132 results on '"F, Ohl"'
Search Results
2. SPORT MOTIVES AND PSYCHOACTIVE SUBSTANCE USE OF YOUNG ATHLETES: DOES THE IMPORTANT THING IS REALLY TO TAKE PART?
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F Ohl, JC Suris, Vè Perreault-Liard, and Richard E. Bélanger
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medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,Athletes ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Psychoactive substance ,medicine ,Abstracts / Résumés ,Psychology ,biology.organism_classification ,Psychiatry - Abstract
BACKGROUND: As for ergogenic substances, studies show that groups of young athletes are more likely to use psychoactive substances than their peers. The links underlying these two contrasting health habits yet stay elusive.
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- 2017
3. SILS, LESS, NOS & Co. bei minimalinvasiven Niereneingriffen
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G. Popken and F. Ohl
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Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Kidney surgery ,Laparoscopy ,business ,Nephrectomy - Abstract
Hintergrund Single-port-Operationen („laparoendoscopic single-site surgery“, LESS) sind eine neue Methode in der minimalinvasiven laparoskopischen Urologie. Diese mindern das Gewebetrauma fur den Patienten, stellen jedoch hohe Anforderungen an den Operateur dar. Wir berichten uber unsere ersten klinischen Erfahrungen.
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- 2010
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4. Additional file 1: Table S1. of Consomic mouse strain selection based on effect size measurement, statistical significance testing and integrated behavioral z-scoring: focus on anxiety-related behavior and locomotion
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M. Labots, M. Laarakker, F. Ohl, and H. Van Lith
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Bootstrap P values of comparison of means between C57BL/6J and donor or consomic lines in mHB behavioral dimensions and motivational systems. (DOCX 20 kb)
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- 2016
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5. Masterpieces of Music Before 1750
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Carl Parrish, John F. Ohl, Carl Parrish, and John F. Ohl
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- Vocal music--History and criticism, Music--History and criticism, Instrumental music--History and criticism
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Anyone interested in the history and development of Western music will welcome this collection of outstanding musical examples illustrating the general course of musical style from the early Middle Ages to the mid-eighteenth century. Included are 50 carefully selected compositions of great historical importance — each masterful and beautiful in its own right.Selections include chants, the organum, parts of masses, motets, chansons, canzonas, lute dances, madrigals, ricercari, and clavecin pieces. Among the pieces are exquisite motets by Josquin, Lassus, and Byrd; madrigals by Marenzio and Caccini; brilliant instrumental displays by Frescobaldi, Pachelbel, Couperin, and Domenico Scarlatti; choral music by Handel and Bach, and much more.Each example is accompanied by notes that identify the place of the composition in the history of music and suggest ways for the reader to undertake a useful analysis of that music. Most examples are in easy-to-follow'short score'— i.e., in two staves, lending themselves to analysis and performance by the student singly or in informal ensembles. The music can be performed either vocally or at the keyboard, allowing the reader to gain unmatched insight into the character and significance of a rich cross-section of historic styles.
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- 2013
6. Regulation of the developing hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis in corticotropin releasing hormone receptor 1-deficient mice
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M V, Schmidt, M, Schmidt, M S, Oitzl, M B, Müller, F, Ohl, W, Wurst, F, Holsboer, S, Levine, and E R, De Kloet
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Male ,Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Genotype ,Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone ,Pituitary-Adrenal System ,Biology ,Hippocampus ,Receptors, Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone ,Corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor 1 ,Mice ,Corticotropin-releasing hormone ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Receptors, Glucocorticoid ,Glucocorticoid receptor ,Mineralocorticoid receptor ,Corticosterone ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Receptor ,In Situ Hybridization ,Mice, Knockout ,Maternal deprivation ,Maternal Deprivation ,General Neuroscience ,Arginine Vasopressin ,Receptors, Mineralocorticoid ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Animals, Newborn ,chemistry ,Female ,Hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis ,Paraventricular Hypothalamic Nucleus - Abstract
During postnatal development, mice undergo a so-called stress hyporesponsive period, which is characterized by low basal corticosterone levels and the inability of mild stressors to induce a corticosterone response. The stress hyporesponsiveness is in part regulated by maternal factors. Twenty-four hours of deprivation results in an activation of basal and stress-induced corticosterone and a down-regulation of corticotropin releasing hormone (CRH), mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) and glucocorticoid receptor (GR) expression in the brain. It has been hypothesized that the CRH receptor 1 (CRHr1) may play an important regulatory role during development by mediating the effects of maternal deprivation. Using CRHr1-deficient mice we examined the role of this receptor on the maternal deprivation effects and in regulating the expression of hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis-related genes. We could demonstrate that the CRHr1 is essential for the activation of the corticosterone response following maternal deprivation, most likely due to the lack of the receptor in the pituitary. Furthermore, we could show that the CRHr1 is regulating the expression of CRH and MRs. In contrast, effects of maternal deprivation during postnatal development on GRs are not mediated by this receptor.
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- 2003
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7. 195: Caffeinated Products as Ergogenic AIDS Among Sport-Practicing Adolescents: Top of the Chart
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F Ohl, E Bernard, JC Suris, and Richard E. Bélanger
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Chart ,Family medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,medicine.disease ,Psychology - Published
- 2015
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8. An experimental note on the allais paradox and monetary incentives
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Daniel F. Ohl, Michael S. Burke, John R. Carter, and Robert D. Gominiak
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Statistics and Probability ,Economics and Econometrics ,Mathematics (miscellaneous) ,Incentive ,Economics ,Allais paradox ,Von Neumann–Morgenstern utility theorem ,Mathematical economics ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Expected utility hypothesis ,Test (assessment) - Abstract
We test whether violations of expected utility theory in an Allais-paradox environment are sensitive to monetary incentives. Like Harrison (1994), we find that violations are significantly reduced when lotteries are real rather than hypothetical.
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- 1996
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9. Technical design report for the PANDA (AntiProton Annihilations at Darmstadt) Straw Tube Tracker
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Erni, W., Keshelashvili, I., Krusche, B., Steinacher, M., Heng, Y., Liu, Z., Liu, H., Shen, X., Wang, Q., Xu, H., Aab, A., Albrecht, M., Becker, J., Csap´o, A., Feldbauer, F., Fink, M., Friedel, P., Heinsius, F. H., Held, T., Klask, L., Koch, H., Kopf, B., Leiber, S., Leyhe, M., Motzko, C., Peliz¨aus, M., Pychy, J., Roth, B., Schr¨oder, T., Schulze, J., Sowa, C., Steinke, M., Trifterer, T., Wiedner, U., Zhong, J., Beck, R., Bianco, S., Brinkmann, K. T., Hammann, C., Hinterberger, F., Kaiser, D., Kliemt, R., Kube, M., Pitka, A., Quagli, T., Schmidt, C., Schmitz, R., Schnell, R., Thoma, U., Vlasov, P., Walther, D., Wendel, C., W¨urschig, T., Zaunick, H. G., Bianconi, A., Bragadireanu, M., Caprini, M., Pantea, D., Pantelica, D., Pietreanu, D., Serbina, L., Tarta, P. D., Kaplan, D., Fiutowski, T., Idzik, M., Mindur, B., Przyborowski, D., Swientek, K., Czech, B., Kistryn, M., Kliczewski, S., Kozela, A., Kulessa, P., Lebiedowicz, P., Pysz, K., Sch¨afer, W., Siudak, R., Szczurek, A., Jowzaee, S., Kajetanowicz, M., Kamys, B., Kistryn, S., Korcyl, G., Korcyl, K., Krzemien, W., Magiera, A., Moskal, P., Palka, M., Rudy, Z., Salabura, P., Smyrski, J., Wro´nska, A., Augustin, I., Lehmann, I., Nimorus, D., Schepers, G., Al Turany, M., Arora, R., Deppe, H., Flemming, H., Gerhardt, A., G¨otzen, K., Jordi, A. F., Kalicy, G., Karabowicz, R., Lehmann, D., Lewandowski, B., L¨uhning, J., Maas, F., Orth, H., Patsyuk, M., Peters, K., Saito, T., Schmidt, C. J., Schmitt, L., Schwarz, C., Schwiening, J., Traxler, M., Voss, B., Wieczorek, P., Wilms, A., Z¨uhlsdorf, M., Abazov, V. M., Alexeev, G., Arefiev, A., Astakhov, V. I., Barabanov, M. Y., Batyunya, B. V., Davydov, Y. I., Dodokhov, V. K., Efremov, A. A., Fedunov, A. G., Festchenko, A. A., Galoyan, A. S., Grigoryan, S., Karmokov, A., Koshurnikov, E. K., Lobanov, V. I., Lobanov, Y. Y., Makarov, A. F., Malinina, L. V., Malyshev, V. L., Mustafaev, G. A., Olshevskiy, A., Pasyuk, M. A., Perevalova, E. A., Piskun, A. A., Pocheptsov, T. A., Pontecorvo, G., Rodionov, V. K., Rogov, Y. N., Salmin, R. A., Samartsev, A. G., Sapozhnikov, M. G., Shabratova, G. S., Skachkova, A. N., Skachkov, N. B., Strokovsky, E. A., Suleimanov, M. K., Teshev, R. S., Tokmenin, V. V., Uzhinsky, V. V., Vodopyanov, A. S., Zaporozhets, S. A., Zhuravlev, N. I., Zorin, A. G., Branford, D., Glazier, D., Watts, D., Woods, P., Britting, A., Eyrich, W., Lehmann, A., Uhlig, F., Dobbs, S., Metreveli, Z., Seth, K., Tomaradze, A., Xiao, T., Bettoni, D., Carassiti, V., Cotta Ramusino, A., Dalpiaz, P., Drago, A., Fioravanti, E., Garzia, I., Savri`e, M., Stancari, G., Bianchi, N., Gianotti, P., A, Guaraldo, C., Lucherini, V., Orecchini, D., Pace, E., Bersani, A., Bracco, G., Macri, M., Parodi, R. F., Bremer, D., Dormenev, V., Drexler, P., D¨uren, M., Eissner, T., F¨ohl, K., Galuska, M., Gessler, T., Hayrapetyan, A., Hu, J., Koch, P., Kr¨ock, B., K¨uhn, W., Lange, S., Liang, Y., Merle, O., Metag, V., Moritz, M., M¨unchow, D., Nanova, M., Novotny, R., Spruck, B., Stenzel, H., Ullrich, T., Werner, M., Euan, C., Hoek, M., Ireland, D., Keri, T., Montgomery, R., Protopopescu, D., Rosner, G., Seitz, B., Babai, M., Glazenborg Kluttig, A., Kavatsyuk, M., Lemmens, P., Lindemulder, M., L¨ohner, H., Messchendorp, J., Moeini, H., Schakel, P., Schreuder, F., Smit, H., Tambave, G., van der Weele, J. C., Veenstra, R., Sohlbach, H., B¨uscher, M., Deermann, D., Dosdall, R., Esch, S., Gillitzer, A., Goldenbaum, F., Grunwald, D., Henssler, S., Herten, A., Hu, Q., Kemmerling, G., Kleines, H., Kozlov, V., Lehrach, A., Maier, R., Mertens, M., Ohm, H., Orfanitski, S., Prasuhn, D., Randriamalala, T., Ritman, J., R¨oder, M., Schadmand, S., Serdyuk, V., Sterzenbach, G., Stockmanns, T., Wintz, P., W¨ustner, P., Kisiel, J., Li, S., Li, Z., Sun, Z., Rigato, V., Fissum, S., Hansen, K., Isaksson, L., Lundin, M., Schr¨oder, B., Achenbach, P., Bleser, S., Cahit, U., Cardinali, M., Denig, A., Distler, M., Fritsch, M., Jasinski, P., Kangh, D., Karavdina, A., Lauth, W., Merkel, H., Michel, M., Mora Espi, M. C., M¨uller, U., Pochodzalla, J., Sanchez, S., Sanchez Lorente, A., Schlimme, S., Sfienti, C., Thiel, M., Weber, T., Dormenev, V. I., Fedorov, A. A., Korzhik, M. V., Missevitch, O. V., Balanutsa, V., Chernetsky, V., Demekhin, A., Dolgolenko, A., Fedorets, P., Gerasimov, A., Goryachev, V., Varentsov, V., Boukharov, A., Malyshev, O., Marishev, I., Semenov, A., B¨ohmer, F., Dørheim, S., Ketzer, B., Paul, S., Hergem¨oller, A. K., Khoukaz, A., K¨ohler, E., T¨aschner, A., Wessels, J., Varma, R., Chaterjee, A., Jha, V., Kailas, S., Roy, B. J., Yan, Y., Chinorat, K., Khanchai, K., Ayut, L., Pomrad, S., Baldin, E., Kotov, K., Peleganchuk, S., Tikhonov, Y., Boucher, J., Chambert, V., Dbeyssi, A., Gumberidze, M., Hennino, T., Imre, M., Kunne, R., Le Galliard, C., Ma, B., Marchand, D., Maroni, A., Ong, S., Ramstein, B., Rosier, P., Tomasi Gustafsson, E., Van de Wiele, J., Boca, G., Braghieri, A., Costanza, S., Genova, P., Lavezzi, L., Montagna, P., Rotondi, A., Abramov, V., Belikov, N., Davidenko, A., Derevschikov, A., Goncharenko, Y., Grishin, V., Kachanov, V., Konstantinov, D., Kormilitsin, V., Melnik, Y., Levin, A., Minaev, N., Mochalov, V., Morozov, D., Nogach, L., Poslavskiy, S., Ryazantsev, A., Ryzhikov, S., Semenov, P., Shein, I., Uzunian, A., Vasiliev, A., Yakutin, A., B¨ack, T., Cederwall, B., Mak´onyi, K., Tegn´er, P. E., von W¨urtemberg, K. M., Belostotski, S., Gavrilov, G., Itzotov, A., Kashchuk, A., Kisselev, A., Kravchenko, P., Levitskaya, O., Manaenkov, S., Miklukho, O., Naryshkin, Y., Veretennikov, D., Vikhrov, V., Zhadanov, A., Alberto, D., Amoroso, A., Bussa, M. P., Busso, L., De Mori, F., Destefanis, M., Fava, L., Ferrero, L., Greco, M., Maggiora, M., Marcello, S., Sosio, S., Spataro, S., Zotti, L., Calvo, D., Coli, S., De Remigis, P., Filippi, A., Giraudo, G., Lusso, S., Mazza, G., Morra, O., Rivetti, A., Wheadon, R., Iazzi, Felice, Lavagno, Andrea, Younis, MUHAMMAD HANNAN, Birsa, R., Bradamante, F., Bressan, A., Martin, A., Clement, H., Galander, B., Caldeira Balkest˚ahl, L., Cal´en, H., Fransson, K., Johansson, T., Kupsc, A., Marciniewski, P., Thom´e, E., Wolke, M., Zlomanczuk, J., D´ıaz, J., Ortiz, A., Dmowski, K., Duda, P., Korzeniewski, R., Slowinski, B., Chlopik, A., Guzik, Z., Kosinski, K., Melnychuk, D., Wasilewski, A., Wojciechowski, M., Wronka, S., Wysocka, A., Zwieglinski, B., B¨uhler, P., Hartman, O. N., Kienle, P., Marton, J., Suzuki, K., Widmann, E., Zmeskal, J., Erni, W., Keshelashvili, I., Krusche, B., Steinacher, M., Heng, Y., Liu, Z., Liu, H., Shen, X., Wang, Q., Xu, H., Aab, A., Albrecht, M., Becker, J., Csapó, A., Feldbauer, F., Fink, M., Friedel, P., Heinsius, F. H., Held, T., Klask, L., Koch, H., Kopf, B., Leiber, S., Leyhe, M., Motzko, C., Pelizäus, M., Pychy, J., Roth, B., Schröder, T., Schulze, J., Sowa, C., Steinke, M., Trifterer, T., Wiedner, U., Zhong, J., Beck, R., Bianco, S., Brinkmann, K. T., Hammann, C., Hinterberger, F., Kaiser, D., Kliemt, R., Kube, M., Pitka, A., Quagli, T., Schmidt, C., Schmitz, R., Schnell, R., Thoma, U., Vlasov, P., Walther, D., Wendel, C., Würschig, T., Zaunick, H. G., Bianconi, A., Bragadireanu, M., Caprini, M., Pantea, D., Pantelica, D., Pietreanu, D., Serbina, L., Tarta, P. D., Kaplan, D., Fiutowski, T., Idzik, M., Mindur, B., Przyborowski, D., Swientek, K., Czech, B., Kistryn, M., Kliczewski, S., Kozela, A., Kulessa, P., Lebiedowicz, P., Pysz, K., Schäfer, W., Siudak, R., Szczurek, A., Jowzaee, S., Kajetanowicz, M., Kamys, B., Kistryn, S., Korcyl, G., Korcyl, K., Krzemien, W., Magiera, A., Moskal, P., Palka, M., Rudy, Z., Salabura, P., Smyrski, J., Wrońska, A., Augustin, I., Lehmann, I., Nimorus, D., Schepers, G., Al Turany, M., Arora, R., Deppe, H., Flemming, H., Gerhardt, A., Götzen, K., Jordi, A. F., Kalicy, G., Karabowicz, R., Lehmann, D., Lewandowski, B., Lühning, J., Maas, F., Orth, H., Patsyuk, M., Peters, K., Saito, T., Schmidt, C. J., Schmitt, L., Schwarz, C., Schwiening, J., Traxler, M., Voss, B., Wieczorek, P., Wilms, A., Zühlsdorf, M., Abazov, V. M., Alexeev, G., Arefiev, A., Astakhov, V. I., Yu Barabanov, M., Batyunya, B. V., Davydov, Yu I., Kh Dodokhov, V., Efremov, A. A., Fedunov, A. G., Festchenko, A. A., Galoyan, A. S., Grigoryan, S., Karmokov, A., Koshurnikov, E. K., Lobanov, V. I., Lobanov, Yu Yu, Makarov, A. F., Malinina, L. V., Malyshev, V. L., Mustafaev, G. A., Olshevskiy, A., Pasyuk, M. A., Perevalova, E. A., Piskun, A. A., Pocheptsov, T. A., Pontecorvo, G., Rodionov, V. K., Rogov, Yu N., Salmin, R. A., Samartsev, A. G., Sapozhnikov, M. G., Shabratova, G. S., Skachkova, A. N., Skachkov, N. B., Strokovsky, E. A., Suleimanov, M. K., Sh Teshev, R., Tokmenin, V. V., Uzhinsky, V. V., Vodopyanov, A. S., Zaporozhets, S. A., Zhuravlev, N. I., Zorin, A. G., Branford, D., Glazier, D., Watts, D., Woods, P., Britting, A., Eyrich, W., Lehmann, A., Uhlig, F., Dobbs, S., Metreveli, Z., Seth, K., Tomaradze, A., Xiao, T., Bettoni, D., Carassiti, V., Cotta Ramusino, A., Dalpiaz, P., Drago, A., Fioravanti, E., Garzia, I., Savriè, M., Stancari, G., Bianchi, N., Gianotti, P, Guaraldo, C., Lucherini, V., Orecchini, D., Pace, E., Bersani, A., Bracco, G., Macri, M., Parodi, R. F., Bremer, D., Dormenev, V., Drexler, P., Düren, M., Eissner, T., Föhl, K., Galuska, M., Gessler, T., Hayrapetyan, A., Hu, J., Koch, P., Kröck, B., Kühn, W., Lange, S., Liang, Y., Merle, O., Metag, V., Moritz, M., Münchow, D., Nanova, M., Novotny, R., Spruck, B., Stenzel, H., Ullrich, T., Werner, M., Euan, C., Hoek, M., Ireland, D., Keri, T., Montgomery, R., Protopopescu, D., Rosner, G., Seitz, B., Babai, M., Glazenborg Kluttig, A., Kavatsyuk, M., Lemmens, P., Lindemulder, M., Löhner, H., Messchendorp, J., Moeini, H., Schakel, P., Schreuder, F., Smit, H., Tambave, G., van der Weele, J. C., Veenstra, R., Sohlbach, H., Büscher, M., Deermann, D., Dosdall, R., Esch, S., Gillitzer, A., Goldenbaum, F., Grunwald, D., Henssler, S., Herten, A., Hu, Q., Kemmerling, G., Kleines, H., Kozlov, V., Lehrach, A., Maier, R., Mertens, M., Ohm, H., Orfanitski, S., Prasuhn, D., Randriamalala, T., Ritman, J., Röder, M., Schadmand, S., Serdyuk, V., Sterzenbach, G., Stockmanns, T., Wintz, P., Wüstner, P., Kisiel, J., Li, S., Li, Z., Sun, Z., Rigato, V., Fissum, S., Hansen, K., Isaksson, L., Lundin, M., Schröder, B., Achenbach, P., Bleser, S., Cahit, U., Cardinali, M., Denig, A., Distler, M., Fritsch, M., Jasinski, P., Kangh, D., Karavdina, A., Lauth, W., Merkel, H., Michel, M., Mora Espi, M. C., Müller, U., Pochodzalla, J., Sanchez, S., Sanchez Lorente, A., Schlimme, S., Sfienti, C., Thiel, M., Weber, T., Dormenev, V. I., Fedorov, A. A., Korzhik, M. V., Missevitch, O. V., Balanutsa, V., Chernetsky, V., Demekhin, A., Dolgolenko, A., Fedorets, P., Gerasimov, A., Goryachev, V., Varentsov, V., Boukharov, A., Malyshev, O., Marishev, I., Semenov, A., Böhmer, F., Dørheim, S., Ketzer, B., Paul, S., Hergemöller, A. K., Khoukaz, A., Köhler, E., Täschner, A., Wessels, J., Varma, R., Chaterjee, A., Jha, V., Kailas, S., Roy, B. J., Yan, Y., Chinorat, K., Khanchai, K., Ayut, L., Pomrad, S., Baldin, E., Kotov, K., Peleganchuk, S., Tikhonov, Yu, Boucher, J., Chambert, V., Dbeyssi, A., Gumberidze, M., Hennino, T., Imre, M., Kunne, R., Le Galliard, C., Ma, B., Marchand, D., Maroni, A., Ong, S., Ramstein, B., Rosier, P., Tomasi Gustafsson, E., Van de Wiele, J., Boca, G., Braghieri, A., Costanza, S., Genova, P., Lavezzi, L., Montagna, P., Rotondi, A., Abramov, V., Belikov, N., Davidenko, A., Derevschikov, A., Goncharenko, Y., Grishin, V., Kachanov, V., Konstantinov, D., Kormilitsin, V., Melnik, Y., Levin, A., Minaev, N., Mochalov, V., Morozov, D., Nogach, L., Poslavskiy, S., Ryazantsev, A., Ryzhikov, S., Semenov, P., Shein, I., Uzunian, A., Vasiliev, A., Yakutin, A., Bäck, T., Cederwall, B., Makónyi, K., Tegnér, P. E., von Würtemberg, K. M., Belostotski, S., Gavrilov, G., Itzotov, A., Kashchuk, A., Kisselev, A., Kravchenko, P., Levitskaya, O., Manaenkov, S., Miklukho, O., Naryshkin, Y., Veretennikov, D., Vikhrov, V., Zhadanov, A., Alberto, D., Amoroso, A., Bussa, M. P., Busso, L., De Mori, F., Destefanis, M., Fava, L., Ferrero, L., Greco, M., Maggiora, M., Marcello, S., Sosio, S., Spataro, S., Zotti, L., Calvo, D., Coli, S., De Remigis, P., Filippi, A., Giraudo, G., Lusso, S., Mazza, G., Morra, O., Rivetti, A., Wheadon, R., Iazzi, F., Lavagno, A., Younis, H., Birsa, Renato, Bradamante, Franco, Bressan, Andrea, Martin, Anna, Clement, H., Galander, B., Caldeira Balkeståhl, L., Calén, H., Fransson, K., Johansson, T., Kupsc, A., Marciniewski, P., Thomé, E., Wolke, M., Zlomanczuk, J., Díaz, J., Ortiz, A., Dmowski, K., Duda, P., Korzeniewski, R., Slowinski, B., Chlopik, A., Guzik, Z., Kosinski, K., Melnychuk, D., Wasilewski, A., Wojciechowski, M., Wronka, S., Wysocka, A., Zwieglinski, B., Bühler, P., Hartman, O. N., Kienle, P., Marton, J., Suzuki, K., Widmann, E., Zmeskal, J., KVI - Center for Advanced Radiation Technology, and Research unit Nuclear & Hadron Physics
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tubes ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Gaseous Detectors ,Transition Radiation ,hep-ex ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,Atlas Muon Spectrometer ,Cleo-Iii Trigger ,Relativistic Rise ,Particle Identification ,straw tube ,Computer Science::Hardware Architecture ,Storage-Ring Hesr ,Pellet Target ,Energy-Loss ,Drift Tubes ,Nuclear Experiment ,physics.ins-det ,detectors - Abstract
This document describes the technical layout and the expected performance of the Straw Tube Tracker (STT), the main tracking detector of the P− ANDA target spectrometer. The STT encloses a Micro-Vertex-Detector (MVD) for the inner tracking and is followed in beam direction by a set of GEM stations. The tasks of the STT are the measurement of the particle momentum from the reconstructed trajectory and the measurement of the specific energy loss for a particle identification. Dedicated simulations with full analysis studies of certain proton-antiproton reactions, identified as being benchmark tests for the whole P− ANDA scientific program, have been performed to test the STT layout and performance. The results are presented, and the time lines to construct the STT are described.
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- 2013
- Full Text
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10. FVE, AWARE & EAEVE Report on European Veterinary Education in Animal Welfare Science, Ethics and Law
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D.B. Morton, Sant’Ana, Manuel Magalhães, F. Ohl, V. Ilieski, D. Simonin, L. Keeling, A.C. Wöhr, B. Zemljic, D. Neuhaus, S. Pesie, and N. De Briyne
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Technical Design Report for the: PANDA Straw Tube Tracker
- Author
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Erni, W., Keshelashvili, I., Krusche, B., Steinacher, M., Heng, Y., Liu, Z., Liu, H., Shen, X., Wang, Q., Xu, H., Aab, A., Albrecht, M., Becker, J., Csap´o, A., Feldbauer, F., Fink, M., Friedel, P., Heinsius, F. H., Held, T., Klask, L., Koch, H., Kopf, B., Leiber, S., Leyhe, M., Motzko, C., Peliz¨aus, M., Pychy, J., Roth, B., Schr¨oder, T., Schulze, J., Sowa, C., Steinke, M., Trifterer, T., Wiedner, U., Zhong, J., Beck, R., Bianco, S., Brinkmann, K. T., Hammann, C., Hinterberger, F., Kaiser, D., Kliemt, R., Kube, M., Pitka, A., Quagli, T., Schmidt, C., Schmitz, R., Schnell, R., Thoma, U., Vlasov, P., Walther, D., Wendel, C., W¨urschig, T., Zaunick, H. G., Bianconi, A., Bragadireanu, M., Caprini, M., Pantea, D., Pantelica, D., Pietreanu, D., Serbina, L., Tarta, P. D., Kaplan, D., Fiutowski, T., Idzik, M., Mindur, B., Przyborowski, D., Swientek, K., Czech, B., Kistryn, M., Kliczewski, S., Kozela, A., Kulessa, P., Lebiedowicz, P., Pysz, K., Sch¨afer, W., Siudak, R., Szczurek, A., Jowzaee, S., Kajetanowicz, M., Kamys, B., Kistryn, S., Korcyl, G., Korcyl, K., Krzemien, W., Magiera, A., Moskal, P., Palka, M., Rudy, Z., Salabura, P., Smyrski, J., Wro´nska, A., Augustin, I., Lehmann, I., Nimorus, D., Schepers, G., Al Turany, M., Arora, R., Deppe, H., Flemming, H., Gerhardt, A., G¨otzen, K., Jordi, A. F., Kalicy, G., Karabowicz, R., Lehmann, D., Lewandowski, B., L¨uhning, J., Maas, F., Orth, H., Patsyuk, M., Peters, K., Saito, T., Schmidt, C. J., Schmitt, L., Schwarz, C., Schwiening, J., Traxler, M., Voss, B., Wieczorek, P., Wilms, A., Z¨uhlsdorf, M., Abazov, V. M., Alexeev, G., Arefiev, A., Astakhov, V. I., Barabanov, M. Y. u., Batyunya, B. V., Davydov, Y. u. I., Dodokhov, V. K. h., Efremov, A. A., Fedunov, A. G., Festchenko, A. A., Galoyan, A. S., Grigoryan, S., Karmokov, A., Koshurnikov, E. K., Lobanov, V. I., Lobanov, Y. u. Y. u., Makarov, A. F., Malinina, L. V., Malyshev, V. L., Mustafaev, G. A., Olshevskiy, A., Pasyuk, M. A., Perevalova, E. A., Piskun, A. A., Pocheptsov, T. A., Pontecorvo, G., Rodionov, V. K., Rogov, Y. u. N., Salmin, R. A., Samartsev, A. G., Sapozhnikov, M. G., Shabratova, G. S., Skachkova, A. N., Skachkov, N. B., Strokovsky, E. A., Suleimanov, M. K., Teshev, R. S. h., Tokmenin, V. V., Uzhinsky, V. V., Vodopyanov, A. S., Zaporozhets, S. A., Zhuravlev, N. I., Zorin, A. G., Branford, D., Glazier, D., Watts, D., Woods, P., Britting, A., Eyrich, W., Lehmann, A., Uhlig, F., Dobbs, S., Metreveli, Z., Seth, K., Tomaradze, A., Xiao, T., Bettoni, D., Carassiti, V., Cotta Ramusino, A., Dalpiaz, P., Drago, A., Fioravanti, E., Garzia, I., Savri`e, M., Stancari, G., Bianchi, N., Gianotti, P., A, Guaraldo, C., Lucherini, V., Orecchini, D., Pace, E., Bersani, A., Bracco, G., Macri, M., Parodi, R. F., Bremer, D., Dormenev, V., Drexler, P., D¨uren, M., Eissner, T., F¨ohl, K., Galuska, M., Gessler, T., Hayrapetyan, A., Hu, J., Koch, P., Kr¨ock, B., K¨uhn, W., Lange, S., Liang, Y., Merle, O., Metag, V., Moritz, M., M¨unchow, D., Nanova, M., Novotny, R., Spruck, B., Stenzel, H., Ullrich, T., Werner, M., Euan, C., Hoek, M., Ireland, D., Keri, T., Montgomery, R., Protopopescu, D., Rosner, G., Seitz, B., Babai, M., Glazenborg Kluttig, A., Kavatsyuk, M., Lemmens, P., Lindemulder, M., L¨ohner, H., Messchendorp, J., Moeini, H., Schakel, P., Schreuder, F., Smit, H., Tambave, G., van der Weele, J. C., Veenstra, R., Sohlbach, H., B¨uscher, M., Deermann, D., Dosdall, R., Esch, S., Gillitzer, A., Goldenbaum, F., Grunwald, D., Henssler, S., Herten, A., Hu, Q., Kemmerling, G., Kleines, H., Kozlov, V., Lehrach, A., Maier, R., Mertens, M., Ohm, H., Orfanitski, S., Prasuhn, D., Randriamalala, T., Ritman, J., R¨oder, M., Schadmand, S., Serdyuk, V., Sterzenbach, G., Stockmanns, T., Wintz, P., W¨ustner, P., Kisiel, J., Li, S., Li, Z., Sun, Z., Rigato, V., Fissum, S., Hansen, K., Isaksson, L., Lundin, M., Schr¨oder, B., Achenbach, P., Bleser, S., Cahit, U., Cardinali, M., Denig, A., Distler, M., Fritsch, M., Jasinski, P., Kangh, D., Karavdina, A., Lauth, W., Merkel, H., Michel, M., Mora Espi, M. C., M¨uller, U., Pochodzalla, J., Sanchez, S., Sanchezlorente, A., Schlimme, S., Sfienti, C., Thiel, M., Weber, T., Dormenev, V. I., Fedorov, A. A., Korzhik, M. V., Missevitch, O. V., Balanutsa, V., Chernetsky, V., Demekhin, A., Dolgolenko, A., Fedorets, P., Gerasimov, A., Goryachev, V., Varentsov, V., Boukharov, A., Malyshev, O., Marishev, I., Semenov, A., B¨ohmer, F., Dørheim, a. e. mail: p. a. o. l. a. g. i. a. n. o. t. t. i. @. l. n. f. i. n. f. n. it Page of S., Ketzer, B., Paul, S., Hergem¨oller, A. K., Khoukaz, A., K¨ohler, E., T¨aschner, A., Wessels, J., Varma, R., Chaterjee, A., Jha, V., Kailas, S., Roy, B. J., Yan, Y., Chinorat, K., Khanchai, K., Ayut, L., Pomrad, S., Baldin, E., Kotov, K., Peleganchuk, S., Tikhonov, Y. u., Boucher, J., Chambert, V., Dbeyssi, A., Gumberidze, M., Hennino, T., Imre, M., Kunne, R., Le Galliard, C., Ma, B., Marchand, D., Maroni, A., Ong, S., Ramstein, B., Rosier, P., Tomasi Gustafsson, E., Van de Wiele, J., Boca, G., Braghieri, A., Costanza, S., Genova, P., Lavezzi, L., Montagna, P., Rotondi, A., Abramov, V., Belikov, N., Davidenko, A., Derevschikov, A., Goncharenko, Y., Grishin, V., Kachanov, V., Konstantinov, D., Kormilitsin, V., Melnik, Y., Levin, A., Minaev, N., Mochalov, V., Morozov, D., Nogach, L., Poslavskiy, S., Ryazantsev, A., Ryzhikov, S., Semenov, P., Shein, I., Uzunian, A., Vasiliev, A., Yakutin, A., B¨ack, T., Cederwall, B., Mak´onyi, K., Tegn´er, P. E., von W¨urtemberg, K. M., Belostotski, S., Gavrilov, G., Itzotov, A., Kashchuk, A., Kisselev, A., Kravchenko, P., Levitskaya, O., Manaenkov, S., Miklukho, O., Naryshkin, Y., Veretennikov, D., Vikhrov, V., Zhadanov, A., Alberto, D., Amoroso, Antonio, Bussa, Maria Pia, Busso, Luigi, DE MORI, Francesca, Destefanis, MARCO GIOVANNI, Fava, L., Ferrero, Livio, Greco, Michela, Maggiora, Marco, Marcello, Simonetta, Sosio, Stefano, Spataro, STEFANO GIOVANNI, Zotti, Laura, Calvo, D., Coli, S., De Remigis, P., Filippi, A., Giraudo, G., Lusso, S., Mazza, G., Morra, O., Rivetti, A., Wheadon, R., Iazzi, F., Lavagno, A., Younis, H., Birsa, R., Bradamante, F., Bressan, A., Martin, A., Clement, H., Galander, B., Caldeira Balkest˚ahl, L., Cal´en, H., Fransson, K., Johansson, T., Kupsc, A., Marciniewski, P., Thom´e, E., Wolke, M., Zlomanczuk, J., D´ıaz, J., Ortiz, A., Dmowski, K., Duda, P., Korzeniewski, R., Slowinski, B., Chlopik, A., Guzik, Z., Kosinski, K., Melnychuk, D., Wasilewski, A., Wojciechowski, M., Wronka, S., Wysocka, A., Zwieglinski, B., B¨uhler, P., Hartman, O. N., Kienle, P., Marton, J., Suzuki, K., Widmann, E., Zmeskal, J., Institut de Physique Nucléaire d'Orsay (IPNO), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11), and PANDA
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High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,Computer Science::Hardware Architecture ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,hep-ex ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,[PHYS.HEXP]Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-INS-DET]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Instrumentation and Detectors [physics.ins-det] ,Detectors and Experimental Techniques ,Nuclear Experiment ,physics.ins-det ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
This document describes the technical layout and the expected performance of the Straw Tube Tracker (STT), the main tracking detector of the PANDA target spectrometer. The STT encloses a Micro-Vertex-Detector (MVD) for the inner tracking and is followed in beam direction by a set of GEM-stations. The tasks of the STT are the measurement of the particle momentum from the reconstructed trajectory and the measurement of the specific energy-loss for a particle identification. Dedicated simulations with full analysis studies of certain proton-antiproton reactions, identified as being benchmark tests for the whole PANDA scientific program, have been performed to test the STT layout and performance. The results are presented, and the time lines to construct the STT are described., Comment: accepted for publication on EPJA
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- 2012
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12. Managing nature parks as an ethical challenge: a proposal for a practical tool to identify fundamental questions
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Franck L. B. Meijboom and F. Ohl
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Intervention (law) ,Harm ,Order (exchange) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Political science ,Management styles ,Duty of care ,Engineering ethics ,Commission ,Deliberation ,media_common ,Public interest - Abstract
In 2010 the Report of the second International Commission on Management of the Oostvaardersplassen (OVP) was published. This international committee evaluated the management of one of the largest wetland reserves in the Netherlands. The results of this evaluation were of high public interest, because the OVP is a controversially debated topic in the Netherlands. This debate has mainly resulted from the introduction of a number of large herbivores to this area, such as Heck cattle, konik horses, and red deer, to maintain short grassland for grazing by geese. This measure had been taken as part of the initial management style of minimal intervention in the OVP, in order to allow ‘natural ecological processes to operate’ within the area. However, this non-intervention policy elicited a fierce debate on our duty of care towards these animals, when the harsh winter of 2009/2010 resulted in an unusually high winter-mortality among large herbivores. Are these animals to be considered part of nature, with animals suffering and dying by starvation as a part of natural processes? Or are they to be treated as kept animals towards which we have direct duties to prevent harm and suffering? On top of this problem, the question arises whether one should assess these dilemmas from the perspective of the individual animal or from a population-oriented perspective. Up until recently, these questions were – at the level of policy – mainly discussed as rather technical issues that demand further ecological expertise or input from veterinary and animal sciences to be solved. The ICMO2 evaluation explicitly tried to include the moral dimensions in their scientific evaluation. In this paper we present the framework that has been used in order to explicate and structure the ethical questions that play a central role in the management of the OVP. This framework offers a tool for practical ethical deliberation and aims to provide room for fundamental ethical presumptions and moral ideals.
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- 2012
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13. Apport de mouvement et créativité chez des enfants âgés entre quatre et six ans
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G. Jimmy, F. Ohl, R. Antonini Philippe, D. Trouilloud, O. Jeanneret, Guillaume Fürst, and Julien Chanal
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Enfants ,ddc:616.9802 ,Créativité ,Ecoles enfantines ,ddc:150 ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Accéléromètre ,Activité physique et sportive - Abstract
Objectif. — Identifier dans quelle mesure un apport de mouvement au niveau de l'école enfantine peut avoir un impact sur la créativité des jeunes enfants. Patients et méthodes. — Quatre-vingt-six enfants issus de 11 classes enfantines dont la pratique hebdomadaire de mouvement est différente ont participé à l'étude. Les enfants ont porté des accéléromètres (GT1 M) et passé le test de créativité de Krampen (1996) à plusieurs reprises sur une période de deux ans. Résultats. — Les résultats montrent que les enfants fréquentant les classes dans lesquelles le mouvement est favorisé sont effectivement les plus actives en termes d'activité physique modérée et vigoureuse (moderate to vigourous physical activity [MVPA]) comme en counts par minute (counts per minute [CountsPmin]). Ces résultats se retrouvent surtout au niveau du temps scolaire (p < 0,01) et sont plus nuancés pour la pratique extrascolaire. De plus, les résultats mettent en avant que des différences en termes de créativité apparaissent entre les individus selon les classes qu'ils fréquentent. Plus spécifiquement, selon les sous-échelles considérées et la période considérée, les scores obtenus pour les individus fréquentant les classes les plus actives sont supérieurs aux scores obtenus pour les individus fréquentant des classes normales. Conclusion. — Comprendre les enjeux de l'implantation de tels programmes ainsi qu'évaluer leurs effets sur le long terme sont des perspectives à développer pour les recherches futures dans ce domaine.
- Published
- 2012
14. Can we measure accurately the prevalence of doping?
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V, Lentillon-Kaestner and F, Ohl
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Doping in Sports ,Male ,Young Adult ,Adolescent ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Female ,Switzerland - Abstract
Questionnaires are used in the majority of the studies on doping prevalence in sport. Nevertheless, prevalence is not easy to evaluate and previous epidemiologic studies demonstrated a wide variance. This variance has mostly been explained by sample differences. The way to evaluate doping prevalence in the survey is questioned in this paper. A questionnaire was administered to 1810 amateur athletes (993 males, 817 females). Doping use was ascertained in various ways, using different definitions of doping and types of question in the survey. Depending on the definition of doping and the type of question used, the prevalence of doping obtained can differ enormously, between 1.3 and 39.2% of athletes. Marijuana and drugs for asthma were the two banned substances most used. The majority of athletes often ignored the banned list and did not use prohibited substances to dope. Using various ways to question athletes, observing the usage of substances, cross checking the data, taking into account the aim of substances uses and the various definitions of doping are necessary to give more reliable prevalence of doping. Moreover, doping at an amateur level seems to be less of a sport problem than a social problem.
- Published
- 2011
15. [SILS, LESS, NOS, and Co. for minimally invasive kidney treatment: is less more?]
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F, Ohl and G, Popken
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Adult ,Male ,Young Adult ,Treatment Outcome ,Humans ,Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures ,Female ,Laparoscopy ,Pilot Projects ,Middle Aged ,Kidney ,Nephrectomy ,Aged - Abstract
Single-port surgery (LESS) is a new method of minimally invasive laparoscopic urology. These modern methods reduce the tissue trauma of the patient; however, high demands are placed on the surgeon. We report our initial clinical experience.Eight patients with different pathologies in the abdomen and retroperitoneum (nephrectomy, renal cyst resection) were treated with an abdominal LESS access and two patients with vaginal NOS (natural orifice surgery) access. Previously, we obtained extensive experience with the setup and implementation in animal studies. The port placements were realized by various single-port systems in the paraumbilical region.All procedures were performed without conversion to an open surgical procedure. Two additional trocars were needed in the first single-port operation. The intra- and postoperative follow-up was uneventful in all patients. The average age of the patients was 58.9 years, the average operating time 131 min, the mean blood loss 70 ml, and the median body mass index 27. The postoperative evaluation of patient satisfaction revealed that all patients were perfectly satisfied.With appropriate experience and training of the whole team, single-port surgery is a safe and appropriate method for selected renal surgery.
- Published
- 2010
16. [Quantifying gene expression in prostate carcinoma. Which endogenous reference genes are suitable?]
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M, Jung, F, Ohl, C, Stephan, A, Rabien, G, Kristiansen, A, Radonić, S A, Loening, and K, Jung
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Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,Male ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Prostate ,Humans ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Software - Published
- 2007
17. Animal models of anxiety
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F, Ohl
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Mice ,Behavior, Animal ,Mutagenesis ,Models, Animal ,Avoidance Learning ,Animals ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Anxiety ,Rats - Abstract
Animal models for anxiety-related behavior are based on the assumption that anxiety in animals is comparable to anxiety in humans. Being anxious is an adaptive response to an unfamiliar environment, especially when confronted with danger or threat. However, pathological variants of anxiety can strongly impede the daily life of those affected. To unravel neurobiological mechanisms underlying normal anxiety as well as its pathologi- cal variations, animal models are indispensable tools. What are the characteristics of an ideal animal model? First, it should display reduced anxiety when treated with anxiolytics (predictive validity). Second, the behavioral response of an animal model to a threatening stimulus should be comparable to the response known for humans (face validity). And third, the mechanisms underlying anxiety as well as the psychological causes should be identical (construct validity). Meeting these three requirements is difficult for any animal model. Since both the physiological and the behavioral response to aversive (threatening) stimuli are similar in humans and animals, it can be assumed that animal models can serve at least two distinct purposes: as (1) behavioral tests to screen for potential anxiolytic and antidepressant effects of new drugs and (2) tools to investigate specific pathogenetic aspects of cardinal symptoms of anxiety disorders. The examples presented in this chapter have been selected to illustrate the potential as well as the caveats of current models and the emerging possibilities offered by gene technology. The main concepts in generating animal models for anxiety-that is, selective breeding of rat lines, experience-related models, genetically engineered mice, and phenotype-driven approaches-are concisely introduced and discussed. Independent of the animal model used, one major challenge remains, which is to reliably identify animal behavioral characteristics. Therefore, a description of behavioral expressions of anxiety in rodents as well as tests assays to measure anxiety-related behavior in these animals is also included in this chapter.
- Published
- 2006
18. Animal Models of Anxiety
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F. Ohl
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Predictive validity ,medicine.drug_class ,medicine ,Construct validity ,Anxiety ,Adaptive response ,Ethology ,Stimulus (physiology) ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Anxiolytic ,Neuroscience ,Face validity - Abstract
Animal models for anxiety-related behavior are based on the assumption that anxiety in animals is comparable to anxiety in humans. Being anxious is an adaptive response to an unfamiliar environment, especially when confronted with danger or threat. However, pathological variants of anxiety can strongly impede the daily life of those affected. To unravel neurobiological mechanisms underlying normal anxiety as well as its pathological variations, animal models are indispensable tools. What are the characteristics of an ideal animal model? First, it should display reduced anxiety when treated with anxiolytics (predictive validity). Second, the behavioral response of an animal model to a threatening stimulus should be comparable to the response known for humans (face validity). And third, the mechanisms underlying anxiety as well as the psychological causes should be identical (construct validity). Meeting these three requirements is difficult for any animal model. Since both the physiological and the behavioral response to aversive (threatening) stimuli are similar in humans and animals, it can be assumed that animal models can serve at least two distinct purposes: as (1) behavioral tests to screen for potential anxiolytic and antidepressant effects of new drugs and (2) tools to investigate specific pathogenetic aspects of cardinal symptoms of anxiety disorders. The examples presented in this chapter have been selected to illustrate the potential as well as the caveats of current models and the emerging possibilities offered by gene technology. The main concepts in generating animal models for anxiety—that is, selective breeding of rat lines, experience-related models, genetically engineered mice, and phenotype-driven approaches—are concisely introduced and discussed. Independent of the animal model used, one major challenge remains, which is to reliably identify animal behavioral characteristics. Therefore, a description of behavioral expressions of anxiety in rodents as well as tests assays to measure anxiety-related behavior in these animals is also included in this chapter.
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- 2005
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19. Isofluran verbessert die kognitiven Funktionen von transgenen Mäusen mit einer Alzheimer-typischen Mutante
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B Eckel, Eberhard Kochs, M Riemenschneider, F Ohl, and Manfred Blobner
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Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Emergency Medicine ,General Medicine ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine - Published
- 2005
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20. Van een park voor de Jacht naar jacht voor het Park
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L. Hoedemaker, G.J. Spek, F. Ohl, L. Hoedemaker, G.J. Spek, and F. Ohl
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- 2014
21. Maternal defence as an emotional stressor in female rats: correlation of neuroendocrine and behavioural parameters and involvement of brain oxytocin
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I D, Neumann, N, Toschi, F, Ohl, L, Torner, and S A, Krömer
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Behavior, Animal ,Brain ,Fear ,Oxytocin ,Neurosecretory Systems ,Prolactin ,Rats ,Adrenocorticotropic Hormone ,Receptors, Oxytocin ,Stress, Physiological ,Animals ,Lactation ,Female ,Rats, Wistar ,Corticosterone ,Maternal Behavior - Abstract
In order to study neuroendocrine and behavioural stress responses in female rats post partum we aimed to establish a relevant emotional stressor -- the maternal defence test based on maternal aggression of a lactating resident towards a virgin or lactating intruder approaching the cage. Exposure to maternal defence significantly elevated corticotropin (ACTH) and corticosterone responses of the residents and of virgin or lactating intruders, with an attenuated response in lactating residents and lactating intruders. Exposure to maternal defence increased plasma oxytocin in virgin intruders only. The aggressive behaviour displayed by the residents was directly correlated with the amount of defensive behaviour of the intruder and independent of the intruder's reproductive state. However, the amount of maternal and explorative behaviours displayed by the lactating residents was significantly higher when exposed to a lactating, compared to a virgin, intruder. ACTH responses in lactating residents exposed to virgin intruders were significantly correlated to the amount of offensive (direct correlation) and maternal (inverse correlation) behaviours they displayed. Plasma prolactin concentrations, elevated in lactating compared to virgin rats under basal conditions, were found to be reduced in the lactating residents and intruders in response to exposure to the maternal defence test, whereas it was unchanged in virgin intruders. To test for the involvement of brain oxytocin in neuroendocrine and behavioural responses of the lactating residents an oxytocin receptor antagonist (0.1 microg/5 microL) was infused icv 10 min prior to testing. This treatment increased basal, but not stress-induced, ACTH, corticosterone and oxytocin secretion. Whereas parameters of aggressive behaviour were unchanged, the antagonist reduced signs of maternal behaviour during maternal defence. In summary, the maternal defence test has been characterized as a relevant emotional stressor for female rats which is useful for studying neuroendocrine and emotional responses in females, in particular in the context of reproductive adaptations.
- Published
- 2001
22. Are social classes still relevant to analyse sports groupings in 'postmodern' society? An analysis referring to P. Bourdieu's theory
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F, Ohl
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Stereotyping ,Social Class ,Social Dominance ,Humans ,Life Style ,Organizational Culture ,Sports - Abstract
P. Bourdieu's theory will be used to analyse changes in sport sociology. A significant part of the transformation of sociological research depends on the analysis of social categories and particularly of social classes. The theory of P. Bourdieu grants social positions and conditions an important role in the explanation of an agent's behaviour. The question is to know whether sports groupings, in the so-called "postmodern" society, can still be analysed with Bourdieu's sociological frame of analysis. The observation of new forms of sports grouping is used, by some French sociologists, to criticise Bourdieu's axiomatic. It is argued here that it is more often a misunderstanding or a mechanical use of Bourdieu's theory which needs to be criticised.
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- 2000
23. Assessing dogs’adaptive capacities at the vet
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E. ten Hove, S. Wingerden, K. van Reenen, Alessia Ortolani, and F. Ohl
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General Veterinary ,business.industry ,Anesthesia ,Heart rate ,Medicine ,business - Published
- 2013
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24. « Où, quand, et comment ? » : Évolution des conduites agressives en football et en hockey sur glace
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A. Traclet, O. Moret, P. Romand, and F. Ohl
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Physiology ,Physiology (medical) ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation - Published
- 2011
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25. Chapter 13 Functional organization and learning-related plasticity in auditory cortex of the Mongolian gerbil
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F. Ohl, C. Simonis, H. Thomas, J. Tillein, and H. Scheich
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Auditory learning ,Audiology ,Plasticity ,Auditory cortex ,Gerbil ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neuroplasticity ,medicine ,Middle ear ,sense organs ,Tonotopy ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Cochlea - Abstract
Publisher Summary The Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus) has recently become a mammalian model for the study of auditory mechanisms. The reasons for the growing interest in gerbil audition are (1) the unusual, almost human-like, low-frequency hearing specialization that is reflected by the expansion of the low-frequency representations in auditory structures; among other factors, this favors speech-related studies in that species; (2) the enlarged middle ear cavities, which permit a direct experimental access to the turns of the cochlea; and (3) the fact that both of them are found in a small, easily bred laboratory animal. This chapter investigates auditory cortical plasticity in this promising animal model––namely, adult auditory learning. The tonotopic organization of gerbil primary auditory cortex (AI) and surrounding fields are analyzed using standard microelectrode mapping technique. Multiple tangential dorsoventral electrode tracks are made in each animal under light anesthesia. On-responses are integrated for up to ten repetitions and the best frequency (BF) determined in the frequency response histogram.
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- 1993
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26. Learning-Related Plasticity of Gerbil Auditory Cortex: Feature Maps Versus Meaning Maps
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C. Simonis, F. Ohl, H. Thomas, J. Tillein, and H. Scheich
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Electrophysiology ,Tone (musical instrument) ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Feature (computer vision) ,Cortex (anatomy) ,medicine ,Classical conditioning ,Tonotopy ,Psychology ,Auditory cortex ,Gerbil ,Neuroscience - Abstract
The basic functional organization of gerbil auditory cortex was mapped in parallel with unit recording and with the fluoro-2-deoxyglucose mapping (FDG) technique. Among at least seven subfields in this cortex primary auditory cortex (AI) and the anterior auditory cortex (AAF) show prominent tonotopic organization with parallel dorsoventral isofrequency contours (electrophysiology) in correspondence to FDG labeled frequency band laminae. Aversive tone conditioning paradigms produce spacial shifts of FDG tone representation in the tonotopic maps. Response curves of single units are reshaped by tone conditioning to code simultaneously for original characteristic frequency and conditioned frequency. This effect may explain changed FDG tone representation. The results suggest that spectral features as well as meaning of sounds are represented in auditory cortex.
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- 1992
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27. Evaluation of Neurocognitive Outcome Following Cerebral Ischemia in Rats: A Comparison Between the Modified Hole Board Test and the Morris Water Maze
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ML, Gordan, primary, J, Berkmann, additional, B, Jungwirth, additional, F, Ohl, additional, EF, Kochs, additional, and M, Blobner, additional
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- 2005
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28. Eigenschaften und neuere Anwendungsmöglichkeiten der Lithopone
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F. Ohl
- Published
- 1940
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29. Practical Guide to Music Notation for Composers, Arrangers and Editors
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Carl A. Rosenthal and John F. Ohl
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Musical notation ,Literature ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Library and Information Sciences ,business ,Music ,Visual arts - Published
- 1968
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30. Masterpieces of Music before 1750; An Anthology of Musical Examples from Gregorian Chant to J. S. Bach
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Charles Warren Fox, Carl Parrish, and John F. Ohl
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Literature ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Art history ,Art ,Musical ,Library and Information Sciences ,Semiology ,medicine ,Performance art ,business ,Music ,media_common - Published
- 1951
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31. Masterpieces of Music before 1750
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Denis Stevens, Carl Parrish, and John F. Ohl
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Music - Published
- 1953
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32. Editorial: Women's cycling: specificities, situation and perspectives.
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Le Douairon Lahaye S and Ohl F
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
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- 2024
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33. The social grounds of self-tracking in insurance: A mixed-method approach to adoption and use.
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Presset B and Ohl F
- Abstract
Scholars have explored the role of self-tracking in mediating people's values, perceptions, and practices. But little is known about its institutionalised forms, although it is becoming a routine component of health policies and insurance programs. Furthermore, the role of structural elements such as sociodemographic variables, socialisations, and trajectories has been neglected. Using both quantitative ( n = 818) and qualitative ( n = 44) data gathered from users and non-users of an insurance program's self-tracking intervention, and drawing from Bourdieu's theoretical framework, we highlight the impact of users' social background on the adoption and use of the technology. We show that older, poorer, and less educated individual are less likely to adopt the technology, and describe four prototypical categories of users, the meritocrats , the litigants , the scrutinisers and the good-intentioned . Each category displays different reasons and ways to use the technology that are grounded in users' socialisations and life trajectories. Results suggest that too much emphasis may have been put on self-tracking's transformative powers and not enough on its reproductive inertia, with important consequences for both scholars, designers, and public health stakeholders., Competing Interests: The authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article., (© The Author(s) 2023.)
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- 2023
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34. 'Clean athlete status' cannot be certified: Calling for caution, evidence and transparency in 'alternative' anti-doping systems.
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Petróczi A, Backhouse SH, Boardley ID, Saugy M, Pitsiladis Y, Viret M, Ioannidis G, Ohl F, Loland S, and McNamee M
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- Athletes, Humans, Doping in Sports, Sports
- Abstract
Athletes, sponsors and sport organisations all have a vested interest in upholding the values of clean sport. Despite the considerable and concerted efforts of the global anti-doping system over two decades, the present system is imperfect. Capitalising upon consequent frustrations of athletes, event organisers and sponsors, alternative anti-doping systems have emerged outside the global regulatory framework. The operating principles of these systems raise several concerns, notably including accountability, legitimacy and fairness to athletes. In this paper, we scrutinise the Clean Protocol™, which is the most comprehensive alternative system, for its shortcomings through detailed analysis of its alleged logical and scientific merits. Specifically, we draw the attention of the anti-doping community - including researchers and practitioners - to the potential pitfalls of using assessment tools beyond the scope for which they have been validated, and implementing new approaches without validation. Further, we argue that whilst protecting clean sport is critically important to all stakeholders, protocols that put athletes in disadvantageous positions and/or pose risks to their professional and personal lives lack legitimacy. We criticise the use of anti-doping data and scientific research out of context, and highlight unintended harms that are likely to arise from the widespread implementation of such protocols in parallel with - or in place of - the existing global anti-doping framework., Competing Interests: Declarations of Interest The authors declare no conflict of interest. All authors are active researchers and practitioners in anti-doping, many serving in unpaid advisory positions with anti-doping organisations and have benefitted from competitively awarded research funding for anti-doping research. None of these activities are related to the content of this paper., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2021
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35. Editorial: Youth and Winter Sports.
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Millet GP and Ohl F
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
36. Monosynaptic Hippocampal-Prefrontal Projections Contribute to Spatial Memory Consolidation in Mice.
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Binder S, Mölle M, Lippert M, Bruder R, Aksamaz S, Ohl F, Wiegert JS, and Marshall L
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- Animals, Electroencephalography, Male, Mice, Neural Pathways physiology, Neurons physiology, Optogenetics, Sleep physiology, Hippocampus physiology, Maze Learning physiology, Memory Consolidation physiology, Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Spatial Memory physiology
- Abstract
Time locking between neocortical sleep slow oscillations, thalamo-cortical spindles, and hippocampal sharp-wave ripples has convincingly been shown to be a key element of systems consolidation. Here we investigate the role of monosynaptic projections from ventral/intermediate hippocampus to medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) in sleep-dependent memory consolidation in male mice. Following acquisition learning in the Barnes maze, we optogenetically silenced the axonal terminals of hippocampal projections within mPFC during slow-wave sleep. This silencing during SWS selectively impaired recent but not remote memory in the absence of effects on error rate and escape latencies. Furthermore, it prevented the development of the most efficient search strategy and sleep spindle time-locking to slow oscillation. An increase in post-learning sleep sharp-wave ripple (SPWR) density and reduced time locking of learning-associated SPWR activity to sleep spindles may be a less specific response. Our results demonstrate that monosynaptic projections from hippocampus to mPFC contribute to sleep-dependent memory consolidation, potentially by affecting the temporal coupling of sleep-associated electrophysiological events. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Convincing evidence supports the role of slow-wave sleep (SWS), and the relevance of close temporal coupling of neuronal activity between brain regions for systems consolidation. Less attention has been paid so far to the specific neuronal pathways underlying these processes. Here, we optogenetically silenced the direct monosynaptic projection from ventral/intermediate hippocampus (HC) to medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) during SWS in male mice following repeated learning trials in a weakly aversive spatial task. Our results confirm the concept that the monosynaptic projection between HC and mPFC contributes to memory consolidation and support an important functional role of this pathway in shaping the temporal precision among sleep-associated electrophysiological events., (Copyright © 2019 the authors.)
- Published
- 2019
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37. Understanding the Paths to Appearance- and Performance-Enhancing Drug Use in Bodybuilding.
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Coquet R, Roussel P, and Ohl F
- Abstract
How do gym-goers who are normally not inclined to resort to appearance- and performance-enhancing drugs (APEDs) progressively normalize their use? Based on data collected through a year and a half of participant observation in a gym and 30 semi-directive interviews with practitioners with varying profiles in French-speaking Switzerland, this article examines the evolution of practitioners' relations with APED use by articulating various levels of analysis. Associated with social vulnerabilities, the progressive normalization of APED use is concomitant with the "conversion" to bodybuilding. Our results show the extent to which and under what conditions interactions within the layout of gyms can influence practices. From refusal to normalization, our results suggest that APEDs and the associated beliefs coincide with career stages, which we aim to bring to light here.
- Published
- 2018
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38. Effects of light regime and substrain on behavioral profiles of male C57BL/6 mice in three tests of unconditioned anxiety.
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Labots M, Zheng X, Moattari G, Ohl F, and van Lith HA
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- Animals, Anxiety genetics, Male, Mice, Behavior, Animal physiology, Housing, Animal, Lighting, Mice, Inbred C57BL genetics
- Abstract
Substrains of the C57BL/6 inbred mouse are widely used in genetic, behavioral and physiological research, as well as models for human disease. Throughout, the choice of the respective substrain can have a large influence on experimental results. Likewise, the conditions under which experiments are performed, such as the light regime, can significantly affect the outcome of an experiment, especially when aiming at experimental behavior. Here, two commonly used mouse substrains, C57BL/6JOlaHsd and C57BL/6NCrl, were housed under either a conventional or a reverse light regime and were tested in either the light phase or the dark phase, respectively. All animals were exposed to three unconditioned anxiety-related behavior set-ups: the modified Hole Board test, the light-dark box and the elevated plus maze. Significant substrain and light regime effects were found in all three behavioral tests, with some of the latter being substrain and test specific. This signifies the importance of the choice of substrain used in for example, a mouse knockout experiment studying behavior, also in relation to light regime under which the animals are tested.
- Published
- 2016
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39. Consomic mouse strain selection based on effect size measurement, statistical significance testing and integrated behavioral z-scoring: focus on anxiety-related behavior and locomotion.
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Labots M, Laarakker MC, Ohl F, and van Lith HA
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- Animals, Anxiety genetics, Female, Male, Mice, Quantitative Trait Loci genetics, Species Specificity, Anxiety physiopathology, Behavior, Animal, Locomotion, Statistics as Topic
- Abstract
Background: Selecting chromosome substitution strains (CSSs, also called consomic strains/lines) used in the search for quantitative trait loci (QTLs) consistently requires the identification of the respective phenotypic trait of interest and is simply based on a significant difference between a consomic and host strain. However, statistical significance as represented by P values does not necessarily predicate practical importance. We therefore propose a method that pays attention to both the statistical significance and the actual size of the observed effect. The present paper extends on this approach and describes in more detail the use of effect size measures (Cohen's d, partial eta squared - η p (2) ) together with the P value as statistical selection parameters for the chromosomal assignment of QTLs influencing anxiety-related behavior and locomotion in laboratory mice., Results: The effect size measures were based on integrated behavioral z-scoring and were calculated in three experiments: (A) a complete consomic male mouse panel with A/J as the donor strain and C57BL/6J as the host strain. This panel, including host and donor strains, was analyzed in the modified Hole Board (mHB). The consomic line with chromosome 19 from A/J (CSS-19A) was selected since it showed increased anxiety-related behavior, but similar locomotion compared to its host. (B) Following experiment A, female CSS-19A mice were compared with their C57BL/6J counterparts; however no significant differences and effect sizes close to zero were found. (C) A different consomic mouse strain (CSS-19PWD), with chromosome 19 from PWD/PhJ transferred on the genetic background of C57BL/6J, was compared with its host strain. Here, in contrast with CSS-19A, there was a decreased overall anxiety in CSS-19PWD compared to C57BL/6J males, but not locomotion., Conclusions: This new method shows an improved way to identify CSSs for QTL analysis for anxiety-related behavior using a combination of statistical significance testing and effect sizes. In addition, an intercross between CSS-19A and CSS-19PWD may be of interest for future studies on the genetic background of anxiety-related behavior.
- Published
- 2016
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40. Substrain and light regime effects on integrated anxiety-related behavioral z-scores in male C57BL/6 mice-Hypomagnesaemia has only a small effect on avoidance behavior.
- Author
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Labots M, Zheng X, Moattari G, Lozeman-Van't Klooster JG, Baars JM, Hesseling P, Lavrijsen M, Kirchhoff S, Ohl F, and van Lith HA
- Subjects
- Animals, Anxiety genetics, Body Weight, Brain metabolism, Brain pathology, Corticosterone blood, Disease Models, Animal, Magnesium blood, Magnesium metabolism, Magnesium Deficiency blood, Magnesium Deficiency pathology, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Inbred Strains, Random Allocation, Statistics, Nonparametric, Adaptation, Ocular, Anxiety etiology, Avoidance Learning physiology, Exploratory Behavior physiology, Locomotion physiology, Magnesium Deficiency complications
- Abstract
Magnesium (Mg) has been described to possess an anxiolytic function, but a number of studies present inconsistent results on this matter. In this study the effect of Mg deficiency on anxiety-related behavior, brain and blood plasma Mg in young adult male C57BL/6JOlaHsd and C57BL/6NCrl mice was studied. The animals were put on a control or Mg deficient diet from day 0 and significant hypomagnesaemia was evident from day 12 onwards in the test animals. Housing and test conditions were under either conventional light regime (white light behavioral test conditions) or reverse light regime (red light behavioral test conditions). The animals were tested in three tests for unconditioned anxiety: the modified Hole Board (day 14), the light-dark test (day 21) and the elevated plus maze (day 28). Overall integrated behavioral z-scores were calculated over these three behavioral tests. Mg showed a structure dependent distribution at the level of the brain, that differed between C57BL/6 substrain and light regime (conventional versus reverse), respectively. Likewise, total brain Mg did differ between substrain and light regime, but was not affected by the diet. Animals on the Mg deficient diet housed under conventional light regime had a higher final (day 28) blood plasma corticosterone level as compared to controls. Animals housed under reverse light regime exhibited no diet effect of plasma corticosterone levels. The significant hypomagnesaemia at blood plasma level resulted in an effect of Mg deficiency on avoidance, but not overall anxiety-related behavior. Significant differences regarding avoidance behavior were found between the two substrains and light regimes, respectively., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Chromosomal assignment of quantitative trait loci influencing baseline circulating total cholesterol level in male laboratory mice: report of a consomic strain survey and comparison with published results.
- Author
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van Lith HA, Laarakker MC, Lozeman-van't Klooster JG, and Ohl F
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Animals, Body Weight, Cholesterol, HDL blood, Chromosome Mapping, Crosses, Genetic, Gene-Environment Interaction, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Transgenic, Phenotype, Photoperiod, Seasons, Time Factors, Cholesterol, HDL genetics, Chromosomes chemistry, Quantitative Trait Loci
- Abstract
Background: An important risk for atherosclerosis is a low level of HDL cholesterol. Baseline HDL cholesterol is under complex genetic and environmental control. Here we report on results of male mice from a consomic strain survey and the parental inbred strains for baseline circulating total cholesterol concentration, which is almost the same as HDL cholesterol in chow fed mice. The consomic strains have been derived from C57BL/6J (host strain) and A/J (donor strain) inbred lines. The work contributes to the value of the mouse as an animal model for studying the genetic background of differences in baseline circulating total and HDL cholesterol levels., Results: The consomic strain survey suggested that mouse chromosomes 1, 7, 9, 14, 16, 17, 19, X, and Y contained at least one quantitative trait locus that is involved in baseline circulating total cholesterol concentration. All consomic lines, for which there is evidence that the substituted chromosome contains a quantitative trait locus, increase compared to the host strain baseline circulating total cholesterol concentration. Since there is evidence that 'body weight', 'age at blood sampling', 'time of the day blood was collected', and 'season' influence this phenotype, additional statistical analyses (with these variables as covariates) were performed. Now there is only evidence for quantitative trait loci on chromosomes 1, 8, 12, and Y. Taken the present results together with previous consomic strain surveys there is evidence that all mouse chromosomes carry quantitative trait loci that control baseline circulating total cholesterol levels. There was however little agreement between the present consomic strain results and previous sets of data. This might be explained by seasonal effects and differences in methodological variables such as age of the mice, fasting versus non-fasting, percentage of dietary fat, unanesthetized versus anesthetized mice, and the daily light-dark cycle., Conclusions: The present findings, when compared with previous consomic strain surveys, clearly illustrate the complexity of the genetic-environmental architecture for the regulation of baseline circulating total cholesterol levels in mice. Different data can be obtained from different labs and it underscores that animal geneticists should present as accurate a picture as possible of the laboratory mouse's environment.
- Published
- 2015
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42. The modified hole board--measuring behavior, cognition and social interaction in mice and rats.
- Author
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Labots M, Van Lith HA, Ohl F, and Arndt SS
- Subjects
- Animals, Anxiety psychology, Memory, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Rats, Behavior, Animal, Cognition physiology, Exploratory Behavior, Social Behavior
- Abstract
This protocol describes the modified hole board (mHB), which combines features from a traditional hole board and open field and is designed to measure multiple dimensions of unconditioned behavior in small laboratory mammals (e.g., mice, rats, tree shrews and small primates). This paradigm is a valuable alternative for the use of a behavioral test battery, since a broad behavioral spectrum of an animal's behavioral profile can be investigated in one single test. The apparatus consists of a box, representing the 'protected' area, separated from a group compartment. A board, on which small cylinders are staggered in three lines, is placed in the center of the box, representing the 'unprotected' area of the set-up. The cognitive abilities of the animals can be measured by baiting some cylinders on the board and measuring the working and reference memory. Other unconditioned behavior, such as activity-related-, anxiety-related- and social behavior, can be observed using this paradigm. Behavioral flexibility and the ability to habituate to a novel environment can additionally be observed by subjecting the animals to multiple trials in the mHB, revealing insight into the animals' adaptive capacities. Due to testing order effects in a behavioral test battery, naïve animals should be used for each individual experiment. By testing multiple behavioral dimensions in a single paradigm and thereby circumventing this issue, the number of experimental animals used is reduced. Furthermore, by avoiding social isolation during testing and without the need to food deprive the animals, the mHB represents a behavioral test system, inducing if any, very low amount of stress.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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43. Moral disengagement in the legitimation and realization of aggressive behavior in soccer and ice hockey.
- Author
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Traclet A, Moret O, Ohl F, and Clémence A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Aggression psychology, Athletes psychology, Hockey psychology, Morals, Soccer psychology
- Abstract
The aim of the present study was to verify that the level of tolerance for aggression is higher in a collective context than in an individual context (polarization effect), and to test the association between moral disengagement, team and self-attitudes toward aggression, and tolerance and realization of aggressive acts in Swiss male soccer and ice hockey. In individual or collective answering conditions, 104 soccer and 98 ice hockey players viewed videotaped aggressive acts and completed a questionnaire, including measures of the perceived legitimacy of videotaped aggression, of the teammates, coach, and self attitudes toward transgressions (modified TNQ), of the moral disengagement in sport (modified MDSS-S), and of self-reported aggressive behavior. A multilevel analysis confirmed a strong polarization effect on the perception of instrumental aggression, the videotaped aggressive acts appearing more tolerated in the collective than in the individual answering condition. Using a structural equation modeling, we found that the moral disengagement, which mediates the effects of perceived coach and ego attitudes toward transgressions, correlates positively with the tolerance of hostile aggression within teams, and with the level of aggressive acts reported by the participants. Aggr. Behav. Aggr. Behav. 42:123-133, 2015. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc., (© 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2015
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44. Preface.
- Author
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Lee G, Illes J, and Ohl F
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Behavioral Research ethics, Biomedical Research ethics, Neurosciences ethics
- Published
- 2015
45. Ethical issues associated with the use of animal experimentation in behavioral neuroscience research.
- Author
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Ohl F and Meijboom F
- Subjects
- Animals, Animal Experimentation ethics, Behavioral Research ethics, Models, Animal, Neurosciences ethics
- Abstract
This chapter briefly explores whether there are distinct characteristics in the field of Behavioral Neuroscience that demand specific ethical reflection. We argue that although the ethical issues in animal-based Behavioral Neuroscience are not necessarily distinct from those in other research disciplines using animal experimentation, this field of endeavor makes a number of specific, ethically relevant, questions more explicit and, as a result, may expose to discussion a series of ethical issues that have relevance beyond this field of science. We suggest that innovative research, by its very definition, demands out-of-the-box thinking. At the same time, standardization of animal models and test procedures for the sake of comparability across experiments inhibits the potential and willingness to leave well-established tracks of thinking, and leaves us wondering how open minded research is and whether it is the researcher's established perspective that drives the research rather than the research that drives the researcher's perspective. The chapter finishes by introducing subsequent chapters of this book volume on Ethical Issues in Behavioral Neuroscience.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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46. Effects of Transfer from Breeding to Research Facility on the Welfare of Rats.
- Author
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Arts JW, Oosterhuis NR, Kramer K, and Ohl F
- Abstract
Transfer from the breeding facility to a research facility is a stressful event for laboratory animals. Heat stress has been reported to constitute one of the major concerns during transport of animals. This study measured ambient and body temperature, corticosterone and glucose levels, body weight, behavior and water and food intake before, during and after transfer in Wistar rats. Decreased body weight, water and food intake were observed on the day of transfer in rats. Environmental temperature strongly affected body temperature of rats and needs to be controlled. Male rats need to habituate for at least one week, females for two weeks after transfer.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. An alternative approach to the prevention of doping in cycling.
- Author
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Aubel O and Ohl F
- Subjects
- Adult, Doping in Sports statistics & numerical data, Health Policy, Humans, Male, Socioeconomic Factors, Young Adult, Bicycling, Doping in Sports prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Framed by an overly reductionist perspective on doping in professional cycling as an individual moral failing, anti-doping policies tend to envisage a combination of education and repression as the primary intervention strategies. We offer an alternative approach, which seeks to understand doping practices as embedded in social relations, especially in relation to team organisation and employment conditions., Methods: We undertake an in-depth analysis of the functioning of nine of the 40 world professional cycling teams, and the careers of the 2,351 riders who were or have been professionals since 2005., Results: We find that anti-doping approaches rest upon questionable assumptions of doping as an individual moral fault, and have not produced the anti-doping effects expected or intended. Based on an analysis of team practices, and the ways in which riders produce their achievements, we offer an alternative perspective which emphasises doping as a product of social-economic condition. Our findings emphasise employment and business models, as well as day-to-day working conditions, as structural drivers of doping practices in which individuals and teams engage., Conclusion: Anti-doping requires structural as well as cultural change within the sport of professional cycling, especially in the ways teams function economically., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Sex Differences in Physiological Acclimatization after Transfer in Wistar Rats.
- Author
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Arts JW, Kramer K, Arndt SS, and Ohl F
- Abstract
Most laboratory animals used in research are vendor-bred and transferred to research facilities. Transfer procedures might have considerable and unintended effects on research results. In the present study we compared physiological and behavioral parameters before and after external and internal transfer, as well as between transferred and non-transferred Wistar rats. The impact of both external and internal transfer on body weight, plasma corticosterone levels, heart rate, blood pressure, and locomotor activity was studied in both male and female Wistar rats, taking into account the sex differences in stress responsivity. External transfer was found to decrease body weight, increase plasma corticosterone, increase activity, increase heart rate in female rats, but decrease heart rate in male rats. Parameters showed differences between the sexes and light phases. This study shows that acclimatization after transfer is sex-specific and researchers should take the sex into consideration when determining the acclimatization period. It is recommended to allow for acclimatization of at least 8 days in males and two weeks in females after external transfer and timely (2 days before starting experiments) transfer the animals internally to the testing room.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Chronic social stress does not affect behavioural habituation in male CD1 mice.
- Author
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Boleij H, Willems J, Leijten M, van't Klooster J, Lesscher H, Kirchhoff S, Lavrijsen M, Arndt SS, and Ohl F
- Subjects
- Animals, Body Weight, Corticosterone blood, Exploratory Behavior, Hippocampus metabolism, Male, Mice, Motor Activity, Receptors, Glucocorticoid metabolism, Receptors, Mineralocorticoid metabolism, Stress, Psychological metabolism, Stress, Psychological physiopathology, Habituation, Psychophysiologic, Social Behavior, Stress, Psychological psychology
- Abstract
Various protocols to induce chronic stress in rodents are being used to determine the effects and underlying mechanisms of prolonged stress experience. Recently, a novel chronic social stress (CSS) protocol has been developed for mice where social instability in adolescence and early adulthood is induced. This protocol has been shown to cause an increase in HPA-axis activity and acute avoidance behaviour in the elevated plus maze. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of this CSS protocol on habituation to an initially novel environment in CD1 mice, since it has been shown that initially high avoidance behaviour in mice can still be followed by rapid habituation, pointing towards an adaptive response. One group of male mice, the CSS group, was exposed to the CSS protocol for 7 weeks and we compared their behavioural and physiological responses with male mice that were housed in a stable social group, the SH group. The results reveal a decrease in body weight gain and fur condition, changes in adrenal weight and decreased GR mRNA expression in the CA1 and the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus in chronically stressed CD1 animals. Irrespective of such evidence for a significantly stressful effect of the protocol, CD 1 mice, after termination of the stress procedure, revealed habituation profiles that matched those of control animals. We conclude that the physiological and central-nervous effects caused by a CSS procedure as used in this experiment fall within the coping capacities of CD1 mice at the behavioural level., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Animal welfare at the group level: more than the sum of individual welfare?
- Author
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Ohl F and Putman RJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Observer Variation, Animal Husbandry, Animal Welfare, Behavior, Animal, Individuality
- Abstract
Currently assessment and management of animal welfare are based on the supposition that welfare status is something experienced identically by each individual animal when exposed to the same conditions. However, many authors argue that individual welfare cannot be seen as an 'objective' state, but is based on the animal's own self-perception; such perception might vary significantly between individuals which appear to be exposed to exactly the same challenges. We argue that this has two implications: (1) actual perceived welfare status of individuals in a population may vary over a wide range even under identical environmental conditions; (2) animals that appear to an external observer to be in better or poorer welfare condition may all in fact perceive their own individual status as the same. This would imply that optimum welfare of a social group might be achieved in situations where individual group members differ markedly in apparent welfare status and perceive their own welfare as being optimal under differing circumstances. Welfare phenotypes may also vary along a continuum between self-regarding and other-regarding behaviour; a variety of situations exist where (social) individuals appear to invest in the welfare of other individuals instead of maximising their own welfare; in such a case it is necessary to re-evaluate individual welfare within the context of a social group and recognise that there may be consequences for the welfare of individuals, of decisions made at the group level or by other group members.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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