomas, and Höschl, Cyril
- Subjects
- *
TOXOPLASMA gondii , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *TOXOPLASMOSIS , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging of the brain , *VOXEL-based morphometry , *SERODIAGNOSIS , *ANALYSIS of variance - Abstract
Objectives. To address the role of latent T. gondii infection in schizophrenia we studied the influence of latent toxoplasmosis on brain morphology. Methods. An optimized voxel-based morphometry of magnetic resonance imaging was analyzed by analysis of variance with diagnosis and seropositivity as factors in 44 schizophrenic patients (12 T. gondii positive) and 56 controls (13 T. gondii positive). Results. Grey matter (GM) volume was reduced in schizophrenia patients compared with controls in the cortical regions, hippocampus and in the caudate. In the schizophrenia sample we found a significant reduction of GM volume in T. gondii positive comparing with T. gondii-negative patients bilaterally in the caudate, median cingulate, thalamus and occipital cortex and in the left cerebellar hemispheres. T. gondii-positive and -negative controls did not differ in any cluster. Among participants seropositive to T. gondii the reduction of GM in the schizophrenia subjects was located in the same regions when comparing the entire sample (11,660 over-threshold voxels ( P ≤ 0.05, FWR corrected). The differences between T. gondii-negative patients and controls consisted only of 289 voxels in temporal regions. Conclusions. Our study is the first to document that latent toxoplasmosis reduces GM in schizophrenia but not in controls. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
269. Positive effects of multiple gene control on the spread of altruism by group selection
- Author
-
Kulich, Tomáš and Flegr, Jaroslav
- Subjects
- *
ALTRUISM , *GENES , *GROUP selection (Evolution) , *BIOLOGICAL evolution , *COMPETITION (Biology) , *BEHAVIOR , *EPISTASIS (Genetics) , *SIMULATION methods & models - Abstract
Abstract: The origin of altruistic behavior has long been a challenge for students of evolutionary biology. The populations with altruistic individuals do better than those without altruists; however, the altruists within a population do worse than the non-altruists and their prevalence in the population decreases due to individual selection. Under certain conditions, the strength of group selection, i.e., the selection driven by competition between populations, can surpass the strength of individual selection; however, such conditions seem to be relatively strict and probably do not hold in many natural systems where the altruistic behavior was observed. It was suggested recently that chances for altruistic behavior to spread highly increase when it is controlled not by a single gene but by multiple independent genes substitutable in their effects on the phenotype of the individual. Here we confirm the original verbal model by numerical modeling of the spread of altruistic/selfish alleles in a metapopulation consisting of partly isolated groups of organisms (demes) interconnected by migration. We have shown that altruistic behavior coded by multiple substitutable genes can stably coexist with selfish behavior, even under relatively high mutation and migration rates, i.e., under such conditions where altruistic behavior coded by a single gene is quickly outcompeted in a metapopulation. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
270. Modulation of immunity in mice with latent toxoplasmosis-the experimental support for the immunosuppression hypothesis of Toxoplasma-induced changes in reproduction of mice and humans.
- Author
-
Kaňková, Šárka, Holáň, Vladimír, Zajícová, Alena, Kodym, Petr, and Flegr, Jaroslav
- Subjects
TOXOPLASMOSIS in animals ,DISEASE prevalence ,LABORATORY mice ,IMMUNOSUPPRESSION ,REPRODUCTION ,INTERLEUKIN-12 ,CELL proliferation -- Molecular aspects - Abstract
The immunosuppression hypothesis suggests that the increased sex ratio in mice and women with latent toxoplasmosis, retarded embryonic growth in the early phases of pregnancy, prolonged pregnancy of Toxoplasma-infected women, and increased prevalence of toxoplasmosis in mothers of children with Down syndrome can be explained by the presumed immunosuppressive effects of latent toxoplasmosis. Here, we searched for indices of immunosuppression in mice experimentally infected with Toxoplasma gondii. Our results showed that mice in the early phase of latent infection exhibited temporarily increased production of interleukin (IL)-12 and decreased production of IL-10. In accordance with the immunosuppression hypothesis, the mice showed decreased production of IL-2 and nitric oxide and decreased proliferation reaction (synthesis of DNA) in the mixed lymphocyte culture in the early and also in the late phases of latent toxoplasmosis. Since about 30% of the world population are latently infected by T. gondii, the toxoplasmosis-associated immunosuppression might have serious public health consequences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
271. The evolutionary history of testicular externalization and the origin of the scrotum.
- Author
-
Kleisner, Karel, Ivell, Richard, and Flegr, Jaroslav
- Subjects
PHYLOGENY ,SCROTUM ,MALE reproductive organs ,MONOTREMES ,GONADS - Abstract
This paper re-examines the evolution of the scrotum and testicular descent in the context of the recent phylogeny of mammals. The adaptive significance of testicular descent and scrotality is briefly discussed. We mapped four character states reflecting the position of testes and presence of scrotum onto recent mammalian phylogeny. Our results are interpreted as follows: as to the presence of testicondy in Monotremata and most of Atlantogenata, which represent the basal group of all eutherians, we argue that primary testicondy represents a plesiomorphic condition for Eutheria as well as for all mammals. This is in opposition to the previous hypothesis of Werdelin and Nilsonne that the scrotum may have evolved before the origin of mammals and then repeatedly disappeared in many groups including monotremes. We suggest that the scrotum evolved at least twice during the evolutionary history of mammals, within Marsupialia and Boreoeutheria, and has subsequently been lost by many groups; this trend is especially strong in Laurasiatheria. We suggest that the recent diversity in testicular position within mammals is the result of multiple selection pressures stemming from the need to provide conditions suitable for sperm development and storage, or to protect the male gonads from excessive physical and physiological disturbance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
272. Elastic, not plastic species: Frozen plasticity theory and the origin of adaptive evolution in sexually reproducing organisms.
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav
- Subjects
- *
MATERIAL plasticity , *GENES , *ORGANISMS , *PALEONTOLOGICAL modeling , *GENETIC polymorphisms , *GENE frequency - Abstract
Background: Darwin's evolutionary theory could easily explain the evolution of adaptive traits (organs and behavioral patterns) in asexual but not in sexual organisms. Two models, the selfish gene theory and frozen plasticity theory were suggested to explain evolution of adaptive traits in sexual organisms in past 30 years. Results: The frozen plasticity theory suggests that sexual species can evolve new adaptations only when their members are genetically uniform, i.e. only after a portion of the population of the original species had split off, balanced on the edge of extinction for several generations, and then undergone rapid expansion. After a short period of time, estimated on the basis of paleontological data to correspond to 1-2% of the duration of the species, polymorphism accumulates in the gene pool due to frequency-dependent selection; and thus, in each generation, new mutations occur in the presence of different alleles and therefore change their selection coefficients from generation to generation. The species ceases to behave in an evolutionarily plastic manner and becomes evolutionarily elastic on a microevolutionary time-scale and evolutionarily frozen on a macroevolutionary time-scale. It then exists in this state until such changes accumulate in the environment that the species becomes extinct. Conclusion: Frozen plasticity theory, which includes the Darwinian model of evolution as a special case - the evolution of species in a plastic state, not only offers plenty of new predictions to be tested, but also provides explanations for a much broader spectrum of known biological phenomena than classic evolutionary theories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
273. A Possible Role of Intracellular Isoelectric Focusing in the Evolution of Eukaryotic Cells and Multicellular Organisms.
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav
- Subjects
- *
ISOELECTRIC focusing , *EUKARYOTIC cells , *CYTOSOL , *ELECTRIC fields , *ENZYME analysis - Abstract
A new scenario of the origin of eukaryotic cell and multicellularity is presented. A concentric pH-gradient has been shown to exist in the cytosol of eukaryotic cells. The most probable source of such gradient is its self-formation in gradient of electric field between center and periphery of a cell. Theoretical analysis has shown that, for example, a cell of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has enough energy to continuously sustain such gradient of strength about 1.5 kV/cm, the value sufficient for effective isoelectric focusing of cytoplasmic proteins. Focusing of enzymes could highly increase the effectiveness of an otherwise diffusion-limited metabolism of large cells by concentrating enzymes into small and distinct parts of a cytoplasm. By taking away an important physical constraint to the volume of cytoplasm, the intracellular isoelectric focusing enabled evolution of cells 3–4 order of magnitude larger than typical prokaryotic cells. This opened the way for the origin of phagocytosis and lately for the development of different forms of endosymbiosis, some of them resulting in an endosymbiotic origin of mitochondria and plastids. The large volume of a cell-enabled separation of nuclear and cytoplasmic compartments which was a precondition for separation of transcription and translation processes and therefore also for the origin of various RNA-preprocessing mechanisms. The possibility to regulate gene expression by postprocessing RNA and to regulate metabolism by an electrophoretic translocation enzymes between different parts of cytoplasm by changing their isoelectric points opened the way for cell and tissue differentiation and therefore for the origin of complex multicellular organisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
274. Retraction Note: Differences in cognitive functions between cytomegalovirus-infected and cytomegalovirus-free university students: a case control study.
- Author
-
Chvátalová, Veronika, Šebánková, Blanka, Hrbáčková, Hana, Tureček, Petr, and Flegr, Jaroslav
- Subjects
COGNITIVE ability ,COLLEGE students ,CYTOMEGALOVIRUSES - Abstract
We also recommend, whenever possible, to substitute the old version of our program Treept which was not user-friendly with other programs, e.g. with our new and more complex program for computing permutation tests for contaminated data[1]. After the publication of the article, J. Gottfried and H. Cigler brought to our attention that the results of the permutation tests for contaminated data in the explorative part of the study were incorrect. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
275. CLONAL TURNOVER VERSUS CLONAL DECAY: A NULL MODEL FOR OBSERVED PATTERNS OF ASEXUAL LONGEVITY, DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTION.
- Author
-
Janko, Karel, Drozd, Pavel, Flegr, Jaroslav, and Pannell, John R.
- Subjects
PLANT clones ,ASEXUAL reproduction ,PHYLOGENY ,PLANTS ,BIODEGRADATION ,MICROBIOLOGY - Abstract
Phylogenetic and phylogeographic studies suggest that a majority of asexual organisms are evolutionarily recent offshoots of extant sexual taxa and that old clonal lineages tend to be isolated from their sexual and younger asexual counterparts. These observations have often been interpreted as support for the long-term disadvantages of asexuality resulting from the mechanisms of clonal decay. Although clonal decay is likely to be an important mechanism that limits the temporal and spatial distribution of asexual lineages, we argue here that contemporary phylogenetic analyses, which are mostly restricted to simple comparisons of “recent” and “ancient” clones, need to be tested against an appropriate null model of neutrality. We use computer simulations to show that many empirical observations of the distribution of asexuality do not in fact reject a null model of the neutral turnover of clones spawned by sexual relatives. In particular, neutral clonal turnover results in qualitatively similar pattern of clonal spatial distribution and age structure, as does a process that includes clonal decay. Although there are important quantitative differences between predictions made by the two models, we show that published empirical data are still inadequate to distinguish between them. Further work on sexual-asexual complexes is therefore required before clonal turnover can be rejected as a parsimonious explanation of the spatial distribution and age structure of asexual lineages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
276. Morphological and Molecular Diversity of the Monocercomonadid Genera Monocercomonas, Hexamastix, and Honigbergiella gen. nov.
- Author
-
Hampl, Vladimír, Cepicka, Ivan, Flegr, Jaroslav, Tachezy, Jan, and Kulda, Jaroslav
- Subjects
MONOCERCOMONADIDAE ,TRICHOMONADIDA ,PHYLOGENY ,TRANSMISSION electron microscopy - Abstract
The family Monocercomonadidae (Parabasala, Trichomonadida) is characterized by the absence of a costa and in most species also of an undulating membrane; both of which are typical structures of trichomonadids. We have examined 25 isolates of Monocercomonadidae species by sequencing of the SSU rDNA and the ITS region and by light and transmission electron microscopy. The isolates formed three distinct phylogenetically unrelated clades: (1) Monocercomonas colubrorum, (2) Monocercomonas ruminantium together with a strain ATCC 50321 designated as Pseudotrichomonas keilini, and (3) Hexamastix. Twenty isolates of Monocercomonas colubrorum split into three clades with no host-specificity. The morphological differences among clades were insufficient to classify them as a separate species. Non-monophyly of the cattle commensal Monocercomonas ruminantium with the type species Monocercomonas colubrorum and absence of Pseudotrichomonas characters in the free-living strain ATCC 50321 led to their reclassification into a new genus (Honigbergiella gen. nov.). The close relationship of these strains indicates a recent switch between a free-living habit and endobiosis. Two strains of Hexamastix represented different species –Hexamastix kirbyi Honigberg 1955 and Hexamastix mitis sp. nov. Polyphyly of the Monocercomonadidae confirmed that the absence of a costa and an undulating membrane are not taxonomically significant characters and were probably secondarily lost in some or all clades. Our observations, however, indicated that other characters – infrakinetosomal body, comb-like structure, marginal lamella, and the type of axostyle – are fully consistent with the position of Monocercomonadidae species in the parabasalian tree and are, therefore, reasonable taxonomic characters. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
277. Effects of Toxoplasma on Human Behavior.
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav
- Abstract
Although latent infection with Toxoplasma gondii is among the most prevalent of human infections, it has been generally assumed that, except for congenital transmission, it is asymptomatic. The demonstration that latent Toxoplasma infections can alter behavior in rodents has led to a reconsideration of this assumption. When infected human adults were compared with uninfected adults on personality questionnaires or on a panel of behavioral tests, several differences were found. Other studies have demonstrated reduced psychomotor performance in affected individuals. Possible mechanisms by which T. gondii may affect human behavior include its effect on dopamine and on testosterone. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
278. Longer pregnancy and slower fetal development in women withlatent "asymptomatic" toxoplasmosis.
- Author
-
Kaňkov´, Šárka and Flegr, Jaroslav
- Subjects
- *
TOXOPLASMOSIS , *PREGNANCY complications , *FETAL development , *DISEASES in women , *PARASITIC diseases , *COMMUNICABLE diseases - Abstract
Background: The purpose of this study was to confirm that women with latent toxoplasmosis have developmentally younger fetuses at estimated pregnancy week 16 and to test four exclusive hypotheses that could explain the observed data. Methods: In the present retrospective cohort study we analysed by the GLM (general linear model) method data from 730 Toxoplasma-free and 185 Toxoplasma-infected pregnant women. Results: At pregnancy week 16 estimated from the date of the last menstruation, the mothers with latent toxoplasmosis had developmentally younger fetuses based on ultrasound scan (P = 0.014). Pregnancy of Toxoplasma-positive compared to Toxoplasma-negative women was by about 1.3 days longer, as estimated both from the date of the last menstruation (P = 0.015) and by ultrasonography (P = 0.025). Conclusion: The most parsimonious explanation for the observed data is retarded fetal growth during the first weeks of pregnancy in Toxoplasma-positive women. The phenomenon was only detectable in multiparous women, suggesting that the immune system may play some role in it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
279. Inference of the Phylogenetic Position of Oxymonads Based on Nine Genes: Support for Metamonada and Excavata.
- Author
-
Hampl, Vladimír, Horner, David S., Dyal, Patricia, Kulda, Jaroslav, Flegr, Jaroslav, Foster, Peter G., and Embley, T. Martin
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
280. Does a cell perform isoelectric focusing?
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav, primary
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
281. Decreased level of psychobiological factor novelty seeking and lower intelligence in men latently infected with the protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii Dopamine, a missing link between schizophrenia and toxoplasmosis?
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav, Preiss, Marek, Klose, Jiří, Havlíček, Jan, Vitáková, Martina, and Kodym, Petr
- Subjects
- *
TOXOPLASMA gondii , *TOXOPLASMOSIS - Abstract
Toxoplasma gondii, a parasitic protozoan, infects about 30–60% of people worldwide. The latent toxoplasmosis, i.e. life-long presence of cysts in the brain and muscular tissues, has no effect on human health. However, infected subjects score worse in psychomotor performance tests and have different personality profiles than Toxoplasma-negative subjects. The mechanism of this effect is unknown; however, it is supposed that presence of parasites’ cysts in the brain induces an increase of the concentration of dopamine. Here we search for the existence of differences in personality profile between Toxoplasma-positive and Toxoplasma-negative subjects by testing 857 military conscripts using a modern psychobiological questionnaire, namely with Cloninger''s Temperament and Character Inventory (TCI). ANCOVA showed that Toxoplasma-positive subjects had lower Novelty seeking (NS) scores (P=0.035) and lower scores for three of its four subscales, namely Impulsiveness (P=0.049), Extravagance (P=0.056) and Disorderliness (P=0.006) than the Toxoplasma-negative subjects. Differences between Toxoplasma-negative and positive subjects in NS was inversely correlated with duration of toxoplasmosis estimated on the basis of concentration anti-Toxoplasma antibodies (P=0.031). Unexpectedly, the infected subjects had also lower IQ (P2=0.003) and lower probability of achieving a higher education (P2<0.0000). Decrease of NS suggests that the increase of dopamine in brain of infected subjects can represent a missing link between toxoplasmosis and schizophrenia. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
282. Cattle Pathogen Tritrichomonas foetus (.
- Author
-
TACHEZY, JAN, TACHEZY, RUTH, HAMPL, VLADIMÍR, ŠEDINOVÁ, MIROSLAVA, VAŇÁČOVÁ, ŠTĚPÁNKA, VRLÍK, MARTIN, RANST, MARC, FLEGR, JAROSLAV, and KULDA, JAROSLAV
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
283. Concordance between genetic relatedness and phenotypic similarities of Trichomonas vaginalis strains.
- Author
-
Hampl, Vladimír, Vaňáčová, Štěpánka, Kulda, Jaroslav, and Flegr, Jaroslav
- Subjects
BACTERIAL genetics ,TRICHOMONAS vaginalis ,VAGINAL diseases ,TRICHOMONIASIS ,DNA ,METRONIDAZOLE - Abstract
Background: Despite the medical importance of trichomoniasis, little is known about the genetic relatedness of Trichomonas vaginalis strains with similar biological characteristics. Furthermore, the distribution of endobionts such as mycoplasmas or Trichomonas vaginalis virus (TVV) in the T. vaginalis metapopulation is poorly characterised. Results: We assayed the relationship between 20 strains of T. vaginalis from 8 countries using the Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis with 27 random primers. The genealogical tree was constructed and its bootstrap values were computed using the program FreeTree. Using the permutation tail probability tests we found that the topology of the tree reflected both the pattern of resistance to metronidazole (the major anti-trichomonal drug) (p < 0.01) and the pattern of infection of strains by mycoplasmas (p < 0.05). However, the tree did not reflect pattern of virulence, geographic origin or infection by TVV. Despite low bootstrap support for many branches, the significant clustering of strains with similar drug susceptibility suggests that the tree approaches the true genealogy of strains. The clustering of mycoplasma positive strains may be an experimental artifact, caused by shared RAPD characters which are dependent on the presence of mycoplasma DNA. Conclusions: Our results confirmed both the suitability of the RAPD technique for genealogical studies in T. vaginalis and previous conclusions on the relatedness of metronidazol resistant strains. However, our studies indicate that testing analysed strains for the presence of endobionts and assessment of the robustness of tree topologies by bootstrap analysis seem to be obligatory steps in such analyses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
284. Relationship between Latent Toxoplasmosis and Depression in Clients of a Center for Assisted Reproduction.
- Author
-
Hlaváčová, Jana, Flegr, Jaroslav, Fiurašková, Kateřina, and Kaňková, Šárka
- Subjects
REPRODUCTIVE technology ,TOXOPLASMOSIS ,DEPRESSION in men ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,MALE infertility ,HUMAN fertility - Abstract
Latent infection of the globally spread parasite Toxoplasma gondii in humans has been associated with changes in personality and behavior. Numerous studies have investigated the effect of toxoplasmosis on depression, but their results are inconsistent. Our study focused on the effect of latent toxoplasmosis on depression in men and women in association with their fertility. In 2016–2018, we recruited clients (677 men and 664 women) of the Center for Assisted Reproduction and asked them to complete a standardized Beck Depression Inventory-II. In women without fertility problems, we found higher depression scores in Toxoplasma-positive than in Toxoplasma-negative (p = 0.010, Cohen's d = 0.48). Toxoplasma-positive infertile men, on the other hand, had lower depression scores than Toxoplasma-negative infertile men (p ≤ 0.001, Cohen's d = 0.48). Our results are consistent with the previously described effects of latent toxoplasmosis, which seem to go in opposite directions regarding the effect on personality and behavior of men and women. Our results could be explained by gender-contrasting reactions to chronic stress associated with lifelong infection. This suggests that due to gender differences in the impact of latent toxoplasmosis, future studies ought to perform separate analyses for women and men. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
285. A Rapid Method for Isolation of Double Stranded RNA.
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
286. The effects of toxoplasmosis on sex ratio at birth.
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav and Kaňková, Šárka
- Subjects
- *
SEX ratio , *HUMAN biology , *TOXOPLASMOSIS , *ANIMAL offspring sex ratio , *POPULATION , *CHILDBIRTH , *COMMUNICABLE disease epidemiology , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *SEX distribution , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PREGNANCY complications - Abstract
Toxoplasmosis affects about one third of human population worldwide. It has a wide range of effects on the health, immunity, behaviour, and both prenatal and postnatal outcomes of infected hosts, including humans. Among these effects, stage of infection-specific shifts in secondary sex ratio were described about ten years ago both in humans and in artificially infected mice. In both women and female mice, in the early stage of infection the probability of giving birth of sons significantly increases, up to 260 sons to every 100 daughters. In the late stages of infection, the probability of giving birth to sons markedly decreases to as low as 78 to every 100 daughters. An ecological correlation study shows that the effect of latent toxoplasmosis on human population biology and demography can be large. In fact, the effect of prevalence of toxoplasmosis on a nationwide sex ratio was the third strongest effect from the effects of 15 factors included in the analysis. It has been suggested that toxoplasmosis-associated concentration of steroid hormones or glucose may be the proximal cause in the sex ratio shift. A more parsimonious explanation of the upward secondary sex ratio shift is found in a lower stringency of quality control of embryos, whose side-effect is increased survival rate of the more immunogenic male embryos in immunosuppressed infected females. The most parsimonious explanation of the downward secondary sex ratio shift relies on the Trivers-Willard hypothesis, which predicts an adaptive shift to more daughters in females with impaired health or lower socioeconomic status. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
287. Maternal RhD heterozygous genotype is associated with male biased secondary sex ratio.
- Author
-
Kaňková, Šárka, Flegr, Jaroslav, Toman, Jan, and Calda, Pavel
- Subjects
- *
ANIMAL offspring sex ratio , *SEX ratio , *PREGNANT women , *BINOMIAL distribution , *GENOTYPES , *CHI-squared test - Abstract
Background: Previous studies suggest that RhD positive heterozygotes express better health status than RhD positive homozygotes and especially RhD negative subjects. This also applies to pregnant women. According to the Trivers-Willard hypothesis, women in better physical condition should have more sons.Aim: To test the hypothesis that RhD positive heterozygous mothers have a male-skewed sex ratio.Study Design: Cross-sectional study. The data was analysed using Chi-Square test for all women, separately for RhD positive and RhD negative women, and separately for primiparous and multiparous women. The effects of maternal weight as a continuous predictor and the RhD phenotype of newborn as a categorical predictor of newborn sex were evaluated by the generalized linear model (GLZ) separately for RhD positive and RhD negative women using binomial distribution and logit link function.Outcome Measures: Clinical records comprised maternal weight before pregnancy, number of previous deliveries, sex of the newborn, maternal RhD phenotype, and RhD phenotype of the newborn.Subjects: We analysed data from 5655 women who gave birth between 2008 and 2012 in General University Hospital in Prague.Results: Secondary sex ratio was significantly higher (P = 0.028) in RhD positive mothers who had RhD negative newborns, i.e., in heterozygotes (SR = 1.23), than in RhD positive mothers who had RhD positive newborns, i.e., in a mixed population of heterozygotes and homozygotes (SR = 1.00), especially in primiparous women (P = 0.013; SR = 1.37 and 0.99 resp.).Conclusion: The sex ratio at birth was significantly higher in RhD positive mothers who had RhD negative newborns than in RhD positive mothers who had RhD positive newborns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
288. Skin fairness is a better predictor for impaired physical and mental health than hair redness.
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav and Sýkorová, Kateřina
- Subjects
- *
FAIRNESS , *MENTAL health , *SURVEYS , *SKIN cancer , *LUST - Abstract
About 1–2% of people of European origin have red hair. Especially female redheads are known to suffer higher pain sensitivity and higher incidence of some disorders, including skin cancer, Parkinson's disease and endometriosis. Recently, an explorative study performed on 7,000 subjects showed that both male and female redheads score worse on many health-related variables and express a higher incidence of cancer. Here, we ran the preregistered study on a population of 4,117 subjects who took part in an anonymous electronic survey. We confirmed that the intensity of hair redness negatively correlated with physical health, mental health, fecundity and sexual desire, and positively with the number of kinds of drugs prescribed by a doctor currently taken, and with reported symptoms of impaired mental health. It also positively correlated with certain neuropsychiatric disorders, most strongly with learning disabilities disorder and phobic disorder in men and general anxiety disorder in women. However, most of these associations disappeared when the darkness of skin was included in the models, suggesting that skin fairness, not hair redness, is responsible for the associations. We discussed two possible explanations for the observed pattern, the first based on vitamin D deficiency due to the avoidance of sunbathing by subjects with sensitive skin, including some redheads, and second based on folic acid depletion in fair skinned subjects, again including some (a different subpopulation of) redheads. It must be emphasized, however, that both of these explanations are only hypothetical as no data on the concentration of vitamin D or folic acid are available for our subjects. Our results, as well as the conclusions of current reviews, suggest that the new empirical studies on the concentration of vitamin D and folic acids in relation to skin and hair pigmentation are urgently needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
289. Neurophysiological effect of the Rh factor. Protective role of the RhD molecule against Toxoplasma-induced impairment of reaction times in women
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav, Novotna, Martina, Lindova, Jitka, and Jan Havlicek
290. Higher perceived dominance in Toxoplasma infected men - A new evidence for role of increased level of testosterone in toxoplasmosis-associated changes in human behavior
- Author
-
Hodkova, Hana, Kolbekova, Petra, Skallova, Anna, Jitka Lindová, and Flegr, Jaroslav
291. Registered replication report: Rand, Greene & Nowak (2012)
- Author
-
Bouwmeester, Samantha, Verkoeijen, Peter P.J.L., Aczel, Balazs, Barbosa, Fernando, Bègue, Laurent, Brañas-Garza, Pablo, Chmura, Thorsten, Cornelissen, Gert, Døssing, Felix S., Espín, Antonio M., Evans, Anthony M., Ferreira-Santos, Fernando, Fiedler, Susann, Flegr, Jaroslav, Ghaffari, Minou, Glöckner, Andreas, Goeschl, Timo, Guo, Lisa, Hauser, Oliver P., Hernan-Gonzalez, Roberto, Herrero, Anthony, Horne, Zachary, Houdek, Petr, Johannesson, Magnus, Koppel, Lina, Kujal, Praveen, Laine, Tei, Lohse, Johannes, Martins, Eva C., Mauro, Carlos, Mischkowski, Dorothee, Mukherjee, Sumitava, Myrseth, Kristian Ove, Navarro-Martinez, Daniel, Neal, Tess M.S., Novakova, Julie, Pagà, Roger, Paiva, Tiago O., Palfi, Bence, Piovesan, Marco, Rahal, Rima-Maria, Salomon, Erika, Srinivasan, Narayanan, Srivastava, Ajita, Szaszi, Barnabas, Szollosi, Aba, Thor, Karoline Ø., Tinghög, Gustav, Trueblood, Jennifer S., Van Bavel, J. Jay, van ‘t Veer, Anna E., Västfjäll, Daniel, Warner, Megan, Wengström, Erik, Wills, Julian, Wollbrant, Conny E., Bouwmeester, Samantha, Verkoeijen, Peter P.J.L., Aczel, Balazs, Barbosa, Fernando, Bègue, Laurent, Brañas-Garza, Pablo, Chmura, Thorsten, Cornelissen, Gert, Døssing, Felix S., Espín, Antonio M., Evans, Anthony M., Ferreira-Santos, Fernando, Fiedler, Susann, Flegr, Jaroslav, Ghaffari, Minou, Glöckner, Andreas, Goeschl, Timo, Guo, Lisa, Hauser, Oliver P., Hernan-Gonzalez, Roberto, Herrero, Anthony, Horne, Zachary, Houdek, Petr, Johannesson, Magnus, Koppel, Lina, Kujal, Praveen, Laine, Tei, Lohse, Johannes, Martins, Eva C., Mauro, Carlos, Mischkowski, Dorothee, Mukherjee, Sumitava, Myrseth, Kristian Ove, Navarro-Martinez, Daniel, Neal, Tess M.S., Novakova, Julie, Pagà, Roger, Paiva, Tiago O., Palfi, Bence, Piovesan, Marco, Rahal, Rima-Maria, Salomon, Erika, Srinivasan, Narayanan, Srivastava, Ajita, Szaszi, Barnabas, Szollosi, Aba, Thor, Karoline Ø., Tinghög, Gustav, Trueblood, Jennifer S., Van Bavel, J. Jay, van ‘t Veer, Anna E., Västfjäll, Daniel, Warner, Megan, Wengström, Erik, Wills, Julian, and Wollbrant, Conny E.
- Abstract
In an anonymous 4-person economic game, participants contributed more money to a common project (i.e., cooperated) when required to decide quickly than when forced to delay their decision (Rand, Greene & Nowak, 2012), a pattern consistent with the social heuristics hypothesis proposed by Rand and colleagues. The results of studies using time pressure have been mixed, with some replication attempts observing similar patterns (e.g., Rand et al., 2014) and others observing null effects (e.g., Tinghög et al., 2013; Verkoeijen & Bouwmeester, 2014). This Registered Replication Report (RRR) assessed the size and variability of the effect of time pressure on cooperative decisions by combining 21 separate, preregistered replications of the critical conditions from Study 7 of the original article (Rand et al., 2012). The primary planned analysis used data from all participants who were randomly assigned to conditions and who met the protocol inclusion criteria (an intent-to-treat approach that included the 65.9% of participants in the time-pressure condition and 7.5% in the forced-delay condition who did not adhere to the time constraints), and we observed a difference in contributions of −0.37 percentage points compared with an 8.6 percentage point difference calculated from the original data. Analyzing the data as the original article did, including data only for participants who complied with the time constraints, the RRR observed a 10.37 percentage point difference in contributions compared with a 15.31 percentage point difference in the original study. In combination, the results of the intent-to-treat analysis and the compliant-only analysis are consistent with the presence of selection biases and the absence of a causal effect of time pressure on cooperation.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
292. Registered replication report: Rand, Greene & Nowak (2012)
- Author
-
Bouwmeester, Samantha, Verkoeijen, Peter P.J.L., Aczel, Balazs, Barbosa, Fernando, Bègue, Laurent, Brañas-Garza, Pablo, Chmura, Thorsten, Cornelissen, Gert, Døssing, Felix S., Espín, Antonio M., Evans, Anthony M., Ferreira-Santos, Fernando, Fiedler, Susann, Flegr, Jaroslav, Ghaffari, Minou, Glöckner, Andreas, Goeschl, Timo, Guo, Lisa, Hauser, Oliver P., Hernan-Gonzalez, Roberto, Herrero, Anthony, Horne, Zachary, Houdek, Petr, Johannesson, Magnus, Koppel, Lina, Kujal, Praveen, Laine, Tei, Lohse, Johannes, Martins, Eva C., Mauro, Carlos, Mischkowski, Dorothee, Mukherjee, Sumitava, Myrseth, Kristian Ove, Navarro-Martinez, Daniel, Neal, Tess M.S., Novakova, Julie, Pagà, Roger, Paiva, Tiago O., Palfi, Bence, Piovesan, Marco, Rahal, Rima-Maria, Salomon, Erika, Srinivasan, Narayanan, Srivastava, Ajita, Szaszi, Barnabas, Szollosi, Aba, Thor, Karoline Ø., Tinghög, Gustav, Trueblood, Jennifer S., Van Bavel, J. Jay, van ‘t Veer, Anna E., Västfjäll, Daniel, Warner, Megan, Wengström, Erik, Wills, Julian, Wollbrant, Conny E., Bouwmeester, Samantha, Verkoeijen, Peter P.J.L., Aczel, Balazs, Barbosa, Fernando, Bègue, Laurent, Brañas-Garza, Pablo, Chmura, Thorsten, Cornelissen, Gert, Døssing, Felix S., Espín, Antonio M., Evans, Anthony M., Ferreira-Santos, Fernando, Fiedler, Susann, Flegr, Jaroslav, Ghaffari, Minou, Glöckner, Andreas, Goeschl, Timo, Guo, Lisa, Hauser, Oliver P., Hernan-Gonzalez, Roberto, Herrero, Anthony, Horne, Zachary, Houdek, Petr, Johannesson, Magnus, Koppel, Lina, Kujal, Praveen, Laine, Tei, Lohse, Johannes, Martins, Eva C., Mauro, Carlos, Mischkowski, Dorothee, Mukherjee, Sumitava, Myrseth, Kristian Ove, Navarro-Martinez, Daniel, Neal, Tess M.S., Novakova, Julie, Pagà, Roger, Paiva, Tiago O., Palfi, Bence, Piovesan, Marco, Rahal, Rima-Maria, Salomon, Erika, Srinivasan, Narayanan, Srivastava, Ajita, Szaszi, Barnabas, Szollosi, Aba, Thor, Karoline Ø., Tinghög, Gustav, Trueblood, Jennifer S., Van Bavel, J. Jay, van ‘t Veer, Anna E., Västfjäll, Daniel, Warner, Megan, Wengström, Erik, Wills, Julian, and Wollbrant, Conny E.
- Abstract
In an anonymous 4-person economic game, participants contributed more money to a common project (i.e., cooperated) when required to decide quickly than when forced to delay their decision (Rand, Greene & Nowak, 2012), a pattern consistent with the social heuristics hypothesis proposed by Rand and colleagues. The results of studies using time pressure have been mixed, with some replication attempts observing similar patterns (e.g., Rand et al., 2014) and others observing null effects (e.g., Tinghög et al., 2013; Verkoeijen & Bouwmeester, 2014). This Registered Replication Report (RRR) assessed the size and variability of the effect of time pressure on cooperative decisions by combining 21 separate, preregistered replications of the critical conditions from Study 7 of the original article (Rand et al., 2012). The primary planned analysis used data from all participants who were randomly assigned to conditions and who met the protocol inclusion criteria (an intent-to-treat approach that included the 65.9% of participants in the time-pressure condition and 7.5% in the forced-delay condition who did not adhere to the time constraints), and we observed a difference in contributions of −0.37 percentage points compared with an 8.6 percentage point difference calculated from the original data. Analyzing the data as the original article did, including data only for participants who complied with the time constraints, the RRR observed a 10.37 percentage point difference in contributions compared with a 15.31 percentage point difference in the original study. In combination, the results of the intent-to-treat analysis and the compliant-only analysis are consistent with the presence of selection biases and the absence of a causal effect of time pressure on cooperation.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
293. Registered replication report: Rand, Greene & Nowak (2012)
- Author
-
Bouwmeester, Samantha, Verkoeijen, Peter P.J.L., Aczel, Balazs, Barbosa, Fernando, Bègue, Laurent, Brañas-Garza, Pablo, Chmura, Thorsten, Cornelissen, Gert, Døssing, Felix S., Espín, Antonio M., Evans, Anthony M., Ferreira-Santos, Fernando, Fiedler, Susann, Flegr, Jaroslav, Ghaffari, Minou, Glöckner, Andreas, Goeschl, Timo, Guo, Lisa, Hauser, Oliver P., Hernan-Gonzalez, Roberto, Herrero, Anthony, Horne, Zachary, Houdek, Petr, Johannesson, Magnus, Koppel, Lina, Kujal, Praveen, Laine, Tei, Lohse, Johannes, Martins, Eva C., Mauro, Carlos, Mischkowski, Dorothee, Mukherjee, Sumitava, Myrseth, Kristian Ove, Navarro-Martinez, Daniel, Neal, Tess M.S., Novakova, Julie, Pagà, Roger, Paiva, Tiago O., Palfi, Bence, Piovesan, Marco, Rahal, Rima-Maria, Salomon, Erika, Srinivasan, Narayanan, Srivastava, Ajita, Szaszi, Barnabas, Szollosi, Aba, Thor, Karoline Ø., Tinghög, Gustav, Trueblood, Jennifer S., Van Bavel, J. Jay, van ‘t Veer, Anna E., Västfjäll, Daniel, Warner, Megan, Wengström, Erik, Wills, Julian, Wollbrant, Conny E., Bouwmeester, Samantha, Verkoeijen, Peter P.J.L., Aczel, Balazs, Barbosa, Fernando, Bègue, Laurent, Brañas-Garza, Pablo, Chmura, Thorsten, Cornelissen, Gert, Døssing, Felix S., Espín, Antonio M., Evans, Anthony M., Ferreira-Santos, Fernando, Fiedler, Susann, Flegr, Jaroslav, Ghaffari, Minou, Glöckner, Andreas, Goeschl, Timo, Guo, Lisa, Hauser, Oliver P., Hernan-Gonzalez, Roberto, Herrero, Anthony, Horne, Zachary, Houdek, Petr, Johannesson, Magnus, Koppel, Lina, Kujal, Praveen, Laine, Tei, Lohse, Johannes, Martins, Eva C., Mauro, Carlos, Mischkowski, Dorothee, Mukherjee, Sumitava, Myrseth, Kristian Ove, Navarro-Martinez, Daniel, Neal, Tess M.S., Novakova, Julie, Pagà, Roger, Paiva, Tiago O., Palfi, Bence, Piovesan, Marco, Rahal, Rima-Maria, Salomon, Erika, Srinivasan, Narayanan, Srivastava, Ajita, Szaszi, Barnabas, Szollosi, Aba, Thor, Karoline Ø., Tinghög, Gustav, Trueblood, Jennifer S., Van Bavel, J. Jay, van ‘t Veer, Anna E., Västfjäll, Daniel, Warner, Megan, Wengström, Erik, Wills, Julian, and Wollbrant, Conny E.
- Abstract
In an anonymous 4-person economic game, participants contributed more money to a common project (i.e., cooperated) when required to decide quickly than when forced to delay their decision (Rand, Greene & Nowak, 2012), a pattern consistent with the social heuristics hypothesis proposed by Rand and colleagues. The results of studies using time pressure have been mixed, with some replication attempts observing similar patterns (e.g., Rand et al., 2014) and others observing null effects (e.g., Tinghög et al., 2013; Verkoeijen & Bouwmeester, 2014). This Registered Replication Report (RRR) assessed the size and variability of the effect of time pressure on cooperative decisions by combining 21 separate, preregistered replications of the critical conditions from Study 7 of the original article (Rand et al., 2012). The primary planned analysis used data from all participants who were randomly assigned to conditions and who met the protocol inclusion criteria (an intent-to-treat approach that included the 65.9% of participants in the time-pressure condition and 7.5% in the forced-delay condition who did not adhere to the time constraints), and we observed a difference in contributions of −0.37 percentage points compared with an 8.6 percentage point difference calculated from the original data. Analyzing the data as the original article did, including data only for participants who complied with the time constraints, the RRR observed a 10.37 percentage point difference in contributions compared with a 15.31 percentage point difference in the original study. In combination, the results of the intent-to-treat analysis and the compliant-only analysis are consistent with the presence of selection biases and the absence of a causal effect of time pressure on cooperation.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
294. Molecular Systematics D. M. Hilis C. Moritz
- Author
-
Flegr, Jaroslav
- Published
- 1994
295. How virtue signalling makes us better: moral preferences with respect to autonomous vehicle type choices.
- Author
-
Kopecky, Robin, Jirout Košová, Michaela, Novotný, Daniel D., Flegr, Jaroslav, and Černý, David
- Subjects
- *
AUTONOMOUS vehicles , *SOCIAL choice , *VIRTUE , *ETHICS , *RESEARCH questions , *RAILROAD signals - Abstract
One of the moral questions concerning autonomous vehicles (henceforth AVs) is the choice between types that differ in their built-in algorithms for dealing with rare situations of unavoidable lethal collision. It does not appear to be possible to avoid questions about how these algorithms should be designed. We present the results of our study of moral preferences (N = 2769) with respect to three types of AVs: (1) selfish, which protects the lives of passenger(s) over any number of bystanders; (2) altruistic, which minimizes the number of casualties, even if this leads to death of passenger(s); and (3) conservative, which abstains from interfering in such situations. We differentiate between scenarios in which participants are to make their decisions privately or publicly, and for themselves or for their offspring. We aim to answer two research questions: (1) whether the public visibility of the choice of an AV type choice make this choice more altruistic and (2) which type of situation makes it more difficult to choose altruistically: when choosing for society as a whole, when choosing only for oneself, or when choosing only for one's offspring. Our results show that respondents exhibit a preference for an altruistic strategy for AVs and that it is reinforced when signaled to others. The altruistic preference is strongest when applies to everybody else, weaker when it reflects a solely personal choice, and weakest when choosing for one's own child. We conclude that a public choice is considerably more likely to pressure consumers into accepting a more socially beneficial solution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
296. Le Petit Machiavellian Prince: Effects of Latent Toxoplasmosis on Political Beliefs and Values.
- Author
-
Kopecky, Robin, Příplatová, Lenka, Boschetti, Silvia, Talmont-Kaminski, Konrad, and Flegr, Jaroslav
- Subjects
- *
TOXOPLASMOSIS , *TOXOPLASMA , *PERSONALITY disorders , *TOXOPLASMA gondii , *COMMUNICABLE diseases - Abstract
Humans infected by Toxoplasma gondii express no specific symptoms but manifest higher incidence of many diseases, disorders and differences in personality and behavior. The aim of this study was to compare the political beliefs and values of Toxoplasma -infected and Toxoplasma -free participants. We measured beliefs and values of 2315 responders via an online survey (477 Toxoplasma -infected) using the Political Beliefs and Values Inventory (PI34). This study showed Toxoplasma -infected and Toxoplasma -free participants of our cross-sectional study differed in three of four factors of PI34, scoring higher in Tribalism and lower in Cultural liberalism and Anti-Authoritarianism. We found sex differences in political beliefs associated with Toxoplasma infection. Infected women scored higher in tribalism and lower in cultural liberalism, compared with the Toxoplasma -free control group, while infected men scored higher in economic equity. These results fit with sexual differences in behavior and attitude observed after toxoplasmosis infection. Controlling for the effect of worse physical health and mental health had little impact, suggesting that impaired health did not cause these changes. Rather than adaptation to prevalence of parasites, as suggested by parasite-stress theory, the differences might be side-effects of long-term mild inflammatory reaction. However, to get clear picture of the mild inflammation effects, more research focused on different infectious diseases is needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
297. Measuring fear evoked by the scariest animal: Czech versions of the Spider Questionnaire and Spider Phobia Beliefs Questionnaire.
- Author
-
Polák, Jakub, Sedláčková, Kristýna, Janovcová, Markéta, Peléšková, Šárka, Flegr, Jaroslav, Vobrubová, Barbora, Frynta, Daniel, and Landová, Eva
- Subjects
- *
ARACHNOPHOBIA , *ANXIETY disorders , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *MANN Whitney U Test , *SPIDERS , *PHOBIAS - Abstract
Background: Although tiny in size and mostly harmless, spiders evoke exceptional fear in a significant part of the population and arachnophobia is one of the most common anxiety disorders with prevalence 2.7–6.1%. Two standard measures have been widely used to reliably assess the emotional and cognitive component of spider fear, the Spider Questionnaire (SPQ) and Spider Phobia Beliefs Questionnaire (SBQ). We aimed to develop and validate their Czech translations, describe distribution of spider fear in the Czech population, and analyse its association with disgust propensity and other sociodemographic characteristics. Methods: In Phase 1, we developed Czech translations of both questionnaires using a back-translation procedure and then tested their psychometric properties against their English versions in a counterbalanced experimental design using the Mann-Whitney U test and two-sided t-test. In Phase 2, we analysed scores on the Czech SPQ and SBQ on a larger sample. We evaluated the effects of age, gender, level of education, biology background, and association with the assessments of snake fear (i.e. the Snake Questionnaire, SNAQ) and disgust propensity (i.e. the Disgust Scale-Revised, DS-R) using a Spearman correlation, redundancy analysis, and general linear models. Results: We have demonstrated that the Czech SPQ and SBQ are equivalent to their originals and show excellent test-retest reliability (SPQ: 0.93; SBQ: 0.87–0.90). In total, 398 (10.3%) out of 3863 subjects reached the cut-off point for potential spider phobia. In addition, SPQ and SBQ scores were highly correlated (0.73–0.79), significantly more than with the SNAQ (0.21–0.32) or the DS-R (0.36–0.40). Two multivariate statistical methods revealed a significant association between the gender, age, level of education, biology background, or disgust propensity and the SPQ scores. Conclusion: The Czech SPQ and SBQ may produce reliable and valid assessments of spider fear, but they must be further psychometrically tested considering the limitation of this study before wider use. We corroborate previous findings that fear of spiders is significantly associated with sociodemographic variables, such as gender, age, or education, as well as with the individual level of disgust propensity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
298. Critical analysis of the topology and rooting of the parabasalian 16S rRNA tree
- Author
-
Hampl, Vladimír, Cepicka, Ivan, Flegr, Jaroslav, Tachezy, Jan, and Kulda, Jaroslav
- Subjects
- *
BIOLOGICAL evolution , *POLYHEDRA , *HYPERMASTIGIDA , *TRICHOMONADIDA - Abstract
The morphological classification of the protozoan phylum Parabasala is not in absolute agreement with the 16S rRNA phylogeny. However, there are strong indications that tree-construction artifacts play a considerable role in the shaping of the 16S rRNA tree. We have performed rigorous analyses designed to minimize such artifacts using the slow–fast and taxa-exclusion methods. The analyses, which included new sequences from the genera Monocercomonas and Hexamastix, in most respects confirmed the previously suggested tree topology and polyphyly of Hypermastigida and Monocercomonadidae but detected one artificial cluster of long branches (Trichonymphidae, Pseudotrichonymphidae, Hexamastix, and Tricercomitus). They also indicated that the rooting of the phylum on the trichonymphid branch is probably wrong and that reliable rooting on the basis of current data is likely impossible. We discuss the tree topology in the view of anagenesis of cytoskeletal and motility organelles and suggest that a robust taxonomic revision requires extensive analysis of other gene sequences. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
299. Reasons of Singles for Being Single: Evidence from Brazil, China, Czech Republic, Greece, Hungary, India, Japan and the UK.
- Author
-
Apostolou, Menelaos, Birkás, Béla, da Silva, Caio Santos A., Esposito, Gianluca, Hsu, Rafael Ming Chi S., Jonason, Peter Karl, Karamanidis, Konstantinos, O, Jiaqing, Ohtsubo, Yohsuke, Putz, Ádám, Sznycer, Daniel, Thomas, Andrew G., Valentova, Jaroslava Varella, Varella, Marco Antonio Correa, Kleisner, Karel, Flegr, Jaroslav, and Wang, Yan
- Subjects
- *
CULTURE , *SINGLE people , *AGE distribution , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *PSYCHOLOGY , *ETHNOLOGY research , *SURVEYS , *SEX distribution , *MATHEMATICAL variables , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *ANALYSIS of covariance , *FACTOR analysis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
The current research aimed to examine the reasons people are single, that is, not in an intimate relationship, across eight different countries—Brazil, China, Czech Republic, Greece, Hungary, India, Japan, and the UK. We asked a large cross-cultural sample of single participants (N = 6,822) to rate 92 different possible reasons for being single. These reasons were classified into 12 factors, including one's perceived inability to find the right partner, the perception that one is not good at flirting, and the desire to focus on one's career. Significant sex and age effects were found for most factors. The extracted factors were further classified into three separate domains: Perceived poor capacity to attract mates, desiring the freedom of choice, and currently being in between relationships. The domain structure, the relative importance of each factor and domain, as well as sex and age effects were relatively consistent across countries. There were also important differences however, including the differing effect sizes of sex and age effects between countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
300. My friend's true self: Children's concept of personal identity.
- Author
-
Jirout Košová, Michaela, Kopecký, Robin, Oulovský, Pavel, Nekvinda, Matěj, and Flegr, Jaroslav
- Subjects
- *
SELF , *MORAL development , *CZECHS , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOCIAL change - Abstract
Our study explores the folk concept of personal identity in the developmental context. Two hundred and seventeen Czech children participated in an interview study based on a hypothetical scenario about a sudden change in their friend, someone they know, or some other unspecified person. The children were asked to judge to what extent particular changes (from six categories of traits) would change the identity core of their friend or some other person on a seven-point scale. We introduced both positive and negative versions of the changes. Our data suggest that children considered moral traits connected to interpersonal relationships crucial for preserving personal identity. Memory connected to personal experiences also scored highly. On the other hand, a change in physical appearance seemed to have the least important impact on personal identity. Negative changes turned out to have a significantly greater impact than positive changes in all categories, except the physical. Possible effects of scenario and the participants' age and sex were further explored. We discuss the possible causes of the effect of negative moral change and the role of social dimension in the development of the concept of personal identity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.