74 results on '"Glowacki, L"'
Search Results
2. Factors shaping species richness and biodiversity of riverine macroinvertebrate assemblages at the local and regional scale
- Author
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Leszczyńska, J., Głowacki, Ł., and Grzybkowska, M.
- Published
- 2017
3. Diagnostic accuracy for self-reported methamphetamine use versus oral fluid test as the reference standard in a methamphetamine-dependent intervention trial population
- Author
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Carter, G, Spittal, MJ, Glowacki, L, Gerostamoulos, D, Dietze, P, Sinclair, B, Arunogiri, S, Berk, M, Lubman, DI, Manning, V, Higgs, P, Quinn, B, Baker, A, Dean, OM, Turner, A, McKetin, R, Carter, G, Spittal, MJ, Glowacki, L, Gerostamoulos, D, Dietze, P, Sinclair, B, Arunogiri, S, Berk, M, Lubman, DI, Manning, V, Higgs, P, Quinn, B, Baker, A, Dean, OM, Turner, A, and McKetin, R
- Abstract
AIMS: Treatment of methamphetamine dependence requires monitoring of recent use or abstinence. Self-report is commonly used for routine monitoring, but the accuracy of self-report is not established. For the treating clinician, the key accuracy statistic is the negative predictive value (NPV). The study aim was to estimate the NPV of self-reported non-use of methamphetamine compared with an oral fluid reference standard. DESIGN, SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: This study was a secondary (subgroup) analysis from a randomized controlled pharmacotherapy trial. Three Australian outpatient addiction services took part. Particpants were 139 people dependent on methamphetamine. MEASUREMENTS: Weekly oral fluid samples over 12 weeks to determine methamphetamine (and amphetamine) concentrations were used as the reference standard. Self-report of any methamphetamine use in the previous 7 days by the time-line follow-back method was the index test. Standard diagnostic accuracy statistics were calculated for all available paired episodes (n = 1134). Three NPV values were calculated: unadjusted NPV and NPV adjusted for clustering of observations through logistic regression and generalized estimating equation (GEE). We also calculated the NPVs for a range of prevalence rates of methamphetamine use, for the calculated levels of sensitivity and specificity. FINDINGS: Sensitivity was 96.4% [95% confidence interval (CI) = 95-97.5], specificity was 63.7% (95% CI = 57.3-69.8) and positive predictive value (PPV) was 90.8% (95% CI = 88.8-92.6). The unadjusted NPV was 82.7% (95% CI = 76.5-87.9), adjusted NPV by logistic regression 82.7% (95% CI = 73.9-91.5) and GEE 76.8% (95% CI = 66.8-86.8). At a methamphetamine use prevalence of 5%, the estimated NPV would be 99.7% (95% CI = 99.6-99.9) and at 95% prevalence, 48.2% (95% CI = 39.6-57.0). CONCLUSIONS: Self-report of no recent methamphetamine use appears to be sufficiently accurate to be clinically useful at the expected prevalence rates of metham
- Published
- 2023
4. Monitoring for fentanyl within Australian supervised injecting facilities: Findings from feasibility testing of novel methods and collaborative workshops.
- Author
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Nielsen, S, Barratt, M, Hiley, S, Bartlett, M, Latimer, J, Jauncey, M, Roux, C, Morelato, M, Clark, N, Kowalski, M, Gilbert, M, Francia, L, Shipton, A, Gerostamoulos, D, Glowacki, L, Lam, T, Nielsen, S, Barratt, M, Hiley, S, Bartlett, M, Latimer, J, Jauncey, M, Roux, C, Morelato, M, Clark, N, Kowalski, M, Gilbert, M, Francia, L, Shipton, A, Gerostamoulos, D, Glowacki, L, and Lam, T
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Australia is yet to see widespread fentanyl-contaminated heroin, despite the established presence of fentanyl in other countries. International mortality trends alongside a local cluster of fentanyl-related deaths prompted interest in developing methods to monitor for fentanyl and other potentially harmful novel psychoactive substances (NPS) in Australia. METHODS: We tested novel methods to monitor for fentanyl and other NPS. From 2017-2021, clients from supervised injecting facilities (SIFs) in Melbourne and Sydney, Australia, contributed urine screens (UDS) with BTNX Rapid Response™ fentanyl test strips (FTS) paired with surveys, and injecting equipment associated with opioid overdoses for laboratory analysis. A single site piloted drug checking using FTS with laboratory confirmation. Two workshops were conducted with SIF staff, content experts and people with lived experience to determine how results can inform practices within SIFs. RESULTS: Of the 911 UDS with FTS conducted, less than 1% (n=8) yielded positive results that were not explained by self-reported pharmaceutical fentanyl use, with two laboratory confirmed fentanyl positive results. Injecting equipment from 59 overdoses was tested and neither fentanyl nor other NPS were identified. Drug checking with FTS (n=34) indicated the presence of fentanyl on three tests. Two specimens were subsequently sent for laboratory testing and classified as false positives as the presence of fentanyl was not confirmed. Workshop participants (n=21) felt routine monitoring with FTS currently had limited value. A process for using pre-defined signals to trigger surveillance was developed. CONCLUSION: The high false positive rates with FTS, relative to the small number of positive results and potential for them to undermine confidence in FTS emphasised the need for confirmatory testing. The role of routine surveillance was unclear within the current low-fentanyl context, however, a process was developed to upscal
- Published
- 2023
5. Implementation of a self-organizing map for investigation of impoundment impact on fish assemblages in a large, lowland river: Long-term study
- Author
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Penczak, T., Głowacki, Ł., Kruk, A., and Galicka, W.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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6. Integrated Quality Assurance Program for the Hydra-70 Solid Rocket Motor
- Author
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Morris, E., Glowacki, L. M., Bond, L. J., Thompson, Donald O., editor, and Chimenti, Dale E., editor
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
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7. Infrequent detection of unintentional fentanyl use via urinalysis among people who regularly inject opioids in Sydney and Melbourne, Australia.
- Author
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Lam, T, Barratt, MJ, Bartlett, M, Latimer, J, Jauncey, M, Hiley, S, Clark, N, Gerostamoulos, D, Glowacki, L, Roux, C, Morelato, M, Nielsen, S, Lam, T, Barratt, MJ, Bartlett, M, Latimer, J, Jauncey, M, Hiley, S, Clark, N, Gerostamoulos, D, Glowacki, L, Roux, C, Morelato, M, and Nielsen, S
- Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIM: The current phase of the North American 'opioid crisis' is characterised by illicit fentanyl use; however, the presence of illicit fentanyl in Australia is unknown. This study aimed to monitor unintentional fentanyl consumption in Australia. DESIGN: Rapid Urine Drug Screens (UDS) paired with surveys conducted within Supervised Injecting Facilities (SIFs), and confirmatory laboratory testing. SETTING: Sydney and Melbourne, Australia PARTICIPANTS: Clients who used heroin within the past 2 days (n=911 tests, 2017-2021). Participants were demographically similar to the overall client base (median age 43, 72% male). MEASUREMENTS: UDS were conducted using BTNX Rapid Response™ fentanyl urine strip tests with cross-reactivity to numerous fentanyl analogues. Positive urine samples were analysed using liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry. Surveys covered past 3 day drug use and lifetime report of fentanyl in heroin. FINDINGS: Two percent of participants reported intentional use of fentanyl, mostly through fentanyl patches. Of the 911 rapid UDS conducted, 17 (1.9%) yielded positive results. Eight of these (all from Melbourne) were not explained by survey-reported fentanyl use in the past 3 days. Of these 8 unexplained positives, confirmatory laboratory analysis was conducted on 6, with 4 deemed to be false positives, and 2 confirmed for the presence of fentanyl. This represents the first confirmation of unintended use of fentanyl type substances in this population. CONCLUSION: There is limited evidence of unintentional fentanyl use among people in Sydney and Melbourne, Australia who regularly inject heroin, suggesting that, currently, there is very little illicit fentanyl in Australian drug markets accessed by Supervised Injecting Facilities attendees. This study demonstrates the feasibility of quick onsite testing to cost-effectively screen large samples for fentanyl; however, the high false positive rate emphasises the need for conf
- Published
- 2022
8. Cultural Invariance in Musical Communication
- Author
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Yurdum, L., Singh, M., Glowacki, L., Vardy, T., Atkinson, Q., Hilton, C.B., Sauter, D., Krasnow, M., Mehr, S., Culbertson, J., Perfors, A., Rabagliati, H., Ramenzoni, V., and Sociale Psychologie (Psychologie, FMG)
- Abstract
Despite the variability of music worldwide, some types of human songs share basic acoustic characteristics. For example, dance songs tend to be loud and rhythmic, whereas lullabies tend to be quiet and melodious. Prior studies with western English-speaking participants have shown that this enables listeners to infer aspects of a singer's behavior, despite being unfamiliar with the singer's culture and language. Here, we test whether these intuitions are shared across a diversity of languages and human societies, with 5524 people from 49 industrialised countries comprising 28 languages, and 116 people in 3 small-scale societies with limited access to global media. Each made inferences about the behavioral contexts of 118 songs from 86 societies. Both groups reliably identified the behavioral functions of dance songs, lullabies, and healing songs. Linguistic and geographical proximity between listeners and singers was minimally predictive of accuracy, demonstrating a degree of cultural invariance in music perception.
- Published
- 2022
9. LIMITED EVIDENCE VIA URINALYSIS OF UNINTENTIONAL FENTANYL USE AMONG PEOPLE WHO REGULARLY INJECT OPIOIDS IN SYDNEY AND MELBOURNE
- Author
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Lam, T, Barratt, MJ, Bartlett, M, Latimer, J, Jauncey, M, Hiley, S, Clarke, N, Gerostamoulos, D, Glowacki, L, Roux, C, Morelato, M, and Nielsen, S
- Subjects
Substance Abuse ,11 Medical and Health Sciences, 16 Studies in Human Society, 17 Psychology and Cognitive Sciences - Published
- 2021
10. The effect of artificial increases in water conductivity on the efficiency of electric fishing in tropical streams (Paraná, Brazil)
- Author
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PENCZAK, T., AGOSTINHO, A.A., GLOWACKI, L., and GOMES, L.C.
- Subjects
Sampling efficiency ,Paraná, Rio ,Brasil ,Paraná River ,Variation of conductivity ,Tropical stream ,Riachos tropicais ,Pesca elétrica ,Ecologia ,Variação de condutividade ,Amostragem de eficiência ,Brazil ,Ciências Biológicas ,Electrofishing - Abstract
PENCZAK, Tadeusz; AGOSTINHO, Angelo Antonio; GLOWACKI, Lucasz; GOMES, Luiz Carlos. The effect of artificial increases in water conductivity on the efficiency of electric fishing in tropical streams (Paraná, Brazil). Hydrobiologia, Dordrecht, v.350, no.1-3, p.189-201, 1997. Four sites in three small tropical streams each were sampled with three successive electrofishings per constant unit effort, starting at the site with lowest natural water conductivity. Each second-fourth site was sampled at double water conductivity (up to 300 µS cm-1 only) by dissolving salt in the water. Electric fishing efficiency estimated by three efficiency indexes was not significantly correlated with increasing conductivity. The reasons for this result are discussed.
- Published
- 2018
11. Fish assemblage changes relative to environmental factors and time in the Warta River, Poland, and its oxbow lakes
- Author
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Penczak, T., primary, Galicka, W., additional, Glowacki, L., additional, Koszalinski, H., additional, Kruk, A., additional, Zieba, G., additional, Kostrzewa, J., additional, and Marszal, L., additional
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. In situ observation of optically and thermally induced charge depletion in chromophore-doped cyclic olefin copolymers.
- Author
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Mellinger, A., Singh, R., Gonzalez, F.C., Szamel, Z., and Glowacki, L.
- Published
- 2004
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13. The spin-allowed and spin-forbidden - , transitions in the magnesium isoelectronic sequence
- Author
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Stanek, M, primary, Glowacki, L, additional, and Migdalek, J, additional
- Published
- 1996
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14. Surveillance and prophylactic intervention of Staphylococcus aureus nasal colonization in a hemodialysis unit.
- Author
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Glowacki, Shannon, Hodsman, Anthony B., Hammerberg, Ole, Meraw, Judy, McNeill, Vivian, Card, Mary Lou, Potters, Harriet, McGhie, Katherine, Stitt, Lawrence W., Glowacki, L S, Hodsman, A B, Hammerberg, O, Meraw, J, McNeill, V, Card, M L, Potters, H, McGhie, K, and Stitt, L W
- Published
- 1994
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15. Use of immune globulin to prevent symptomatic cytomegalovirus disease in transplant recipients ‐ A meta‐analysis
- Author
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Glowacki, L Shannon and Smaill, Fiona M.
- Abstract
The objective of this meta‐analysis was to review the evidence for the use of immune globulin in the prevention of symptomatic cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease in transplant recipients. A computerized search of Medline from 1980 to October 1991 was conducted using the textword “cytomegalo:” and the subheading “prevention and control” for studies in all languages. Reference lists, a manual search of relevant literature and communication with internationally recognized experts were used to locate additional studies. Of the studies identified, 18 met the inclusion criteria (population: transplant recipients; intervention: immune globulin; outcome: symptomatic cytomegalovirus disease; study design: randomized controlled trial). The meta‐analysis of the 18 studies showed a reduction in the incidence of symptomatic CMV disease in the group receiving immune globulin as compared to the untreated group. The common odds ratio was 0.58 (95% C.I. 0.42 to 0.77). Analyses of combining trials by subgroups of polyvalent immune globulin, hyperimmune globulin, bone marrow recipients and solid organ recipients resulted in common odds ratios comparable to the overall common odds ratio. Common odds ratios for the trials reporting cytomegalovirus interstitial pneumonia, cytomegalovirus death, overall death and graft loss ranged from 0.47 to 0.69. Common odds ratios for the effect of immune globulin prophylaxis analyzed by pre‐transplant patient/donor cytomegalovirus antibody status ranged from 0.32 to 0.50. In conclusion, the use of immune globulin as passive immunization for the prevention of symptomatic cytomegalovirus disease in the transplant population is supported by this meta‐analysis. The response is similar in both bone marrow and solid organ transplant recipients. There appears to be no significant clinical advantage in the use of hyperimmune globulin over polyvalent immune globulin.
- Published
- 1994
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16. Fishes of three oxbow lakes and their parent Pilica River: 25 years later
- Author
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Penczak, T., Kruk, A., Koszalinski, H., Kostrzewa, J., Lidia Marszał, Galicka, W., and Glowacki, L.
17. Influence of climate-related temporal changes on fish assemblages in oxbow lakes and in their parent Pilica River (continuation)
- Author
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Penczak, T., Glowacki, L., Kostrzewa, J., Andrzej Kruk, Koszaliński, H., Galicka, W., Marszal, L., and Ziȩba, G.
18. The effect of artificial increases in water conductivity on the efficiency of electric fishing in tropical streams (Parana, Brazil)
- Author
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Gomes, L. C., Agostinho, A. A., Glowacki, L., and Penczak, T.
- Subjects
FISHERY management ,FRESHWATER ecology ,ELECTRIC fishing - Abstract
Four sites in three small tropical streams each were sampled with three successive electrofishings per constant unit effort, starting at the site with lowest natural water conductivity. Each second-fourth site was sampled at double water conductivity (up to 300 5S cm
-1 only) by dissolving salt in the water. Electric fishing efficiency estimated by three efficiency indexes was not significantly correlated with increasing conductivity. The reasons for this result are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1997
19. Use of immune globulin to prevent symptomatic cytomegalovirus disease in transplant recipients ‐ A meta‐analysis
- Author
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Glowacki, L. Shannon and Smaill, Fiona
- Published
- 1995
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20. Trends in alcohol, MDMA, methylamphetamine and THC in injured and deceased motor vehicle drivers and motorcyclists over a decade (2010-2019) in Victoria, Australia.
- Author
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Schumann J, Di Rago M, Woodford N, Glowacki L, Fitzpatrick J, Kelly M, Beck B, Drummer OH, Gerostamoulos D, and Dipnall JF
- Abstract
Background: Driving under the influence of alcohol and other drugs contributes significantly to road traffic crashes worldwide. This study explored trends of alcohol, methylamphetamine (MA), 3,4-methylenedioxy-N-methylamphetamine (MDMA) and Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), in road crashes from 2010 to 2019 in Victoria, Australia., Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional analysis using data from the Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine and Victoria Police, examining proscribed drug detections in road crashes. Time series graphs per substance explored indicative trends and comparisons between road users. Negative binomial regression models, with robust SEs and adjusted for exposure (kilometres travelled, Victorian licence holders), modelled the incidence rate ratio, with a Bonferroni-adjusted α=0.007 for multiple comparisons., Results: There were 19 843 injured drivers and 1596 fatally injured drivers. MA had the highest prevalence (12.3% of fatalities and 9.1% of injured drivers), demonstrating an increase over time. Overall, 16.8% of car drivers and motorcyclists tested positive for one or more drugs, with 14% of crashes involving a blood alcohol concentration (BAC)≥0.05%. MA and THC were the most common drugs in fatalities. Between 2015 and 2019, MA was detected in 27.9% of motorcyclist fatalities, followed by THC (18.3%) and alcohol ≥0.05% (14.2%), with similar but lower frequencies among injured motorcyclists. Alcohol detections (≥0.05% BAC) in fatalities declined, but increased in injured motorcyclists and car drivers until plateauing in 2017. THC detections rose among injured drivers until 2018, detected in 8.1% and 15.2% of injured and fatal drivers, respectively. MDMA-positive driving decreased among injured drivers and remained stable at ~1% of fatalities., Conclusions: Despite enhanced road safety measures in Victoria, drug-driving persists, indicating a need for revised prevention strategies targeting this growing issue., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2025. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ Group.)
- Published
- 2025
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21. "We are one people": Group myths also draw cues from self-concept formation.
- Author
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Elster E and Glowacki L
- Subjects
- Humans, Group Processes, Cognition physiology, Concept Formation physiology, Self Concept, Cues
- Abstract
Sijilmassi et al. suggest that group myths explaining the shared history of a people succeed and propagate by leveraging cognitive cues from fitness interdependence. We offer an alternative and mutually compatible account rooting the success of group myths in cues from a different cognitive domain: The development of self-concepts.
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- 2025
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22. Deaths involving novel benzodiazepines in Victoria, Australia from 2018 to 2022.
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Drummer OH, Joubert S, Di Rago M, Castle JW, Crump K, Glowacki L, and Gerostamoulos D
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- Humans, Victoria, Substance Abuse Detection methods, Forensic Toxicology, Male, Diazepam analogs & derivatives, Female, Adult, Estazolam, Bromazepam analysis, Benzodiazepines
- Abstract
Novel benzodiazepine (NBz) detections in Victorian coronial cases started early in 2018 and have continued to increase in number and type up to December 2022. The 11 different NBz detections included etizolam (n = 82), flualprazolam (n = 43), clonazolam or 8-aminoclonazolam (n = 30), bromazolam (n = 15), clobromazolam (n = 13), phenazepam (n = 13), flubromazolam (n = 12), flubromazepam (n = 8), desalkylflurazepam (n = 6), diclazepam (n = 2), and estazolam (n = 1). The pattern of detections varied over the 5-year period, with different compounds appearing over different time frames. The most recent NBz to appear were bromazolam, clobromazolam, flubromazepam, and phenazepam, whereas etizolam had been seen regularly in case work since 2018. Of the total 133 deaths, 95 were considered drug-related deaths by forensic pathologists with at least one additional CNS depressant also present capable of contributing to death. All deaths involved other (non-benzodiazepine) CNS active drugs, although many involved multiple NBz, with five or more different benzodiazepines detected in eight cases., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For commercial re-use, please contact reprints@oup.com for reprints and translation rights for reprints. All other permissions can be obtained through our RightsLink service via the Permissions link on the article page on our site–for further information please contact journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2024
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23. Quantitative analysis of tetrahydrocannabinol isomers and other toxicologically relevant drugs in blood.
- Author
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Mantinieks D, Di Rago M, Drummer OH, Glowacki L, Schumann J, and Gerostamoulos D
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- Humans, Chromatography, Liquid methods, Isomerism, Illicit Drugs blood, Illicit Drugs chemistry, Liquid-Liquid Extraction methods, Dronabinol blood, Dronabinol chemistry, Dronabinol analogs & derivatives, Tandem Mass Spectrometry methods, Substance Abuse Detection methods, Limit of Detection
- Abstract
A multi-analyte liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method is described, involving the separation of delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (delta-9-THC) and delta-8-THC in addition to other commonly encountered drugs and metabolites. Briefly, sample preparation involved an alkaline liquid-liquid extraction (methyl tert-butyl ether) of blood (100 μl). The solvent layer was transferred, evaporated to dryness, reconstituted, and samples then separated on an Agilent Poroshell 120 EC-C18 100 Å (50 mm × 3.0 mm, 2.7 μm) analytical column using a multi-step gradient elution of 50 mM ammonium formate in water (pH 3.5) and 0.1% formic acid in methanol over 14 min. A SCIEX Triple Quad 6500+ system operating in scheduled multiple reaction monitoring and positive electrospray ionization was used for detection. There were no interferences, and matrix effects were generally acceptable (±20% of neat response). Linearity was achieved within the calibration range, including methylamphetamine (MA) (10-1000 ng/ml), 3,4-methylenedioxy-N-methylamphetamine (MDMA) (10-1,000 ng/ml), cocaine (10-1000 ng/ml), and two THC isomers (1-100 ng/ml). Accuracies of MA, MDMA, cocaine, and two THC isomers were 3.6 to 8.9%, -1.2 to 4%, -5.3 to 5.8%, and -11 to 14%, respectively; while precision estimates of the same were 1.6 to 5.4%, 1.7 to 5.3%, 1.2 to 4.5%, and 2 to 10%, respectively. Autosampler stability and dilution integrity were within acceptable limits, and no carryover was detected at the limit of detection. This validated LC-MS/MS method made the routine identification of both delta-9-THC and delta-8-THC in blood possible., (© 2023 The Authors. Drug Testing and Analysis published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
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24. Author's response: The challenge of peace.
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Glowacki L
- Subjects
- Humans, Warfare, Social Conditions
- Abstract
The 30 commentators are largely sympathetic to the account I develop for the origins of peace in humans, though many suggest that peace has deeper roots and that humans share characteristics of peace with other species. Multiple commentators propose how to extend my framework or focus on the cognitive and psychological prerequisites for peace. In my reply, I discuss these considerations and further my account of why I think peace as defined here was unlikely prior to behavioral modernity which emerged approximately 100,000 years ago. In general, there seems to be a consensus that moving the debate beyond "war versus peace" in human evolution and instead focusing on the conditions that enable war or peace is a fruitful direction for the field to take.
- Published
- 2024
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25. Universal interpretations of vocal music.
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Yurdum L, Singh M, Glowacki L, Vardy T, Atkinson QD, Hilton CB, Sauter D, Krasnow MM, and Mehr SA
- Subjects
- Humans, Language, Linguistics, Acoustics, Music, Cultural Evolution
- Abstract
Despite the variability of music across cultures, some types of human songs share acoustic characteristics. For example, dance songs tend to be loud and rhythmic, and lullabies tend to be quiet and melodious. Human perceptual sensitivity to the behavioral contexts of songs, based on these musical features, suggests that basic properties of music are mutually intelligible, independent of linguistic or cultural content. Whether these effects reflect universal interpretations of vocal music, however, is unclear because prior studies focus almost exclusively on English-speaking participants, a group that is not representative of humans. Here, we report shared intuitions concerning the behavioral contexts of unfamiliar songs produced in unfamiliar languages, in participants living in Internet-connected industrialized societies (n = 5,516 native speakers of 28 languages) or smaller-scale societies with limited access to global media (n = 116 native speakers of three non-English languages). Participants listened to songs randomly selected from a representative sample of human vocal music, originally used in four behavioral contexts, and rated the degree to which they believed the song was used for each context. Listeners in both industrialized and smaller-scale societies inferred the contexts of dance songs, lullabies, and healing songs, but not love songs. Within and across cohorts, inferences were mutually consistent. Further, increased linguistic or geographical proximity between listeners and singers only minimally increased the accuracy of the inferences. These results demonstrate that the behavioral contexts of three common forms of music are mutually intelligible cross-culturally and imply that musical diversity, shaped by cultural evolution, is nonetheless grounded in some universal perceptual phenomena.
- Published
- 2023
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26. Why did foraging, horticulture and pastoralism persist after the Neolithic transition? The oasis theory of agricultural intensification.
- Author
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Medupe D, Roberts SG, Shenk MK, and Glowacki L
- Subjects
- Ecology, Anthropology, Cultural, Biodiversity, Agriculture, Horticulture
- Abstract
Despite the global spread of intensive agriculture, many populations retained foraging or mixed subsistence strategies until well into the twentieth century. Understanding why has been a longstanding puzzle. One explanation, called the marginal habitat hypothesis, is that foraging persisted because foragers tended to live in marginal habitats generally not suited to agriculture. However, recent empirical studies have not supported this view. The alternative but untested oasis hypothesis of agricultural intensification claims that intensive agriculture developed in areas with low biodiversity and a reliable water source not reliant on local rainfall. We test both the marginal habitat and oasis hypotheses using a cross-cultural sample drawn from the 'Ethnographic atlas' (Murdock 1967 Ethnology 6 , 109-236). Our analyses provide support for both hypotheses. We found that intensive agriculture was unlikely in areas with high rainfall. Further, high biodiversity, including pathogens associated with high rainfall, appears to have limited the development of intensive agriculture. Our analyses of African societies show that tsetse flies, elephants and malaria are negatively associated with intensive agriculture, but only the effect of tsetse flies reached significance. Our results suggest that in certain ecologies intensive agriculture may be difficult or impossible to develop but that generally lower rainfall and biodiversity is favourable for its emergence. This article is part of the theme issue 'Evolutionary ecology of inequality'.
- Published
- 2023
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27. Monitoring for fentanyl within Australian supervised injecting facilities: Findings from feasibility testing of novel methods and collaborative workshops.
- Author
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Nielsen S, Barratt M, Hiley S, Bartlett M, Latimer J, Jauncey M, Roux C, Morelato M, Clark N, Kowalski M, Gilbert M, Francia L, Shipton A, Gerostamoulos D, Glowacki L, and Lam T
- Subjects
- Australia epidemiology, Humans, Analgesics, Opioid, Australasian People, Heroin, Needle-Exchange Programs, Feasibility Studies, Fentanyl, Drug Overdose epidemiology, Drug Overdose prevention & control
- Abstract
Background: Australia is yet to see widespread fentanyl-contaminated heroin, despite the established presence of fentanyl in other countries. International mortality trends alongside a local cluster of fentanyl-related deaths prompted interest in developing methods to monitor for fentanyl and other potentially harmful novel psychoactive substances (NPS) in Australia., Methods: We tested novel methods to monitor for fentanyl and other NPS. From 2017-2021, clients from supervised injecting facilities (SIFs) in Melbourne and Sydney, Australia, contributed urine screens (UDS) with BTNX Rapid Response™ fentanyl test strips (FTS) paired with surveys, and injecting equipment associated with opioid overdoses for laboratory analysis. A single site piloted drug checking using FTS with laboratory confirmation. Two workshops were conducted with SIF staff, content experts and people with lived experience to determine how results can inform practices within SIFs., Results: Of the 911 UDS with FTS conducted, less than 1% (n=8) yielded positive results that were not explained by self-reported pharmaceutical fentanyl use, with two laboratory confirmed fentanyl positive results. Injecting equipment from 59 overdoses was tested and neither fentanyl nor other NPS were identified. Drug checking with FTS (n=34) indicated the presence of fentanyl on three tests. Two specimens were subsequently sent for laboratory testing and classified as false positives as the presence of fentanyl was not confirmed. Workshop participants (n=21) felt routine monitoring with FTS currently had limited value. A process for using pre-defined signals to trigger surveillance was developed., Conclusion: The high false positive rates with FTS, relative to the small number of positive results and potential for them to undermine confidence in FTS emphasised the need for confirmatory testing. The role of routine surveillance was unclear within the current low-fentanyl context, however, a process was developed to upscale testing should signals of increased fentanyl prevalence in the Australian heroin market emerge., Competing Interests: Declarations of Interest SN and TL have received unrelated untied educational grants from Seqirus to investigate prescription opioid related harms. SN is a named investigator on a research grant from Indivior on a long-acting injectable buprenorphine implementation study. MJB volunteers for The Loop Australia (TLA), a health promotion charity working towards delivering drug-checking services in Australia that repackages and shares drug alert information with its networks. MJB also serves as the Executive Director of Bluelight.org, which hosts digital harm reduction communities where alerts about unusual drugs are often shared., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
28. Norm violations and punishments across human societies.
- Author
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Garfield ZH, Ringen EJ, Buckner W, Medupe D, Wrangham RW, and Glowacki L
- Abstract
Punishments for norm violations are hypothesised to be a crucial component of the maintenance of cooperation in humans but are rarely studied from a comparative perspective. We investigated the degree to which punishment systems were correlated with socioecology and cultural history. We took data from the Standard Cross-Cultural Sample database and coded ethnographic documents from a sample of 131 largely non-industrial societies. We recorded whether punishment for norm violations concerned adultery, religion, food, rape or war cowardice and whether sanctions were reputational, physical, material or execution. We used Bayesian phylogenetic regression modelling to test for culture-level covariation. We found little evidence of phylogenetic signals in evidence for punishment types, suggesting that punishment systems change relatively quickly over cultural evolutionary history. We found evidence that reputational punishment was associated with egalitarianism and the absence of food storage; material punishment was associated with the presence of food storage; physical punishment was moderately associated with greater dependence on hunting; and execution punishment was moderately associated with social stratification. Taken together, our results suggest that the role and kind of punishment vary both by the severity of the norm violation, but also by the specific socio-economic system of the society., Competing Interests: All authors declare none., (© The Author(s) 2023.)
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- 2023
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29. Fatal Intoxications from a Combination of 4-Fluoroamphetamine and 25C-NBOMe.
- Author
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Gerostamoulos D, Glowacki L, Pricone M, Crump K, Di Rago M, Joubert S, Lynch MJ, Woodford NW, and Drummer OH
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Female, Benzylamines, Phenethylamines, Amphetamines
- Abstract
Six fatalities have occurred from the ingestion of a combination of new psychoactive substances (NPSs), 4-fluoroamphetamine (4FA) and 2-(4-chloro-2,5-dimethoxyphenyl)-N-[(2-methoxyphenyl)methyl]ethanamine (25C-NBOMe) over a 9-month period. Four of these fatalities (one older female and three young males) were from direct adverse effects of drugs, and one each from a fall while being intoxicated and during restraint. All cases were subject to full postmortem examinations that included collection of femoral blood. The four drug-caused fatalities had postmortem blood concentrations for 4FA and 25C-NBOMe of 330-682 ng/L (median 417) and 1.4-12 ng/mL (median 4.3), respectively. The other two cases (both young males) where death was considered to have been caused indirectly by drug intoxication had 4FA and 25C-NBOMe postmortem concentrations of 21 and 123 ng/mL, and 1.8 and 4.5 ng/mL, respectively. None of these cases showed concentrations of drugs that suggested use of high recreational doses. In one drug-caused death, capsules and a brown powder obtained from the scene were found to contain a mixture of these two NPSs. With the exception of one drug-caused death, other drugs were detected; however, the effects of the two NPSs together were regarded as the primary triggers for the deaths. There were no consistent symptoms or pathology in these cases; however, agitation/aggression was observed in two cases prior to their collapse, with seizures in possibly three cases. Pulmonary and/or cerebral edema was noted in three cases. Potentially significant natural disease (a mildly enlarged heart) was only observed in one drug-caused case. These cases illustrate a possible increased risk of sudden death with this combination of drugs, both of which can elevate serotonin concentrations as well as act as strong stimulants. These cases also illustrate the difficulty in detecting NPS in cases where no prior information is available that might suggest their use., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2023
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30. Diagnostic accuracy for self-reported methamphetamine use versus oral fluid test as the reference standard in a methamphetamine-dependent intervention trial population.
- Author
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Carter G, Spittal MJ, Glowacki L, Gerostamoulos D, Dietze P, Sinclair B, Arunogiri S, Berk M, Lubman DI, Manning V, Higgs P, Quinn B, Baker A, Dean OM, Turner A, and McKetin R
- Subjects
- Humans, Self Report, Australia epidemiology, Amphetamine, Sensitivity and Specificity, Reference Standards, Methamphetamine
- Abstract
Aims: Treatment of methamphetamine dependence requires monitoring of recent use or abstinence. Self-report is commonly used for routine monitoring, but the accuracy of self-report is not established. For the treating clinician, the key accuracy statistic is the negative predictive value (NPV). The study aim was to estimate the NPV of self-reported non-use of methamphetamine compared with an oral fluid reference standard., Design, Setting and Participants: This study was a secondary (subgroup) analysis from a randomized controlled pharmacotherapy trial. Three Australian outpatient addiction services took part. Particpants were 139 people dependent on methamphetamine., Measurements: Weekly oral fluid samples over 12 weeks to determine methamphetamine (and amphetamine) concentrations were used as the reference standard. Self-report of any methamphetamine use in the previous 7 days by the time-line follow-back method was the index test. Standard diagnostic accuracy statistics were calculated for all available paired episodes (n = 1134). Three NPV values were calculated: unadjusted NPV and NPV adjusted for clustering of observations through logistic regression and generalized estimating equation (GEE). We also calculated the NPVs for a range of prevalence rates of methamphetamine use, for the calculated levels of sensitivity and specificity., Findings: Sensitivity was 96.4% [95% confidence interval (CI) = 95-97.5], specificity was 63.7% (95% CI = 57.3-69.8) and positive predictive value (PPV) was 90.8% (95% CI = 88.8-92.6). The unadjusted NPV was 82.7% (95% CI = 76.5-87.9), adjusted NPV by logistic regression 82.7% (95% CI = 73.9-91.5) and GEE 76.8% (95% CI = 66.8-86.8). At a methamphetamine use prevalence of 5%, the estimated NPV would be 99.7% (95% CI = 99.6-99.9) and at 95% prevalence, 48.2% (95% CI = 39.6-57.0)., Conclusions: Self-report of no recent methamphetamine use appears to be sufficiently accurate to be clinically useful at the expected prevalence rates of methamphetamine use in clinical treatment settings. If generalizable to clinical settings, where these tests are routinely conducted, this may permit a reduction in the frequency and cost of oral fluid assays., (© 2022 The Authors. Addiction published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society for the Study of Addiction.)
- Published
- 2023
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31. The evolution of peace.
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Glowacki L
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Violence prevention & control, Social Conditions, Aggression, Hominidae
- Abstract
While some species have affiliative and even cooperative interactions between individuals of different social groups, humans are alone in having durable, positive-sum, interdependent relationships across unrelated social groups. Our capacity to have harmonious relationships that cross group boundaries is an important aspect of our species' success, allowing for the exchange of ideas, materials, and ultimately enabling cumulative cultural evolution. Knowledge about the conditions required for peaceful intergroup relationships is critical for understanding the success of our species and building a more peaceful world. How do humans create harmonious relationships across group boundaries and when did this capacity emerge in the human lineage? Answering these questions involves considering the costs and benefits of intergroup cooperation and aggression, for oneself, one's group, and one's neighbor. Taking a game theoretical perspective provides new insights into the difficulties of removing the threat of war and reveals an ironic logic to peace - the factors that enable peace also facilitate the increased scale and destructiveness of conflict. In what follows, I explore the conditions required for peace, why they are so difficult to achieve, and when we expect peace to have emerged in the human lineage. I argue that intergroup cooperation was an important component of human relationships and a selective force in our species history beginning at least 300 thousand years. But the preconditions for peace only emerged in the past 100 thousand years and likely coexisted with intermittent intergroup violence which would have also been an important and selective force in our species' history.
- Published
- 2022
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32. Acoustic regularities in infant-directed speech and song across cultures.
- Author
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Hilton CB, Moser CJ, Bertolo M, Lee-Rubin H, Amir D, Bainbridge CM, Simson J, Knox D, Glowacki L, Alemu E, Galbarczyk A, Jasienska G, Ross CT, Neff MB, Martin A, Cirelli LK, Trehub SE, Song J, Kim M, Schachner A, Vardy TA, Atkinson QD, Salenius A, Andelin J, Antfolk J, Madhivanan P, Siddaiah A, Placek CD, Salali GD, Keestra S, Singh M, Collins SA, Patton JQ, Scaff C, Stieglitz J, Cutipa SC, Moya C, Sagar RR, Anyawire M, Mabulla A, Wood BM, Krasnow MM, and Mehr SA
- Subjects
- Humans, Adult, Infant, Speech, Language, Acoustics, Voice, Music
- Abstract
When interacting with infants, humans often alter their speech and song in ways thought to support communication. Theories of human child-rearing, informed by data on vocal signalling across species, predict that such alterations should appear globally. Here, we show acoustic differences between infant-directed and adult-directed vocalizations across cultures. We collected 1,615 recordings of infant- and adult-directed speech and song produced by 410 people in 21 urban, rural and small-scale societies. Infant-directedness was reliably classified from acoustic features only, with acoustic profiles of infant-directedness differing across language and music but in consistent fashions. We then studied listener sensitivity to these acoustic features. We played the recordings to 51,065 people from 187 countries, recruited via an English-language website, who guessed whether each vocalization was infant-directed. Their intuitions were more accurate than chance, predictable in part by common sets of acoustic features and robust to the effects of linguistic relatedness between vocalizer and listener. These findings inform hypotheses of the psychological functions and evolution of human communication., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.)
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- 2022
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33. Infrequent detection of unintentional fentanyl use via urinalysis among people who regularly inject opioids in Sydney and Melbourne, Australia.
- Author
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Lam T, Barratt MJ, Bartlett M, Latimer J, Jauncey M, Hiley S, Clark N, Gerostamoulos D, Glowacki L, Roux C, Morelato M, and Nielsen S
- Subjects
- Adult, Analgesics, Opioid, Australia epidemiology, Female, Fentanyl, Heroin, Humans, Male, Urinalysis, Drug Overdose epidemiology, Opioid-Related Disorders epidemiology
- Abstract
Background and Aim: The current phase of the North American 'opioid crisis' is characterised by illicit fentanyl use; however, the presence of illicit fentanyl in Australia is unknown. This study aimed to monitor unintentional fentanyl consumption in Australia., Design: Rapid urine drug screens (UDS) paired with surveys conducted within supervised injecting facilities (SIFs) and confirmatory laboratory testing., Setting: Sydney and Melbourne, Australia., Participants: Clients who used heroin within the past 2 days (n = 911 tests, 2017-2021). Participants were demographically similar to the overall client base (median age 43, 72% male)., Measurements: UDS were conducted using BTNX Rapid Response fentanyl urine strip tests with cross-reactivity to numerous fentanyl analogues. Positive urine samples were analysed using liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry. Surveys covered past 3 day drug use and lifetime report of fentanyl in heroin., Findings: Two percent of participants reported intentional use of fentanyl, mostly through fentanyl patches. Of the 911 rapid UDS conducted, 17 (1.9%) yielded positive results. Eight of these (all from Melbourne) were not explained by survey-reported fentanyl use in the past 3 days. Of these 8 unexplained positives, confirmatory laboratory analysis was conducted on 6, with 4 deemed to be false positives, and 2 confirmed for the presence of fentanyl. This represents the first confirmation of unintended use of fentanyl type substances in this population., Conclusion: There is limited evidence of unintentional fentanyl use among people in Sydney and Melbourne, Australia who regularly inject heroin, suggesting that, currently, there is very little illicit fentanyl in Australian drug markets accessed by supervised injecting facilities attendees. This study demonstrates the feasibility of quick onsite testing to cost-effectively screen large samples for fentanyl; however, the high false positive rate emphasises the need for confirmation of positive tests through advanced analytical techniques., (© 2022 The Authors. Addiction published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society for the Study of Addiction.)
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- 2022
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34. Key individuals catalyse intergroup violence.
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Glowacki L and McDermott R
- Subjects
- Animals, Biological Evolution, Catalysis, Aggression, Violence
- Abstract
Intergroup violence is challenging to understand: why do individuals cooperate to harm members of other groups when they themselves may be killed or injured? Despite progress in understanding the evolutionary and proximate mechanisms that underlie violence, we still have little insight into the processes that lead to the emergence of coalitionary aggression. We argue that an overlooked component is the presence of individuals who have a crucial role in initiating violence. In instigating intergroup violence, these key individuals may expect to face lower costs, receive greater benefits, or garner benefits that have a greater value to them than others. Alternatively, key individuals may be motivated by individual traits such as increased boldness, propensity for aggression or exploratory behaviour. Key individuals catalyse the emergence of coalitionary violence through one of several processes including altering the costs and benefits that accrue to others, paying a greater share of the startup costs, signalling privileged knowledge, or providing coordination, among other factors. Here we integrate diverse lines of empirical research from humans and non-human animals demonstrating that inter-individual variation is an important factor in the emergence of intergroup violence. Focusing on the role of key individuals provides new insights into how and why violence emerges. This article is part of the theme issue 'Intergroup conflict across taxa'.
- Published
- 2022
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35. Are strangers just enemies you have not yet met? Group homogeneity, not intergroup relations, shapes ingroup bias in three natural groups.
- Author
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Doğan G, Glowacki L, and Rusch H
- Subjects
- Humans, Bias
- Abstract
Humans often favour ingroup members over others, a bias that drives discrimination and intergroup conflicts. Hostile relations between groups and homogeneity within groups may affect such ingroup bias. In an experiment with members of three natural groups in Ethiopia, we vary intergroup relations (neutral versus enmity) and exploit the natural variation in the homogeneity of groups (homogeneous versus heterogeneous) to identify their effect on in- and outgroup concerns. We find that ingroup bias largely manifests as positive concern for ingroup members combined with no concern for outgroup members. Enmity has no effect on ingroup bias, whereas ingroup concern is amplified in homogeneous groups. Group homogeneity, thus, is the primary driver of concerns for others in our study's context. Our results are relevant to understanding the consequences of exclusionary group identities. This article is part of the theme issue 'Intergroup conflict across taxa'.
- Published
- 2022
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36. How small-scale societies achieve large-scale cooperation.
- Author
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Glowacki L and Lew-Levy S
- Subjects
- Humans, Social Norms, Cooperative Behavior, Social Behavior
- Abstract
For most of our species' history, humans have lived in relatively small subsistence communities, often called small-scale societies. While these groups lack centralized institutions, they can and often do maintain large-scale cooperation. Here, we explore several mechanisms promoting cooperation in small-scale societies, including (a) the development of social norms that encourage prosocial behavior, (b) reciprocal exchange relationships, (c) reputation that facilitates high-cost cooperation, (d) relational wealth, and (e) risk buffering institutions. We illustrate these with ethnographic and psychological evidence from contemporary small-scale societies. We argue that these mechanisms for cooperation helped past and present small-scale communities adapt to diverse ecological and social niches., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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37. Gut microbiota and age shape susceptibility to clostridial enteritis in lorikeets under human care.
- Author
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Minich D, Madden C, Navarro MA, Glowacki L, French-Kim K, Chan W, Evans MV, Soares K, Mrofchak R, Madan R, Ballash GA, LaPerle K, Paul S, Vodovotz Y, Uzal FA, Martinez M, Hausmann J, Junge RE, and Hale VL
- Abstract
Background: Enteritis is a common cause of morbidity and mortality in lorikeets that can be challenging to diagnose and treat. In this study, we examine gut microbiota in two lorikeet flocks with enteritis (Columbus Zoo and Aquarium-CZA; Denver Zoo-DZ). Since 2012, the CZA flock has experienced repeated outbreaks of enteritis despite extensive diet, husbandry, and clinical modifications. In 2018, both CZA and DZ observed a spike in enteritis. Recent research has revealed that the gut microbiota can influence susceptibility to enteropathogens. We hypothesized that a dysbiosis, or alteration in the gut microbial community, was making some lorikeets more susceptible to enteritis, and our goal was to characterize this dysbiosis and determine the features that predicted susceptibility., Results: We employed 16S rRNA sequencing to characterize the cloacal microbiota in lorikeets (CZA n = 67, DZ n = 24) over time. We compared the microbiota of healthy lorikeets, to lorikeets with enteritis, and lorikeets susceptible to enteritis, with "susceptible" being defined as healthy birds that subsequently developed enteritis. Based on sequencing data, culture, and toxin gene detection in intestinal contents, we identified Clostridium perfringens type A (CZA and DZ) and C. colinum (CZA only) at increased relative abundances in birds with enteritis. Histopathology and immunohistochemistry further identified the presence of gram-positive bacilli and C. perfringens, respectively, in the necrotizing intestinal lesions. Finally, using Random Forests and LASSO models, we identified several features (young age and the presence of Rhodococcus fascians and Pseudomonas umsongensis) associated with susceptibility to clostridial enteritis., Conclusions: We identified C. perfringens type A and C. colinum associated with lorikeet necrohemorrhagic enteritis at CZA and DZ. Susceptibility testing of isolates lead to an updated clinical treatment plan which ultimately resolved the outbreaks at both institutions. This work provides a foundation for understanding gut microbiota features that are permissive to clostridial colonization and host factors (e.g. age, prior infection) that shape responses to infection., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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38. Toward inclusive theories of the evolution of musicality.
- Author
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Savage PE, Loui P, Tarr B, Schachner A, Glowacki L, Mithen S, and Fitch WT
- Subjects
- Biological Evolution, Humans, Adaptation, Physiological, Music
- Abstract
We compare and contrast the 60 commentaries by 109 authors on the pair of target articles by Mehr et al. and ourselves. The commentators largely reject Mehr et al.'s fundamental definition of music and their attempts to refute (1) our social bonding hypothesis, (2) byproduct hypotheses, and (3) sexual selection hypotheses for the evolution of musicality. Instead, the commentators generally support our more inclusive proposal that social bonding and credible signaling mechanisms complement one another in explaining cooperation within and competition between groups in a coevolutionary framework (albeit with some confusion regarding terminologies such as "byproduct" and "exaptation"). We discuss the proposed criticisms and extensions, with a focus on moving beyond adaptation/byproduct dichotomies and toward testing of cross-species, cross-cultural, and other empirical predictions.
- Published
- 2021
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39. Postmortem Drug Redistribution: A Compilation of Postmortem/Antemortem Drug Concentration Ratios.
- Author
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Mantinieks D, Gerostamoulos D, Glowacki L, Di Rago M, Schumann J, Woodford NW, and Drummer OH
- Subjects
- Autopsy, Forensic Toxicology, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Pharmaceutical Preparations, Postmortem Changes
- Abstract
Postmortem drug redistribution (PMR) is a well-known phenomenon in forensic toxicology with implications for medico-legal death investigations. Paired antemortem (AM) specimen and postmortem (PM) mortuary admission femoral blood drug concentrations from 811 coronial cases were used to construct a retrospective compilation of PM/AM drug concentration ratios for 42 parent drugs and metabolites. The median PM/AM ratios for all antidepressants were > 1 and consistent with PMR In contrast, the median PM/AM ratios of most benzodiazepines were < 1. The antipsychotics were varied (0.63-3.3) and suggest the mixed effects of PMR and drug instability. Amphetamines exhibited no trends (0.90-0.95) and are likely confounded by many factors. The PM/AM ratios of cardiovascular drugs, opioids and other drugs are also reported. This research represents an expansive retrospective compilation of paired AM and PM drug concentrations for many toxicologically relevant drugs. While the median PM/AM ratios demonstrate some drug-dependent trends, there was no obvious relationship between AM specimens and PM femoral blood taken at mortuary admission., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2021
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40. High Throughput Detection of 327 Drugs in Blood by LC-MS-MS with Automated Data Processing.
- Author
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Di Rago M, Pantatan S, Hargreaves M, Wong K, Mantinieks D, Kotsos A, Glowacki L, Drummer OH, and Gerostamoulos D
- Subjects
- Amphetamines, Australia, Benzodiazepines, Cannabinoids, Chromatography, Liquid, Forensic Medicine, Forensic Toxicology, Humans, Limit of Detection, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Illicit Drugs analysis, Substance Abuse Detection methods
- Abstract
The described procedure provides a rapid technique for the detection and semi-quantitation of a large number of drugs in blood. This procedure uses a minimal sample volume and employs a one-step liquid extraction and automated data processing to yield rapid turnaround times. A total of 327 of the most commonly used medicinal and illicit drugs in Australia were selected including various amphetamines, anesthetics, antidepressants, antipsychotics, anticonvulsants, benzodiazepines, beta blockers, opioid and nonopioid analgesics, stimulants, THC and a large number of synthetic cannabinoids and other novel psychoactive substances. The extracts were subject to 5-minute chromatography using a Kinetex C18 50 × 4.6 mm 2.6 μm solid-core analytical column and analyzed using a Sciex 3200 Q-TRAP MS-MS (+ ESI, MRM mode, two transitions per analyte). The method was fully validated in accordance with international guidelines. Matrix effects and extraction efficiencies were acceptable with most analytes showing > 80% response and low variation (within 25%RSD). Cannabinoids were most affected by the matrix and yielded poorest recovery values but were still detectable. Precision, accuracy, repeatability and multipoint linearity were assessed for all analytes. The method has been used in routine practice in the forensic toxicology service at the Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine in over 6000 coronial investigations using both postmortem and clinical blood specimens. This technique has greatly increased throughput, reduced turnaround times and allowed for rapid same-day analysis of results when needed. The method is routinely used in routine overnight testing with results reported to pathologists within 4 h of data acquisition. This rapid toxicological technique is used in conjunction with other investigative processes such as full-body CT imaging, review of case circumstances and medical histories to provide an efficient death investigation process., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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41. Time-Dependent Changes in THC Concentrations in Deceased Persons.
- Author
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Chu M, Rago MD, Mantinieks D, Glowacki L, Woodford NW, Gerostamoulos D, and Drummer OH
- Subjects
- Adult, Autopsy, Humans, Postmortem Changes, Dronabinol metabolism, Forensic Toxicology, Substance Abuse Detection methods
- Abstract
Changes in the concentrations of Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) in the postmortem period were investigated in a series of cases by comparing concentrations in blood taken on receipt of the body in the mortuary (admission specimen, AD) with the concentrations obtained in blood taken at autopsy some time later and also from blood specimens taken antemortem. Overall, the median THC concentration in AD blood was 13.7 ng/mL (n = 239, range LOQ-220), while the median concentration at autopsy was 13.8 ng/mL (n = 106, range LOQ-810) and 1.9 ng/mL (n = 147, range LOQ-48) antemortem. Fourteen cases had all three specimens taken from the same decedent. The corresponding AM, AD and PM median concentrations were 4.0 (range LOQ-48), 15.5 (range 4.0-176) and 4.4 ng/mL (LOQ-56), respectively. The median elapsed times from AM to AD and AD to PM were 33 and 97.5 h, respectively. In contrast, acetaminophen showed no change in blood concentration from AM to AD (6.8 and 6.0 mg/L, respectively). These data show large increases in THC concentration in the early postmortem period, followed by a decline, although the median blood concentrations at autopsy were similar to that obtained antemortem. In contrast, when blood was taken from the femoral region, subclavian and heart ventricles sites, in the same case, the THC concentrations, while variable, showed overall no significant difference. These dynamic changes reflect complex phenomenon occurring in deceased persons and will further serve to increase the uncertainty over any interpretation of postmortem THC concentrations., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The emergence of locally adaptive institutions: Insights from traditional social structures of East African pastoralists.
- Author
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Glowacki L
- Subjects
- Africa, Eastern, Animal Husbandry methods, Farmers statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Theoretical, Problem Solving, Social Behavior, Social Conditions, Social Environment, Adaptation, Psychological, Community Networks, Community-Institutional Relations, Farmers psychology, Resilience, Psychological
- Abstract
Humans inhabit the widest range of ecological and social niches of any mammal. Yet each ecological and social environment presents a set of challenges that we must solve in order to successfully inhabit it. We are able to do so by building institutions that can flexibly respond to changing circumstances. Institutions that solve adaptive challenges necessary for human sociality, such as how to resolve conflicts, find mates, and extract and distribute resources, are termed locally adaptive institutions. The design of locally adaptive institutions promotes coordination and cooperation among unrelated individuals, reflecting the constraints of the particular ecological and social challenges to which they are responsive. Institutions generally are enabled by a suite of social and psychological mechanisms, including norm compliance, self-interested design, selective imitation, and cultural group selection among others. The development of locally adaptive institutions are likely to be especially shaped by self-interested design in which agents are sensitive to the payoffs from various norms and choose to enforce and follow those which they anticipate to be most beneficial to themselves. Exogenous shocks, including the advent of material and cultural technologies, population pressures, or even group conflict can contribute to the modification of existing social institutions and the development of new social structures. Using several case examples from traditional east African pastoralist societies, I illustrate how ecological and social pressures shape the development of social norms that underlie locally adaptive social institutions and facilitate continued cooperation in the face of change at scales ranging from local to global., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Music as a coevolved system for social bonding.
- Author
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Savage PE, Loui P, Tarr B, Schachner A, Glowacki L, Mithen S, and Fitch WT
- Subjects
- Animals, Brain, Cultural Evolution, Music
- Abstract
Why do humans make music? Theories of the evolution of musicality have focused mainly on the value of music for specific adaptive contexts such as mate selection, parental care, coalition signaling, and group cohesion. Synthesizing and extending previous proposals, we argue that social bonding is an overarching function that unifies all of these theories, and that musicality enabled social bonding at larger scales than grooming and other bonding mechanisms available in ancestral primate societies. We combine cross-disciplinary evidence from archeology, anthropology, biology, musicology, psychology, and neuroscience into a unified framework that accounts for the biological and cultural evolution of music. We argue that the evolution of musicality involves gene-culture coevolution, through which proto-musical behaviors that initially arose and spread as cultural inventions had feedback effects on biological evolution because of their impact on social bonding. We emphasize the deep links between production, perception, prediction, and social reward arising from repetition, synchronization, and harmonization of rhythms and pitches, and summarize empirical evidence for these links at the levels of brain networks, physiological mechanisms, and behaviors across cultures and across species. Finally, we address potential criticisms and make testable predictions for future research, including neurobiological bases of musicality and relationships between human music, language, animal song, and other domains. The music and social bonding hypothesis provides the most comprehensive theory to date of the biological and cultural evolution of music.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Universality and diversity in human song.
- Author
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Mehr SA, Singh M, Knox D, Ketter DM, Pickens-Jones D, Atwood S, Lucas C, Jacoby N, Egner AA, Hopkins EJ, Howard RM, Hartshorne JK, Jennings MV, Simson J, Bainbridge CM, Pinker S, O'Donnell TJ, Krasnow MM, and Glowacki L
- Subjects
- Auditory Perception, Behavior, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Dancing, Humans, Infant Care, Infant, Newborn, Love, Psychoacoustics, Religion, Anthropology, Cultural, Music, Singing
- Abstract
What is universal about music, and what varies? We built a corpus of ethnographic text on musical behavior from a representative sample of the world's societies, as well as a discography of audio recordings. The ethnographic corpus reveals that music (including songs with words) appears in every society observed; that music varies along three dimensions (formality, arousal, religiosity), more within societies than across them; and that music is associated with certain behavioral contexts such as infant care, healing, dance, and love. The discography-analyzed through machine summaries, amateur and expert listener ratings, and manual transcriptions-reveals that acoustic features of songs predict their primary behavioral context; that tonality is widespread, perhaps universal; that music varies in rhythmic and melodic complexity; and that elements of melodies and rhythms found worldwide follow power laws., (Copyright © 2019, American Association for the Advancement of Science.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Identification of a thermal degradation product of CUMYL-PEGACLONE and its detection in biological samples.
- Author
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Nash C, Glowacki L, Gerostamoulos D, Pigou P, Scott T, and Kostakis C
- Subjects
- Autopsy, Designer Drugs analysis, Drug Stability, Hot Temperature, Humans, Illicit Drugs blood, Illicit Drugs urine, Limit of Detection, Tandem Mass Spectrometry methods, Cannabinoid Receptor Agonists blood, Cannabinoid Receptor Agonists urine, Cannabinoids blood, Cannabinoids urine, Substance Abuse Detection methods
- Abstract
The structural diversity of synthetic cannabinoids makes it a challenging task to have a comprehensive screening method for this class of drugs. The difficulty is increased by the fact that some synthetic cannabinoids undergo thermal decomposition during common routes of administration, such as smoking or vaping. CUMYL-PEGACLONE is a relatively new synthetic cannabinoid which has a structural variant from most other synthetic cannabinoids: a γ-carbolinone core. To investigate its thermal stability, CUMYL-PEGACLONE was heated in an oven at temperatures ranging from 200 to 350
o C, and a major thermal degradation product, N-pentyl-γ-carbolinone, was subsequently identified. Unlike some other synthetic cannabinoids, the thermal degradation product of CUMYL-PEGACLONE is not one of its known metabolites, nor were any known metabolites detected during the thermal stability experiments. The degradation product was formed in significant amounts at temperatures above 250°C, and has been detected (along with CUMYL-PEGACLONE) in case samples, including post-mortem blood and urine, and residue found at a scene., (© 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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46. Making Pastoralists Count: Geospatial Methods for the Health Surveillance of Nomadic Populations.
- Author
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Wild H, Glowacki L, Maples S, Mejía-Guevara I, Krystosik A, Bonds MH, Hiruy A, LaBeaud AD, and Barry M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Ethiopia, Female, Geographic Information Systems economics, Health Surveys, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Remote Sensing Technology, Rural Population statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires, Vaccination statistics & numerical data, Young Adult, Maternal-Child Health Services, Spatial Analysis, Transients and Migrants statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Nomadic pastoralists are among the world's hardest-to-reach and least served populations. Pastoralist communities are difficult to capture in household surveys because of factors including their high degree of mobility over remote terrain, fluid domestic arrangements, and cultural barriers. Most surveys use census-based sampling frames which do not accurately capture the demographic and health parameters of nomadic populations. As a result, pastoralists are "invisible" in population data such as the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS). By combining remote sensing and geospatial analysis, we developed a sampling strategy designed to capture the current distribution of nomadic populations. We then implemented this sampling frame to survey a population of mobile pastoralists in southwest Ethiopia, focusing on maternal and child health (MCH) indicators. Using standardized instruments from DHS questionnaires, we draw comparisons with regional and national data finding disparities with DHS data in core MCH indicators, including vaccination coverage, skilled birth attendance, and nutritional status. Our field validation demonstrates that this method is a logistically feasible alternative to conventional sampling frames and may be used at the population level. Geospatial sampling methods provide cost-affordable and logistically feasible strategies for sampling mobile populations, a crucial first step toward reaching these groups with health services.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Reasons to strike first.
- Author
-
Buckner W and Glowacki L
- Abstract
De Dreu and Gross predict that attackers will have more difficulty winning conflicts than defenders. As their analysis is presumed to capture the dynamics of decentralized conflict, we consider how their framework compares with ethnographic evidence from small-scale societies, as well as chimpanzee patterns of intergroup conflict. In these contexts, attackers have significantly more success in conflict than predicted by De Dreu and Gross's model. We discuss the possible reasons for this disparity.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Spoils division rules shape aggression between natural groups.
- Author
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Doğan G, Glowacki L, and Rusch H
- Subjects
- Adult, Competitive Behavior, Cooperative Behavior, Ethiopia, Ethnicity psychology, Games, Experimental, Humans, Male, Social Behavior, Aggression psychology, Group Processes
- Abstract
Violent intergroup conflicts cause widespread harm; yet, throughout human history, destructive hostilities occur time and time again
1,2 . Benefits that are obtainable by victorious parties include territorial expansion, deterrence and ascendency in between-group resource competition3-6 . Many of these are non-excludable goods that are available to all group members, whereas participation entails substantial individual risks and costs. Thus, a collective action problem emerges, raising the question why individuals participate in such campaigns at all7-9 . Distinguishing offensive and defensive intergroup aggression provides a partial answer: defensive aggression is adaptive under many circumstances10-14 . However, participation in offensive aggression, such as raids or wars of conquest, still requires an explanation. Here, we focus on one condition that is hypothesized to facilitate the emergence of offensive intergroup aggression: asymmetric division of a conflict's spoils may motivate those profiting from such inequality to initiate between-group aggression, even if doing so jeopardizes their group's welfare15-17 . We test this hypothesis by manipulating how benefits among victors are shared in a contest experiment among three Ethiopian societies whose relations are either peaceful or violent. Under equal sharing, between-group hostility increased contest contributions. By contrast, unequal sharing prompted offensive contribution strategies in privileged participants, whereas disadvantaged participants resorted to defensive strategies, both irrespective of group relations.- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Form and Function in Human Song.
- Author
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Mehr SA, Singh M, York H, Glowacki L, and Krasnow MM
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Auditory Perception, Cues, Judgment, Singing
- Abstract
Humans use music for a variety of social functions: we sing to accompany dance, to soothe babies, to heal illness, to communicate love, and so on. Across animal taxa, vocalization forms are shaped by their functions, including in humans. Here, we show that vocal music exhibits recurrent, distinct, and cross-culturally robust form-function relations that are detectable by listeners across the globe. In Experiment 1, internet users (n = 750) in 60 countries listened to brief excerpts of songs, rating each song's function on six dimensions (e.g., "used to soothe a baby"). Excerpts were drawn from a geographically stratified pseudorandom sample of dance songs, lullabies, healing songs, and love songs recorded in 86 mostly small-scale societies, including hunter-gatherers, pastoralists, and subsistence farmers. Experiment 1 and its analysis plan were pre-registered. Despite participants' unfamiliarity with the societies represented, the random sampling of each excerpt, their very short duration (14 s), and the enormous diversity of this music, the ratings demonstrated accurate and cross-culturally reliable inferences about song functions on the basis of song forms alone. In Experiment 2, internet users (n = 1,000) in the United States and India rated three contextual features (e.g., gender of singer) and seven musical features (e.g., melodic complexity) of each excerpt. The songs' contextual features were predictive of Experiment 1 function ratings, but musical features and the songs' actual functions explained unique variance in function ratings. These findings are consistent with the existence of universal links between form and function in vocal music., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The cultural evolution of war rituals.
- Author
-
Glowacki L
- Subjects
- Shamanism, Warfare, Ceremonial Behavior, Cultural Evolution
- Abstract
The cultural evolutionary processes outlined by Singh illuminate why ritualized behaviors aimed at controlling unseen forces and overcoming fear are common in warfare among many small-scale societies. They also suggest an explanation for the development of ritual specialists for war who are distinct from war leaders.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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