23,004 results on '"Human Experimentation"'
Search Results
2. Effect of Abutment Height on Marginal Bone Loss Around Dental Implants: A Systematic Review.
- Author
-
Amo, Fernando Suárez-López del, Romero-Bustillos, Miguel, Catena, Andrés, Galindo-Moreno, Pablo, Sánchez-Suárez, José Manuel, Sánchez, Rodrigo, and Garaicoa-Pazmino, Carlos
- Subjects
DENTAL implants ,MAXIMUM likelihood statistics ,CONFOUNDING variables ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,HUMAN experimentation - Abstract
Purpose: To analyze the influence of abutment height (AH) on marginal bone loss (MBL). Materials and Methods: A literature search was performed for human studies (RCTs, prospective and retrospective cohorts) reporting on AH and MBL. The data obtained--including clinical outcomes, treatment covariates, and patient characteristics--were analyzed. Meta-regression was performed on the effect size of the differences between the shorter and larger AHs on the MBL of each study. The estimation was done using the restricted maximum likelihood method. Results: The initial screening and full-text analysis resulted in 7,936 and 46 articles, respectively. Finally, 14 articles were included in the systematic review, reporting a total of 1,606 implants. An overall high-to-moderate risk of bias was determined among the included investigations. Meta-regression analysis revealed that AH had a significant effect on MBL (b = --1.630, P < .003), demonstrating that longer abutments were correlated with less MBL. No effects were observed for the study type (P = .607), the number of stages (P = .510), or the elapsed time (P = .491). Conclusions: The height of the abutment has a significant impact on MBL. As such, increased AH is related to less MBL. Nevertheless, the role of confounding variables remains to be studied and determined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Future locations prediction with multi-graph attention networks based on spatial–temporal LSTM framework.
- Author
-
Li, Zhao-Yang and Shao, Xin-Hui
- Subjects
- *
LOCATION-based services , *MULTIGRAPH , *TIME series analysis , *HUMAN experimentation , *FORECASTING - Abstract
Studies on human mobility from abundant trajectory data have become more and more popular with the development of location-based services. Prediction for locations people may visit in the future is a significant task, helping to make visiting recommendations and manage traffic conditions. Different from other time series prediction tasks, location prediction is temporally dependent as well as spatial-aware. In this paper, we propose a novel multi-graph attention network with sequence-to-sequence structures based on spatial–temporal long short-term memory to predict future locations. Specifically, we build three graphs with movements in geographic space and apply graph attention networks to explore the latent spatial associations among geographic regions. Additionally, we come up with spatial–temporal long short-term memory and use it to establish a sequence-to-sequence framework, which collects the temporal dependence as well as some spatial information from history trajectories. The predictions of future location are finally made by aggregating spatial–temporal contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Intracranial EEGs evidenced visual object processing in the human medial temporal lobe subregions.
- Author
-
Qi, Zihui, Xiong, Hui, Zhuo, Junjie, Cao, Dan, Liu, Hao, Shi, Weiyang, Lang, Yongcui, Liu, Yaoling, Zhang, Guangming, and Jiang, Tianzi
- Subjects
- *
VISUAL memory , *TEMPORAL lobe , *HIPPOCAMPUS (Brain) , *HUMAN experimentation , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY - Abstract
• Neural mechanism of object encoding in MTL revealed by human intracranial EEGs. • PRC showed strongest broad-gamma activation ∼100 ms in response to object stimuli. • Found strong bidirectional low-frequency interactions of PRC with PHC and HPC. • Findings support the PRC-HPC-ventral object pathway. The perirhinal cortex (PRC) and parahippocampal cortex (PHC) are core regions along the visual dual-stream. The specific functional roles of the PRC and PHC and their interactions with the downstream hippocampus cortex (HPC) are crucial for understanding visual memory. Our research used human intracranial EEGs to study the neural mechanism of the PRC, PHC, and HPC in visual object encoding. Single-regional function analyses found evidence that the PRC, PHC, and HPC are activated ∼100 ms within the broad-gamma band and that the PRC was more strongly activated than either the PHC or the HPC after an object stimulus. Inter-regional analyses showed strong bidirectional interactions of the PRC with both the PHC and HPC in the low-frequency band, whereas the interactions between the PHC and HPC were not significant. These findings demonstrated the core role of the PRC in encoding visual object information and supported the hypothesis of PRC-HPC-ventral object pathway. The recruitment of the PHC and its interaction with the PRC in visual object encoding also provide new insights beyond the traditional dorsal-stream hypothesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A streamlined culturomics case study for the human gut microbiota research.
- Author
-
Park, Hyunjoon, Yeo, Soyoung, Ryu, Chang Beom, and Huh, Chul Sung
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN microbiota , *GUT microbiome , *MICROBIAL diversity , *HUMAN experimentation , *RIBOSOMAL RNA , *SPECIES - Abstract
Bacterial culturomics is a set of techniques to isolate and identify live bacteria from complex microbial ecosystems. Despite its potential to revolutionize microbiome research, bacterial culturomics has significant challenges when applied to human gut microbiome studies due to its labor-intensive nature. Therefore, we established a streamlined culturomics approach with minimal culture conditions for stool sample preincubation. We evaluated the suitability of non-selective medium candidates for maintaining microbial diversity during a 30-day incubation period based on 16S rRNA gene amplicon analysis. Subsequently, we applied four culture conditions (two preincubation media under an aerobic/anaerobic atmosphere) to isolate gut bacteria on a large scale from eight stool samples of healthy humans. We identified 8141 isolates, classified into 263 bacterial species, including 12 novel species candidates. Our analysis of cultivation efficiency revealed that seven days of aerobic and ten days of anaerobic incubation captured approximately 91% and 95% of the identified species within each condition, respectively, with a synergistic effect confirmed when selected preincubation media were combined. Moreover, our culturomics findings expanded the coverage of gut microbial diversity compared to 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing results. In conclusion, this study demonstrated the potential of a streamlined culturomics approach for the efficient isolation of gut bacteria from human stool samples. This approach might pave the way for the broader adoption of culturomics in human gut microbiome studies, ultimately leading to a more comprehensive understanding of this complex microbial ecosystem. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Principles of cortical areas and their implications for neuroimaging.
- Author
-
Petersen, Steven E., Seitzman, Benjamin A., Nelson, Steven M., Wig, Gagan S., and Gordon, Evan M.
- Subjects
- *
CEREBRAL cortex , *HUMAN experimentation , *BRAIN imaging , *NEUROBIOLOGY , *COGNITION - Abstract
Cortical organization should constrain the study of how the brain performs behavior and cognition. A fundamental concept in cortical organization is that of arealization: that the cortex is parceled into discrete areas. In part one of this report, we review how non-human animal studies have illuminated principles of cortical arealization by revealing: (1) what defines a cortical area, (2) how cortical areas are formed, (3) how cortical areas interact with one another, and (4) what "computations" or "functions" areas perform. In part two, we discuss how these principles apply to neuroimaging research. In doing so, we highlight several examples where the commonly accepted interpretation of neuroimaging observations requires assumptions that violate the principles of arealization, including nonstationary areas that move on short time scales, large-scale gradients as organizing features, and cortical areas with singular functionality that perfectly map psychological constructs. Our belief is that principles of neurobiology should strongly guide the nature of computational explanations. Petersen et al. review fundamental principles of the areal organization of the cerebral cortex. They discuss the definition, formation, interactions, and functions of cortical areas, and they identify ways in which the principles of arealization should guide human neuroimaging research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Examining Retention Sentiments and Attrition Among Active Duty Army Medical Officers.
- Author
-
Vie, Loryana L, Whittaker, Kerry S, Lathrop, Adam D, and Hawkins, Jake N
- Subjects
- *
MILITARY nurses , *ARMY officers , *HUMAN experimentation , *MILITARY service , *MILITARY personnel - Abstract
Introduction Providing quality care and maintaining exceptional medical providers are important priorities for military medicine. The present study examines the association between retention sentiments and voluntary separation from army service among Army Medical Corps and Nurse Corps Officers. Retention sentiments are derived from the Department of the Army Career Engagement Survey, a voluntary survey that Active Duty Soldiers complete annually. Materials and Methods The sample included active Army officers in the Medical Corps (n = 1198) and Nurse Corps (n = 1016) who completed the Department of the Army Career Engagement Survey between May 06, 2020 and November 02, 2023, passed the embedded attention check, and said their responses could be used for research purposes. The most frequently cited "Extremely Important" reasons to leave the army were identified within each sample. Binomial logistic regression was used to examine the likelihood of separating from army service based on the top five reasons to leave the Army as identified on the Department of the Army Career Engagement Survey. This study was determined by Exempt Human Subjects Research. Results An examination of the factors most frequently endorsed as an "Extremely Important" reason to leave the Army revealed that "Effects of deployments on Family or personal relationships" and "Impact of military service on my Family's well-being" were among the five most cited "Extremely Important" reasons to leave the army within both the Medical Corps and the Nurse Corps samples. When examined together (i.e. summed), the Composite Leave Score was associated with a significantly greater odds of separating from army service in each sample. Specifically, each additional top five "Extremely Important" leave reason identified was associated with a 38% greater odds of separating from army service within the Medical Corps and 50% greater odds of separating from army service within the Nurse Corps. Conclusions The current study highlights unique retention concerns among army medical providers in the Medical Corps and Nurse Corps. Additionally, this study ties medical provider sentiments to subsequent voluntary separation from the army. These findings can help army senior leaders evaluate, draft, and revise policy aimed at increasing retention among army medical providers, and increasing access to quality healthcare for service members and their families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Distribution of TRPC5 in the human lung: A study in body donors.
- Author
-
UMLAUF, FREDERIK, DIEBOLT, COLINE M., ENGLISCH, COLYA N., FLOCKERZI, FIDELIS, and TSCHERNIG, THOMAS
- Subjects
- *
TRP channels , *HEMATOXYLIN & eosin staining , *ION channels , *ALVEOLAR macrophages , *HUMAN experimentation - Abstract
Transient receptor potential channel canonical 5 (TRPC5) is a non-selective ion channel; ion influx through TRPC5 causes activation of downstream signaling pathways. In addition, TRPC5 has been identified as having a potential role in pathological processes, particularly in diseases caused by cellular cation homeostasis dysregulation, such as bronchial asthma or pulmonary hypertension. However, the expression and distribution of TRPC5 in the human lung remain unclear. To date, TRPC5 has only been detected in a few cell types in the human lung, such as airway, pulmonary venous and arterial smooth muscle cells. The present study therefore aimed to investigate the protein expression of TRPC5 in the human lung and to evaluate its histological distribution. Human lung samples were obtained from six preserved body donors. After processing, both hematoxylin & eosin staining, as well as immunohistochemistry were performed. Microscopic analysis revealed medium to strong immunostaining signals in all lung structures examined, including the pleura, pulmonary arteries and veins, bronchioles, alveolar septa, type 1 and 2 pneumocytes, as well as alveolar macrophages. Current research suggests that TRPC5 may be involved in various pathological processes in the human lung and some pharmacological compounds have already been identified that affect the function of TRPC5. Therefore, TRPC5 may present a novel drug target for therapeutic intervention in various lung diseases. The results of the present study indicate that the TRPC5 protein is expressed in all examined histological structures of the human lung. These findings suggest that TRPC5 may be more important for physiological cell function and pathophysiological cell dysfunction in the lung than is currently known. Further research is needed to explore the role and therapeutic target potential of TRPC5 in the human lung. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Analysis of palmprints and soleprints of black-tufted marmosets (Callithrix penicillata): are there similarities to humans?
- Author
-
Herter, Júlia Vieira, de Barros, Rodrigo Meneses, Silva Santana, Marcelo Ismar, Tavares, Maria Clotilde Henriques, de Castro, Márcio Botelho, Gomes, Paula Damasceno, and Hirano, Líria Queiroz Luz
- Subjects
DERMATOGLYPHICS ,MARMOSETS ,PRIMATES ,BIOMETRY ,HUMAN experimentation - Abstract
Friction ridges are important and unique biometric features that have been studied in fingerprint science since antiquity and used for human identification. This study aimed to analyze palmprints and soleprints of Callithrix penicillata, including the description of flexion creases, regions, minutiae classification, and delta counting, in order to evaluate the uniqueness of these data and feasibility of using this information as an identification method. Palmprints and footprints were collected using commercial fingerprint ink on A4 size paper. Following image digitalization using the GIMP (2.10.14) image editing program, regions and flexion creases were identified. A total of 600 minutiae were classified in females (288 palms and 312 soles) and 732 in males (360 palms and 372 soles), and all deltas were counted. It was possible to identify three main inconstant flexion creases, in both palmprints and soleprints, with different distribution and orientation when compared to those in humans. Less variety in the types of minutiae and differences in the distribution of deltas were found when compared to human studies. In addition, the hypothesis of non-coincident characteristics in each sample was confirmed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Evaluating research ethics committees in Vietnam and Laos: Results of a validated self-assessment tool.
- Author
-
Sattah, Nathan Gabriel, D'Anniballe, Vincent, Le, Hoang Tu, Le, Luyen Thi, Le, Thanh Ngoc, Vu, Thom Thi, Louangpradith, Viengsakhone, and Lee, Walter T.
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION ethics , *HUMAN experimentation , *RESEARCH ethics , *RESEARCH protocols , *STANDARD operating procedure - Abstract
Background: There is an increase in human subject research in developing countries and conducting them in an ethical manner depends on the research ethics oversight in these countries. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the operational, financial, and educational characteristics of research ethics committees (RECs) at institutions in Vietnam and Laos. Methods: A validated self-assessment tool designed to assess nine major characteristics of RECs was translated into Vietnamese and Laotian. The translated surveys were delivered to and completed by representatives from RECs at institutions in Vietnam and Laos. The surveys were collected, translated back into English, and scored. The data was analyzed to identify potential areas of strength and areas for improvement. Results: The mean survey score for the 19 RECs surveyed was 165.3 out of a maximum of 200 points with a standard deviation of 22.9. Committees scored the highest in the review of specific protocol items (95.6%), submission arrangements and materials (89.5%), and the policies referring to review procedures (85.6%) domains. RECs scored the lowest in the resources domain (65.5%), with only 26.3% of committees having an annual budget. Nearly all RECs have standard operating procedures (94.7%) and policies for disclosing conflicts of interest (89.5%). Most committees use prior ethics training as a criterion to select REC chairs (78.9%) and members (73.7%), with the majority of committees requiring a training course in ethics (76.5%). 68.4% of committees have continuing education in ethics for members and only 42.1% of committees have a budget for member training. Conclusion: This study demonstrated that RECs in Vietnam and Laos have strong foundational review processes for research protocols. Important areas of improvement include improved institutional oversight, financial and administrative resources, and the continued ethics education for current committee members. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Vulnerability in research ethics: A call for assessing vulnerability and implementing protections.
- Author
-
Findley, Michael G., Ghosn, Faten, and Lowe, Sara J.
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN experimentation , *RESEARCH ethics , *MEDICAL sciences , *PREGNANT women , *RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
Ethics standards reference the need for special consideration of vulnerable populations, such as pregnant women, incarcerated individuals, and minors. The concept of vulnerability is poorly conceptualized in the medical sciences where it originated, and its application to the social sciences is even more challenging. Social science researchers may unwittingly fail to appreciate preexisting vulnerabilities and indeed may be responsible for inducing new research-related vulnerability. In this paper, we present the first comprehensive coding of country-level vulnerability designations. Specifically, we coded all 355 official documents governing social/behavioral human subjects research for the 107 countries with such regulations and identified 68 distinct vulnerability categories. The data reveal substantial regional variation, overemphasis of categories derived from medical sciences, neglect of critical categories such as displacement, and likely heterogeneity within and across groups. The article provides a conceptual framework that shifts the problem away from static, enumerated categories toward emphasis on research-induced vulnerability. Based on our conceptualization and coding, we present a framework for assessing vulnerability and implementing appropriate protections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The Effect of Communicating AI Confidence on Human Decision Making When Performing a Binary Decision Task.
- Author
-
Ishizu, Nanami, Yeoh, Wen Liang, Okumura, Hiroshi, and Fukuda, Osamu
- Subjects
JUDGMENT (Psychology) ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,SOCIAL interaction ,DECISION making ,HUMAN experimentation - Abstract
In this study, we experimentally analyzed whether people can perceive the accuracy or smartness of AI judgments, and whether the judgment accuracy of AI and the level of confidence in those judgments affect people's decision-making. The results showed that people may perceive an AI's smartness even when it only presents information on the results of its judgments. The results also suggest that AI accuracy and confidence affect human decision-making, and that the magnitude of the effect of AI confidence varies with AI accuracy. We also found that when a person's ability to make a decision is less than or equal to the AI's ability to make a decision, the human performance in a binary decision task improves regardless of AI accuracy. The results obtained in this study are similar in some respects to relationships in which people make decisions while interacting, and the findings from research on human interactions may apply to the research and development of human–AI interactions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Towards comparable quality-assured Azure Kinect body tracking results in a study setting—Influence of light.
- Author
-
Büker, Linda, Hackbarth, Michel, Quinten, Vincent, Hein, Andreas, and Hellmers, Sandra
- Subjects
- *
MEASUREMENT errors , *HUMAN experimentation , *MEDIAN (Mathematics) , *BATHYMETRY , *KINECT (Motion sensor) - Abstract
Quality assurance in research helps to ensure reliability and comparable results within a study. This includes reliable measurement equipment and data-processing. The Azure Kinect DK is a popular sensor used in studies with human subjects that tracks numerous joint positions with the Azure Kinect Body Tracking SDK. Prior experiments in literature indicate that light might influence the results of the body tracking. As similar light conditions are not always given in study protocols, the impact needs to be analyzed to ensure comparable results. We ran two experiments, one with four different light conditions and one with repeated measures of similar light conditions, and compared the results by calculating the random error of depth measurement, the mean distance error of the detected joint positions, and the distance between left and right ankle. The results showed that recordings with similar light conditions produce comparable results, with a maximum difference in the median value of mean distance error of 0.06 mm, while different light conditions result in inconsistent outcomes with a difference in the median value of mean distance error of up to 0.35 mm. Therefore, light might have an influence on the Azure Kinect and its body tracking. Especially additional infrared light appears to have a negative impact on the results. Therefore, we recommend recording various videos in a study under similar light conditions whenever possible, and avoiding additional sources of infrared light. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. An integrative structural study of the human full-length RAD52 at 2.2 Å resolution.
- Author
-
Balboni, Beatrice, Marotta, Roberto, Rinaldi, Francesco, Milordini, Giulia, Varignani, Giulia, Girotto, Stefania, and Cavalli, Andrea
- Subjects
- *
DRUG discovery , *DNA-binding proteins , *ANTINEOPLASTIC agents , *HUMAN experimentation , *HYDRATION - Abstract
Human RAD52 (RAD52) is a DNA-binding protein involved in many DNA repair mechanisms and genomic stability maintenance. In the last few years, this protein was discovered to be a promising novel pharmacological target for anticancer strategies. Although the interest in RAD52 has exponentially grown in the previous decade, most information about its structure and mechanism still needs to be elucidated. Here, we report the 2.2 Å resolution cryo-EM reconstruction of the full-length RAD52 (FL-RAD52) protein. This allows us to describe the hydration shell of the N-terminal region of FL-RAD52, which is structured in an undecamer ring. Water molecules coordinate with protein residues to promote stabilization inside and among the protomers and within the inner DNA binding cleft to drive protein-DNA recognition. Additionally, through a multidisciplinary approach involving SEC-SAXS and computational methods, we comprehensively describe the highly flexible and dynamic organization of the C-terminal portion of FL-RAD52. This work discloses unprecedented structural details on the FL-RAD52, which will be critical for characterizing its mechanism of action and inhibitor development, particularly in the context of novel approaches to synthetic lethality and anticancer drug discovery. A cryo-EM reconstruction with 2.2 Å resolution of the full-length RAD52 protein highlights the hydration shell of the DNA-binding region and the highly flexible C-terminal portion, obtained by combining SEC-SAXS and computational methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Validation of conductivity tensor imaging against diffusion tensor magnetic resonance electrical impedance tomography.
- Author
-
Sajib, S. Z. K., Chauhan, M., Sahu, S., Boakye, E., and Sadleir, R. J.
- Subjects
- *
DIFFUSION tensor imaging , *ELECTRICAL impedance tomography , *IONIC mobility , *HUMAN experimentation , *WHITE matter (Nerve tissue) - Abstract
Diffusion tensor magnetic resonance electrical impedance tomography (DT-MREIT) and electrodeless conductivity tensor imaging (CTI) are two emerging modalities that can quantify low-frequency tissue anisotropic conductivity properties by assuming similar properties underlie ionic mobility and water diffusion. While both methods have potential applications to estimating neuro-modulation fields or formulating forward models used for electrical source imaging, a direct comparison of the two modalities has not yet been performed in-vitro or in-vivo. Therefore, the aim of this study was to test the equivalence of these two modalities. We scanned a tissue phantom and the head of human subject using DT-MREIT and CTI protocols and reconstructed conductivity tensor and effective low frequency conductivities. We found both gray and white matter conductivities recovered by each technique were equivalent within 0.05 S/m. Both DT-MREIT and CTI require multiple processing steps, and we further assess the effects of each factor on reconstructions and evaluate the extent to which different measurement mechanisms potentially cause discrepancies between the two methods. Finally, we discuss the implications for spectral models of measuring conductivity using these techniques. The study further establishes the credibility of CTI as an electrodeless non-invasive method of measuring low frequency conductivity properties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Cumulative adversity and survival in the wild.
- Author
-
Ortiz‐Ross, Xochitl and Blumstein, Daniel T.
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN experimentation , *ADULTS , *HYPOTHESIS - Abstract
Protecting populations contending with co‐occurring stressors requires a better understanding of how multiple early‐life stressors affect the fitness of natural systems. However, the complexity of such research has limited its advancement and prevented us from answering new questions. In human studies, cumulative risk models predict adult health risk based on early adversity exposure. We apply a similar framework in wild yellow‐bellied marmots (Marmota flaviventer). We tested cumulative adversity indices (CAIs) across different adversity types and time windows. All CAIs were associated with decreased pup survival and were well supported. Moderate and acute, but not standardized CAIs were associated with decreased lifespan, supporting the cumulative stress hypothesis and the endurance of early adversity. Multivariate models showed that differences in lifespan were driven by weaning date, precipitation, and maternal loss, but they performed poorly compared with CAI models. We highlight the development, utility, and insights of CAI approaches for ecology and conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Auditory Noise Facilitates Lower Visual Reaction Times in Humans.
- Author
-
Pérez-Pacheco, Argelia, Rodríguez Morales, Fernando Yael, Misaghian, Khashayar, Faubert, Jocelyn, and Lugo Arce, Jesus Eduardo
- Subjects
- *
STOCHASTIC resonance , *HUMAN experimentation , *SIGNAL detection , *TASK performance , *NERVOUS system , *REACTION time - Abstract
Simple Summary: Noise can positively and negatively affect the systems it interacts with. When the right amount of noise is added to a weak signal, it can make it easier to detect, a phenomenon known as stochastic resonance. Our research focused on applying noise to improve human reaction times. We observed a significant decrease in the reaction times after placing subjects in the beneficial noise branch close to the optimal point. These findings suggest a novel approach to enhancing human performance in tasks that require faster reaction times, such as sports. Noise is commonly seen as a disturbance but can influence any system it interacts with. This influence may not always be desirable, but sometimes it can improve the system's performance. For example, stochastic resonance is a phenomenon where adding the right amount of noise to a weak signal makes it easier to detect. This is known as sub-threshold detection. This sub-threshold detection's natural fingerprint is the fact that the threshold values follow an inverse U-shaped curve as the noise intensity increases. The minimum threshold value is the point of maximum sensitivity and represents the optimal point that divides the dynamics in two. Below that point, we can find the beneficial noise branch, where the noise can facilitate better detection. Above that point, the common detrimental noise concept can be found: adding noise hinders signal detection. The nervous system controls the movements and bodily functions in the human body. By reducing the sensory thresholds, we can improve the balance of these functions. Additionally, researchers have wondered if noise could be applied to different senses or motor mechanisms to enhance our abilities. In this work, noise is used to improve human reaction times. We tested the hypothesis that visual reaction times decrease significantly when the subject's perception is in the beneficial noise branch and closer to the optimal point than outside of this condition. Auditory noise was introduced in 101 human subjects using an interface capable of searching for the right amount of noise to place the subject in the beneficial noise branch close to the optimal point. When comparing the results, the reaction times decreased when the subjects were at the optimal point compared to when the subjects were outside of such conditions. These results reveal the possibility of using this approach to enhance human performance in tasks requiring faster reaction times, such as sports. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Neuroprotective and Neurite Outgrowth Stimulating Effects of New Low-Basicity 5-HT7 Receptor Agonists: In Vitro Study in Human Neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y Cells.
- Author
-
Jakubowska, Klaudia, Hogendorf, Adam S., Gołda, Sławomir, and Jantas, Danuta
- Subjects
- *
SEROTONIN receptors , *NEUROBLASTOMA , *NEUROPROTECTIVE agents , *HUMAN experimentation , *CELL culture , *TRETINOIN - Abstract
There is some evidence that the serotonin receptor subtype 7 (5-HT7) could be new therapeutic target for neuroprotection. The aim of this study was to compare the neuroprotective and neurite outgrowth potential of new 5-HT7 receptor agonists (AH-494, AGH-238, AGH-194) with 5-CT (5-carboxyamidotryptamine) in human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells. The results revealed that 5-HT7 mRNA expression was significantly higher in retinoic acid (RA)-differentiated cells when compared to undifferentiated ones and it was higher in cell cultured in neuroblastoma experimental medium (DMEM) compared to those placed in neuronal (NB) medium. Furthermore, the safety profile of compounds was favorable for all tested compounds at concentration used for neuroprotection evaluation (up to 1 μM), whereas at higher concentrations (above 10 μM) the one of the tested compounds, AGH-194 appeared to be cytotoxic. While we observed relatively modest protective effects of 5-CT and AH-494 in UN-SH-SY5Y cells cultured in DMEM, in UN-SH-SY5Y cells cultured in NB medium we found a significant reduction of H2O2-evoked cell damage by all tested 5-HT7 agonists. However, 5-HT7-mediated neuroprotection was not associated with inhibition of caspase-3 activity and was not observed in RA-SH-SY5Y cells exposed to H2O2. Furthermore, none of the tested 5-HT7 agonists altered the damage induced by 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA), 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium ion (MPP +) and doxorubicin (Dox) in UN- and RA-SH-SY5Y cells cultured in NB. Finally we showed a stimulating effect of AH-494 and AGH-194 on neurite outgrowth. The obtained results provide insight into neuroprotective and neurite outgrowth potential of new 5-HT7 agonists. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Osseointegration of minimally invasive sacroiliac joint fixation implants—A human retrieval study.
- Author
-
Randers, Engelke, Kibsgård, Thomas, Nogueira, Liebert P., Kjensjord, Trygve, Röhrl, Stephan M., Nordsletten, Lars, and Stuge, Britt
- Subjects
- *
SACROILIAC joint , *OSSEOINTEGRATION , *REOPERATION , *HUMAN experimentation , *JOINT pain , *OSSEOINTEGRATED dental implants - Abstract
Minimally invasive sacroiliac joint fusion has become increasingly prevalent and is described to reduce pain and improve function. In some patients, pain can recur several months after primary surgery. Lack of early implant osseointegration might be a cause of pain and hence an indication for revision surgery. Triangular titanium implants are the most documented implant for minimally invasive sacroiliac joint fusion. There is, however, no knowledge of how triangular titanium implants osseointegrate in humans and whether fusion is induced over the sacroiliac joint. During planned revision surgery due to recurrent pain, six triangular titanium implants were retrieved from six different patients at median 9 months from primary surgery. All six implants were scanned using microcomputed tomography. The presence or absence of bone in‐growth, on‐growth, and through‐growth of the implants was evaluated as an indication of implant osseointegration. Three of six implants showed no or minor signs of osseointegration. Of the three remaining implants, one showed partial osseointegration and two implants showed high degrees of osseointegration. This study showed that triangular titanium implants can osseointegrate into host bone in humans. When osseointegration occurs, triangular titanium implants can give fusion across the sacroiliac joint. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The causal structure and computational value of narratives.
- Author
-
Chen, Janice and Bornstein, Aaron M.
- Subjects
- *
REINFORCEMENT learning , *BRAIN imaging , *CLASS actions , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *HUMAN experimentation , *EPISODIC memory - Abstract
Naturalistic stimuli used in modern human neuroscience research are often narratives, but there has been limited discussion of a core property of these narratives: causal structure. Causal structure of narratives has a powerful impact on episodic memory, and emerging evidence suggests that causal variables play a role in the activity of brain systems during narrative encoding and retrieval. Consideration of how humans identify and use causal information in narratives may inform studies and computational models of the neural mechanisms that enable organisms to link actions and outcomes. Narrative schema may be especially valuable for improving value-guided learning and decision-making by enabling efficient credit assignment in complex, high-dimensional state spaces like those encountered in natural environments. Many human behavioral and brain imaging studies have used narratively structured stimuli (e.g., written, audio, or audiovisual stories) to better emulate real-world experience in the laboratory. However, narratives are a special class of real-world experience, largely defined by their causal connections across time. Much contemporary neuroscience research does not consider this key property. We review behavioral and neuroscientific work that speaks to how causal structure shapes comprehension of and memory for narratives. We further draw connections between this work and reinforcement learning, highlighting how narratives help link causes to outcomes in complex environments. By incorporating the plausibility of causal connections between classes of actions and outcomes, reinforcement learning models may become more ecologically valid, while simultaneously elucidating the value of narratives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Boosting Healthiness Exposure in Category-Constrained Meal Recommendation Using Nutritional Standards.
- Author
-
MING LI, LIN LI, XIAOHUI TAO, ZHONGWEI XIE, QING XIE, and JINGLING YUAN
- Subjects
- *
FOOD standards , *RECOMMENDER systems , *DATA analysis , *MEALS , *HUMAN experimentation , *APPETIZERS - Abstract
Food computing, a newly emerging topic, is closely linked to human life through computational methodologies. Meal recommendation, a food-related study about human health, aims to provide users a meal with courses constrained from specific categories (e.g., appetizers, main dishes) that can be enjoyed as a service. Historical interaction data, important user information, is often used by existing models to learn user preferences. However, if a user's preferences favor less healthy meals, the model will follow that preference and make similar recommendations, potentially negatively impacting the user's long-term health. This emphasizes the necessity for health-oriented and responsible meal recommendation systems. In this article, we propose a healthiness-aware and category-wise meal recommendation model called CateRec, which boosts healthiness exposure by using nutritional standards as knowledge to guide the model training. Two fundamental questions are raised and answered: (1) How can the healthiness of meals be evaluated? Two well-known nutritional standards from the World Health Organization and the United Kingdom Food Standards Agency are used to calculate the healthiness score of the meal. (2) How can the model training be guided in a health-oriented manner? We construct category-wise personalization partial rankings and category-wise healthiness partial rankings, and theoretically analyze that they meet the necessary properties and assumptions required to be trained by the maximum posterior estimator under Bayesian probability. The data analysis confirms the existence of user preferences leaning towards less healthy meals in two public datasets. A comprehensive experiment demonstrates that our CateRec effectively boosts healthiness exposure in terms of mean healthiness score and ranking exposure while being comparable to the state-of-the-art model in terms of recommendation accuracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Annotation-Free Human Sketch Quality Assessment.
- Author
-
Yang, Lan, Pang, Kaiyue, Zhang, Honggang, and Song, Yi-Zhe
- Subjects
- *
DUAL-task paradigm , *HUMAN beings , *HUMAN experimentation - Abstract
As lovely as bunnies are, your sketched version would probably not do them justice (Fig. 1). This paper recognises this very problem and studies sketch quality assessment for the first time—letting you find these badly drawn ones. Our key discovery lies in exploiting the magnitude ( L 2 norm) of a sketch feature as a quantitative quality metric. We propose Geometry-Aware Classification Layer (GACL), a generic method that makes feature-magnitude-as-quality-metric possible and importantly does it without the need for specific quality annotations from humans. GACL sees feature magnitude and recognisability learning as a dual task, which can be simultaneously optimised under a neat cross-entropy classification loss with theoretic guarantee. This gives GACL a nice geometric interpretation (the better the quality, the easier the recognition), and makes it agnostic to both network architecture changes and the underlying sketch representation. Through a large scale human study of 160,000 trials, we confirm the agreement between our GACL-induced metric and human quality perception. We further demonstrate how such a quality assessment capability can for the first time enable three practical sketch applications. Interestingly, we show GACL not only works on abstract visual representations such as sketch but also extends well to natural images on the problem of image quality assessment (IQA). Last but not least, we spell out the general properties of GACL as general-purpose data re-weighting strategy and demonstrate its applications in vertical problems such as noisy label cleansing. Code will be made publicly available at https://github.com/yanglan0225/SketchX-Quantifying-Sketch-Quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Practitioners' expectations on automated release note generation techniques.
- Author
-
Sumana Nath, Sristy and Roy, Banani
- Subjects
- *
COMPUTER software development , *COMPUTER software quality control , *RESEARCH personnel , *PROJECT managers , *HUMAN experimentation - Abstract
The software development life cycle relies heavily on the software release note, a crucial document. Various practitioners, including project managers and clients, benefit from release notes as they provide an overview of the latest software release. However, the manual generation of release notes is a time‐consuming and stressful task. Researchers have recently proposed automated techniques to generate release notes, saving developers' time and enhancing their understanding of software projects. Unfortunately, the adoption of these tools in practice remains limited. To address this gap, we have taken steps to understand the expectations and requirements of practitioners regarding release note generation techniques before implementing new automated approaches. Consequently, our approach involves two main stages: First, we conduct a comprehensive review of the relevant literature and analyze existing release notes from GitHub repositories to gain insights into the current practices. Second, we conduct an online survey study to gather input from practitioners and understand their expectations regarding release notes. We have reviewed 16 papers related to release notes and explored 3347 release notes from 21 GitHub repositories. Our analysis revealed key artifacts present in release note contents, including issues (29%), pull requests (32%), commits (19%), and common vulnerabilities and exposures (CVE) issues (6%). Additionally, we conducted a survey study involving 32 professionals to understand the essential information that should be included in release notes based on users' roles. For instance, project managers were more interested in learning about new features rather than less critical bug fixes. Furthermore, we identified gaps in existing systems and essential factors to consider when implementing release notes techniques in software engineering. The insights gained from our study can guide future research directions and assist practitioners in generating release notes with relevant content, thus improving the overall quality of documentation in software development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Longitudinal Screening for Oral High-Risk Non-HPV16 and Non-HPV18 Strains of Human Papillomavirus Reveals Increasing Prevalence among Adult and Pediatric Biorepository Samples: A Pilot Study.
- Author
-
Jacobs, Jordan, Chon, Eugene, and Kingsley, Karl
- Subjects
HUMAN papillomavirus ,HUMAN papillomavirus vaccines ,MEDICAL screening ,HUMAN experimentation ,SALIVA - Abstract
Most high-risk oral human papillomavirus research has focused on prevalent HPV16 and HPV18, with fewer studies focused on other high-risk strains incorporated into the nine-valent HPV vaccine. Therefore, the objective of this study was to determine the oral prevalence of non-HPV16 and non-HPV18 high-risk strains. A total of n = 251 existing biorepository saliva samples were screened using validated primers and qPCR. A total of n = 72 samples tested positive for HPV, including HPV31, HPV33, HPV35, HPV52, and HPV58. In addition, there were also significant increases in the prevalence of these high-risk strains (2011–2014, 21.3%) following the nine-valent HPV vaccine's introduction (2015–2019, 36.2%). However, the distribution of HPV-positive samples was nearly equal among males and females (52.8%, 47.2%, respectively, p = 0.5485), although the majority (66.7%) of the HPV-positive samples were within the HPV vaccination age (11 to 26 years) or catch-up range (27 to 45 years). These data demonstrated that the prevalence of high-risk oral HPV may be higher than anticipated, highly concentrated among patients within the recommended vaccination age range, and may be increasing over time—providing new evidence and support for the nine-valent HPV vaccine that covers these additional high-risk HPV strains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Evaluation in Neural Style Transfer: A Review.
- Author
-
Ioannou, Eleftherios and Maddock, Steve
- Subjects
- *
LANDSCAPE assessment , *EVALUATION methodology , *VIDEO processing , *HUMAN experimentation , *VIDEO compression - Abstract
The field of neural style transfer (NST) has witnessed remarkable progress in the past few years, with approaches being able to synthesize artistic and photorealistic images and videos of exceptional quality. To evaluate such results, a diverse landscape of evaluation methods and metrics is used, including authors' opinions based on side‐by‐side comparisons, human evaluation studies that quantify the subjective judgements of participants, and a multitude of quantitative computational metrics which objectively assess the different aspects of an algorithm's performance. However, there is no consensus regarding the most suitable and effective evaluation procedure that can guarantee the reliability of the results. In this review, we provide an in‐depth analysis of existing evaluation techniques, identify the inconsistencies and limitations of current evaluation methods, and give recommendations for standardized evaluation practices. We believe that the development of a robust evaluation framework will not only enable more meaningful and fairer comparisons among NST methods but will also enhance the comprehension and interpretation of research findings in the field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. A brief chronicle of research on human pluripotent stem cells.
- Author
-
Pera, Martin F.
- Subjects
- *
PLURIPOTENT stem cells , *HUMAN stem cells , *SOMATIC cell nuclear transfer , *CANCER cell culture , *HUMAN experimentation , *DRUG toxicity , *FUNCTIONAL genomics - Abstract
Today, human pluripotent stem cell technologies find widespread application across biomedical research, as models for early human development, as platforms for functional human genomics, as tools for the study of disease, drug screening and toxicology, and as a renewable source of cellular therapeutics for a range of intractable diseases. The foundations of this human pluripotent stem cell revolution rest on advances in a wide range of disciplines, including cancer biology, assisted reproduction, cell culture and organoid technology, somatic cell nuclear transfer, primate embryology, single‐cell biology, and gene editing. This review surveys the slow emergence of the study of human pluripotency and the exponential growth of the field during the past several decades. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Puppies as the primary causal animal for human rabies cases: three-year prospective study of human rabies in the Philippines.
- Author
-
Nobuo Saito, Inton, Karren L., Mauhay, Jaira D., Solante, Rontgene M., Guzman, Ferdinand D., Kentaro Yamada, Yasuhiko Kamiya, Mariko Saito-Obata, Quiambao, Beatriz P., Takaaki Yahiro, Kazunori Kimitsuki, and Akira Nishizono
- Subjects
RABIES ,PUPPIES ,LONGITUDINAL method ,HUMAN experimentation ,SALIVA analysis ,MINORS - Abstract
Introduction: While rabies remains a global concern, detailed studies on human rabies, particularly regarding causal animals and the reasons for not receiving postexposure prophylaxis (PEP), are lacking. Methods: We conducted a 3-year prospective study (October 2019–September 2022) at the Philippines’ largest rabies referral center. We interviewed patients with suspected rabies and their families. We used LN34 qRT-PCR and rapid fluorescent focus inhibition test on saliva samples. We also compared our findings with two retrospective studies at the same hospital. Results: We enrolled 151 patients, including 131 with potential rabies exposure. Similar to retrospective studies, the participants were predominantly males (75.5%), adults (76.8%), low-income individuals (91.4%), and rural dwellers (62.3%). The causal animals were mainly dogs (97.0%), with similar incubation periods, clinical symptoms, and a high proportion not receiving vaccines or immunoglobulins (93.2%). Most causal animals were owned by either the patients’ households or their neighbors (60.2%), with a significant proportion being puppies (58.8%). Most patients had knowledge of rabies; however, reasons for not seeking PEP included misconceptions about minor bites not causing rabies (51.3%), beliefs in traditional healers (33.9%), and economic constraints (22.6%). Despite completing the WHO regimen, two PEP failures were observed. LN34 qRT-PCR detected 98 positive cases (sensitivity, 64.9%; 95% CI 56.7–72.5). These strains belong to the Southeast Asia 4 subclade. Discussion: In conclusion, this study highlights the role of puppies as primary causal animals and the presence of misconceptions that preclude patients from acquiring PEP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Evaluation of the mechanism of action of paracetamol, drotaverine, and peppermint oil and their effects in combination with hyoscine butylbromide on colonic motility: human ex-vivo study.
- Author
-
Traserra, Sara, Barber, Claudia, Alcalá-González, Luis Gerardo, Landolfi, Stefania, Lange, Robert, Malagelada, Carolina, Corsetti, Maura, and Jimenez, Marcel
- Subjects
FORSKOLIN ,ACETAMINOPHEN ,PEPPERMINT ,ADENYLATE cyclase ,HUMAN experimentation ,SMOOTH muscle - Abstract
Introduction: Drotaverine, paracetamol, and peppermint oil are often prescribed for the treatment of gastrointestinal spasm and pain. This study aimed to evaluate the effect of these drugs alone and combined with the well-known antispasmodic hyoscine butylbromide on the human colon. Methods: Colon samples were obtained from macroscopically normal regions of 68 patients undergoing surgery and studied in muscle bath. Drotaverine, paracetamol, and peppermint oil were tested alone and in combination with hyoscine butylbromide on (1) spontaneous contractility induced by isometric stretch (in the presence of 1 µM tetrodotoxin) and (2) contractility induced by 10
-5 M carbachol and after (3) electrical field stimulation-induced selective stimulation of excitatory (in the presence of 1 mM Nε-nitro-L-arginine and 10 µM MRS2179) and (4) inhibitory (under non-adrenergic, non-cholinergic conditions) pathways. (5) Drotaverine alone was also tested on cAMPdependent pathway activated by forskolin. Results: Compared with the vehicle, drotaverine and paracetamol (10-9 -10-5 M) did not modify spontaneous contractions, carbachol-induced contractions, and responses attributed to selective activation of excitatory pathways. The addition of hyoscine butylbromide (10-7 -10-5 M), concentration-dependently reduced myogenic contractions and carbachol- and electrical field stimulation-induced contractile responses. The association of paracetamol (10-4 M) and hyoscine butylbromide (10-7 -10-5 M) was not different from hyoscine butylbromide alone (10-7 -10-5 M). At higher concentrations (10-3 M-3*10-3 M), paracetamol decreased myogenic and carbachol-induced contractions. The adenylate cyclase activator, forskolin, concentration-dependently reduced contractility, leading to smooth muscle relaxation. The effect of forskolin 10-7 M was concentration-dependently enhanced by drotaverine (10-6 M-10-5 M). Discussion: Peppermint oil reduced myogenic activity and carbachol- and electrical field stimulation-induced contractions. The association of hyoscine butylbromide and peppermint oil was synergistic since the interaction index measured with the isobologram was lower than 1. No effect was seen on the neural-mediated inhibitory responses with any of the drugs studied although peppermint oil reduced the subsequent off-contraction. Drotaverine and hyoscine butylbromide have a complementary effect on human colon motility as one stimulates the cAMP inhibitory pathway and the other inhibits the excitatory pathway. Peppermint oil is synergic with hyoscine butylbromide suggesting that a combination therapy may be more effective in treating patients. In contrast, at therapeutic concentrations, paracetamol does not modify colonic contractility, suggesting that the association of paracetamol and hyoscine butylbromide has independent analgesic and antispasmodic properties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Tau protein profiling in tauopathies: a human brain study.
- Author
-
Lantero-Rodriguez, Juan, Camporesi, Elena, Montoliu-Gaya, Laia, Gobom, Johan, Piotrowska, Diana, Olsson, Maria, Burmann, Irena Matečko, Becker, Bruno, Brinkmalm, Ann, Burmann, Björn M., Perkinton, Michael, Ashton, Nicholas J., Fox, Nick C., Lashley, Tammaryn, Zetterberg, Henrik, Blennow, Kaj, and Brinkmalm, Gunnar
- Subjects
- *
TAU proteins , *TAUOPATHIES , *PROGRESSIVE supranuclear palsy , *ALZHEIMER'S disease , *PATHOLOGICAL physiology , *HUMAN experimentation - Abstract
Abnormal accumulation of misfolded and hyperphosphorylated tau protein in brain is the defining feature of several neurodegenerative diseases called tauopathies, including Alzheimer's disease (AD). In AD, this pathological change is reflected by highly specific cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) tau biomarkers, including both phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated variants. Interestingly, despite tau pathology being at the core of all tauopathies, CSF tau biomarkers remain unchanged in certain tauopathies, e.g., progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), Pick's disease (PiD), and corticobasal neurodegeneration (CBD). To better understand commonalities and differences between tauopathies, we report a multiplex assay combining immunoprecipitation and high-resolution mass spectrometry capable of detecting and quantifying peptides from different tau protein isoforms as well as non-phosphorylated and phosphorylated peptides, including those carrying multiple phosphorylations. We investigated the tau proteoforms in soluble and insoluble fractions of brain tissue from subjects with autopsy-confirmed tauopathies, including sporadic AD (n = 10), PSP (n = 11), PiD (n = 10), and CBD (n = 10), and controls (n = 10). Our results demonstrate that non-phosphorylated tau profiles differ across tauopathies, generally showing high abundance of microtubule-binding region (MTBR)-containing peptides in insoluble protein fractions compared with controls; the AD group showed 12–72 times higher levels of MTBR-containing aggregates. Quantification of tau isoforms showed the 3R being more abundant in PiD and the 4R isoform being more abundant in CBD and PSP in the insoluble fraction. Twenty-three different phosphorylated peptides were quantified. Most phosphorylated peptides were measurable in all investigated tauopathies. All phosphorylated peptides were significantly increased in AD insoluble fraction. However, doubly and triply phosphorylated peptides were significantly increased in AD even in the soluble fraction. Results were replicated using a validation cohort comprising AD (n = 10), CBD (n = 10), and controls (n = 10). Our study demonstrates that abnormal levels of phosphorylation and aggregation do indeed occur in non-AD tauopathies, however, both appear pronouncedly increased in AD, becoming a distinctive characteristic of AD pathology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Visual continuum in non-human animals: serial dependence revealed in dogs.
- Author
-
Lõoke, Miina, Guérineau, Cécile, Broseghini, Anna, Mongillo, Paolo, and Marinelli, Lieta
- Subjects
- *
VISUAL perception , *DOG training , *MAMMALS , *STIMULUS & response (Psychology) , *HUMAN experimentation - Abstract
Serial dependence is a recently described phenomenon by which the perceptual evaluation of a stimulus is biased by a previously attended one. By integrating stimuli over time, serial dependence is believed to ensure a stable conscious experience. Despite increasing studies in humans, it is unknown if the process occurs also in other species. Here, we assessed whether serial dependence occurs in dogs. To this aim, dogs were trained on a quantity discrimination task before being presented with a discrimination where one of the discriminanda was preceded by a task-irrelevant stimulus. If dogs are susceptible to serial dependence, the task-irrelevant stimulus was hypothesized to influence the perception of the subsequently presented quantity. Our results revealed that dogs perceived the currently presented quantity to be closer to the one presented briefly before, in accordance with serial dependence. The direction and strength of the effect were comparable to those observed in humans. Data regarding dogs' attention during the task suggest that dogs used two different quantity estimation mechanisms, an indication of a higher cognitive mechanism involved in the process. The present results are the first empirical evidence that serial dependence extends beyond humans, suggesting that the mechanism is shared by phylogenetically distant mammals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Steve Brown's legacy: Tools to study the individual human molecular circadian clock and its regulation.
- Author
-
Gachon, Frédéric
- Subjects
- *
MOLECULAR clock , *NEUROSPORA crassa , *DROSOPHILA melanogaster , *HUMAN experimentation , *BEHAVIORAL research - Abstract
Since the discovery of the genetic origin of the circadian clock in Drosophila melanogaster by Konopka and Benzer in 1971, most of the research about the regulation of the molecular circadian clock relies on laboratory models. Additional models such as Cyanobacteria, Neurospora crassa, Arabidopsis and rodents helped chronobiologists to describe the species‐specific molecular clocks and their regulation. However, the lack of tools and the difficulty to access biological samples somehow excluded human from this research landscape outside behavioural research. Among many other impressive achievements, Steve Brown provided to the community of chronobiologists new tools and strategies to study the individual human circadian clock and its regulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Biochemical Studies on Human Ornithine Aminotransferase Support a Cell-Based Enzyme Replacement Therapy in the Gyrate Atrophy of the Choroid and Retina.
- Author
-
Pampalone, Gioena, Chiasserini, Davide, Pierigè, Francesca, Camaioni, Emidio, Orvietani, Pier Luigi, Bregalda, Alessandro, Menotta, Michele, Bellezza, Ilaria, Rossi, Luigia, Cellini, Barbara, and Magnani, Mauro
- Subjects
- *
ENZYME replacement therapy , *ORNITHINE , *ATROPHY , *ERYTHROCYTES , *RETINA , *RETROLENTAL fibroplasia , *PLASMA stability , *HUMAN experimentation , *CHOROID - Abstract
The gyrate atrophy of the choroid and retina (GACR) is a rare genetic disease for which no definitive cure is available. GACR is due to the deficit of ornithine aminotransferase (hOAT), a pyridoxal 5′-phosphate-dependent enzyme responsible for ornithine catabolism. The hallmark of the disease is plasmatic ornithine accumulation, which damages retinal epithelium leading to progressive vision loss and blindness within the fifth decade. Here, we characterized the biochemical properties of tetrameric and dimeric hOAT and evaluated hOAT loaded in red blood cells (RBCs) as a possible enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) for GACR. Our results show that (i) hOAT has a relatively wide specificity for amino acceptors, with pyruvate being the most suitable candidate for ornithine catabolism within RBCs; (ii) both the tetrameric and dimeric enzyme can be loaded in RBC retaining their activity; and (iii) hOAT displays reduced stability in plasma, but is partly protected from inactivation upon incubation in a mixture mimicking the intracellular erythrocyte environment. Preliminary ex vivo experiments indicate that hOAT-loaded RBCs are able to metabolize extracellular ornithine at a concentration mimicking that found in patients, both in buffer and, although with lower efficiency, in plasma. Overall, our data provide a proof of concept that an RBC-mediated ERT is feasible and can be exploited as a new therapeutic approach in GACR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Spatially resolved imaging of human macular capillaries using adaptive optics-enhanced optical coherence tomography angiography.
- Author
-
Bonnin, S., Gocho, K., Norberg, N., Gofas, E., Lejoyeux, R., Chaumette, C., Grieve, K., Couturier, A., and Paques, M.
- Subjects
- *
OPTICAL coherence tomography , *ANGIOGRAPHY , *CAPILLARIES , *DIVERSITY in organizations , *HUMAN experimentation - Abstract
Documenting the organization of the retinal capillaries is of importance to understand the visual consequences of vascular diseases which may differentially affect the microvascular layers. Here we detailed the spatial organization of the macular capillaries in ten healthy human subjects using a prototypic adaptive optics-enhanced optical coherence tomography angiography (AO-OCTA) system. Within the central 6° × 6°, the radial peripapillary capillaries and the superficial, intermediate and deep vascular plexuses (SVP, IVP and DVP, respectively) were consistently resolved. In 8 out of the 10 eyes, the capillary segments composing the perifoveal arcade (PFA) were perfused only by the SVP, while drainage of the PFA showed more variability, comprising a case in which the PFA was drained by the DVP. Around the center, a distinct central avascular zone could be documented for each layer in 7 of the 10 cases; in three eyes, the IVP and SVP merged tangentially around the center. In all eyes, the foveal avascular zone was larger in the DVP than in the SVP and IVP. In one eye with incomplete separation of the inner foveal layers, there was continuity of both the SVP and the IVP; a central avascular zone was only present in the DVP. The diversity of perfusion and drainage patterns supported a connectivity scheme combining parallel and serial organizations, the latter being the most commonly observed in perifoveal vessels. Our results thus help to further characterize the diversity of organization patterns of the macular capillaries and to robustly analyze the IVP, which will help to characterize early stages of microvascular diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Verification of the effect of data-driven brain motion correction on PET imaging.
- Author
-
Odagiri, Hayato, Watabe, Hiroshi, Takanami, Kentaro, Akimoto, Kazuma, Usui, Akihito, Kawakami, Hirofumi, Katsuki, Akie, Uetake, Nozomu, Dendo, Yutaka, Tanaka, Yoshitaka, Kodama, Hiroyasu, Takase, Kei, and Kaneta, Tomohiro
- Subjects
- *
ROTATIONAL motion , *COMPUTED tomography , *POSITRON emission tomography , *GLUCOSE metabolism , *HUMAN experimentation , *PHOTOPLETHYSMOGRAPHY ,BRAIN metabolism - Abstract
Introduction: Brain positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) scans are useful for identifying the cause of dementia by evaluating glucose metabolism in the brain with F-18-fluorodeoxyglucose or Aβ deposition with F-18-florbetaben. However, since imaging time ranges from 10 to 30 minutes, movements during the examination might result in image artifacts, which interfere with diagnosis. To solve this problem, data-driven brain motion correction (DDBMC) techniques are capable of performing motion corrected reconstruction using highly accurate motion estimates with high temporal resolution. In this study, we investigated the effectiveness of DDBMC techniques on PET/CT images using a Hoffman phantom, involving continuous rotational and tilting motion, each expanded up to approximately 20 degrees. Materials and methods: Listmode imaging was performed using a Hoffman phantom that reproduced rotational and tilting motions of the head. Brain motion correction processing was performed on the obtained data. Reconstructed images with and without brain motion correction processing were compared. Visual evaluations by a nuclear medicine specialist and quantitative parameters of images with correction and reference still images were compared. Results: Normalized Mean Squared Error (NMSE) results demonstrated the effectiveness of DDBMC in compensating for rotational and tilting motions during PET imaging. In Cases 1 and 2 involving rotational motion, NMSE decreased from 0.15–0.2 to approximately 0.01 with DDBMC, indicating a substantial reduction in differences from the reference image across various brain regions. In the Structural Similarity Index (SSIM), DDBMC improved it to above 0.96 Contrast assessment revealed notable improvements with DDBMC. In continuous rotational motion, % contrast increased from 42.4% to 73.5%, In tilting motion, % contrast increased from 52.3% to 64.5%, eliminating significant differences from the static reference image. These findings underscore the efficacy of DDBMC in enhancing image contrast and minimizing motion induced variations across different motion scenarios. Conclusions: DDBMC processing can effectively compensate for continuous rotational and tilting motion of the head during PET, with motion angles of approximately 20 degrees. However, a significant limitation of this study is the exclusive validation of the proposed method using a Hoffman phantom; its applicability to the human brain has not been investigated. Further research involving human subjects is necessary to assess the generalizability and reliability of the presented motion correction technique in real clinical scenarios. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Oxygenated versus non‐oxygenated flush out during deceased donor liver procurement: The first proof‐of‐concept study in humans.
- Author
-
Fernandes, Eduardo de Souza Martins, Corrêa, Raphael Rodrigues, Furtado, Rodrigo Lopes Leite, Brüggenwirth, Isabel M. A., Yang, Cindy, Mello, Felipe Pedreira Tavares, Oliveira Andrade, Ronaldo, Pimentel, Leandro Moreira Savattone, Girão, Camila Liberato, César, Camilla, Siqueira, Munique Ana Pimentel, Braga, Eduardo Pinho, Carvalho, Angela Cristina Gouvea, Porte, Robert J., and Bouskela, Eliete
- Subjects
- *
PERFUSION , *PRESERVATION of organs, tissues, etc. , *BILE ducts , *PROOF of concept , *HUMAN experimentation , *ADENOSINE triphosphate , *LIVER , *KIDNEYS - Abstract
Background Methods Results Conclusion Liver transplantation is used for treating end‐stage liver disease, fulminant hepatitis, and oncological malignancies and organ shortage is a major limiting factor worldwide. The use of grafts based on extended donor criteria have become internationally accepted. Oxygenated machine perfusion technologies are the most recent advances in organ transplantation; however, it is only applied after a period of cold ischemia. Due to its high cost, we aimed to use a novel device, OxyFlush®, based on oxygenation of the preservation solution, applied during liver procurement targeting the maintenance of ATP during static cold storage (SCS).Twenty patients were randomly assigned to the OxyFlush or control group based on a 1:1 ratio. In the OxyFlush group, the perfusion solution was oxygenated with OxyFlush® device while the control group received a non‐oxygenated solution. Liver and the common bile duct (CBD) biopsies were obtained at three different time points. The first was at the beginning of the procedure, the second during organ preparation, and the third after total liver reperfusion. Biopsies were analyzed, and adenosine triphosphate (ATP) levels and histological scores of the liver parenchyma and CBD were assessed. Postoperative laboratory tests were performed.OxyFlush® was able to maintain ATP levels during SCS and improved the damage caused by the lack of oxygen in the CBD. However, OxyFlush® did not affect laboratory test results and histological findings of the parenchyma.We present a novel low‐cost device that is feasible and could represent a valuable tool in organ preservation during SCS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The Trotter collection: A review of Mildred Trotter's hair research and an update for studies of human variation.
- Author
-
Koch, Sandra L., Zaidi, Arslan, González, Tomás, Shriver, Mark D., and Jablonski, Nina G.
- Subjects
- *
HAIR , *HAIR analysis , *HUMAN experimentation , *POPULATION aging - Abstract
Objectives: Mildred Trotter was an anatomist and physical anthropologist whose studies on hair morphology, growth, somatic distribution, and trait relationships to age and ethnogeographic population were foundational to the field of microscopical hair analysis. The collection of human hair samples she assembled for her research has been an underutilized resource for studies on human hair variation. We applied updated methods and reviewed Trotter's original data to reassess the relationship hair traits have to diverse population labels. Methods: Hair form and pigmentation patterns were measured from a subset of the hair samples accumulated by Trotter and we compared our data to Trotter's original results. Variability in hair traits were tested within individuals, within populations, and among ethnogeographic groups. Results: Measured hair cross‐section dimensions and melanosome density and distribution revealed substantial variability within individuals and ethnogeographic populations. Hair traits were found to not be distinctly separable by ancestry but instead showed continuous variation across human populations. Trotter's measurements were precise and the dataset she compiled remains valid, though the conclusions should be reviewed in light of our current understanding of human variation. Discussion: Our findings support moving away from categorical ancestry classifications and eliminating the use of outdated racial typologies in favor of more descriptive trait analysis. Detailed analysis of trait pattern distributions are presented that may be useful for future research on human variation. We point to the need for additional research on human variation and hair trait relationships with reference to known population affinity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Critical human rights research.
- Author
-
Skarstad, Kjersti
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN experimentation , *CRITICAL theory , *HUMAN rights - Abstract
What constitutes human rights research? This article provides an overarching understanding of what human rights research is, or could be, by applying the philosophical research paradigm of critical theory to the field. It argues that human rights research should adopt a critical stance, steering clear of both "activist" and "value-neutral" approaches, as these might impede progress in figuring out the best ways of safeguarding human rights. In contrast, the critical approach preserves the vital role of human rights as a critical corrective to prevailing practices. As such, critical human rights research is explicitly normative, emancipatory, and interdisciplinary. Besides outlining a specific mandate for human rights research, the article illustrates how existing research in this domain can be situated and comprehended within the framework of critical theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The Mineral Apposition Rate on Implants with Either a Sandblasted Acid-Etched Implant Surface (SLA) or a Nanostructured Calcium-Incorporated Surface (XPEED ®): A Histological Split-Mouth, Randomized Case/Control Human Study.
- Author
-
Menhall, Abdallah, Lahoud, Pierre, Yang, Kyung Ran, Park, Kwang Bum, Razukevicius, Dainius, Traini, Tonino, and Makary, Christian
- Subjects
- *
OSSEOINTEGRATION , *ENDOSSEOUS dental implants , *DENTAL implants , *HUMAN experimentation , *MINERALS , *CALCIUM ions , *REGRESSION analysis , *LINEAR statistical models - Abstract
This study aimed to histologically evaluate the effects of XPEED® and SLA surface on the mineral apposition rate (MAR) at 3 and 5 weeks in titanium dental implants placed in human bone. In total, 17 titanium dental implants with XPEED® surface (n = 9) used as test and SLA surface (n = 8) used as control were included in this study. Each patient received four doses of tetracycline 500 mg at 12 h intervals 2 weeks prior to biopsy retrieval. Implant retrieval was performed, and retrieved biopsies were carefully treated for histomorphometric evaluation under epifluorescence microscopy. At 3 and 5 weeks, newly formed bone appeared in direct contact with both types of tested surfaces. At 3 weeks, the MAR value was, respectively, 2.0 (±0.18) μm/day for XPEED® implants and 1.5 (±0.10) μm/day for SLA implants (p = 0.017). At 5 weeks, lower MAR values for both XPEED® and SLA implants were noted, with 1.2 (±0.10) μm/day and 1.1 (±0.10) μm/day, respectively (p = 0.046). The overall evaluation by linear regression analysis for both time and implant surfaces showed a decreased osteoblast activity at 5 weeks compared to 3 weeks (p < 0.005). The results of the present study show that the bone apposition rate occurs faster around implants with XPEED® surface at 3 weeks and 5 weeks of healing. MAR values may support the use of implants with XPEED® surfaces in early loading protocols. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Medical Research on Human Subjects - Historical Landmarks.
- Author
-
GINGHINĂ, Silvia
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL ethics , *SCIENTIFIC community , *HUMAN experimentation , *MEDICAL research , *HISTORY of medicine - Abstract
Medical clinical research, otherwise defined as research on human subjects, represents the standardized method unanimously accepted by the medical, scientific community, as well as by civil society, as the only way that allows the approval of the use in medical practice of a new drug, as well as of a new method of investigation or treatment. We will briefly present the history of medical research, with reference to Hippocrates, Galen, Avicenna, Ambroise Paré, James Lind, Edward Jenner, Pasteur, as well as about the negative examples and errors that manifested themselves in the name of medical research, from the perspective of medical ethics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Biomedical Research and the Need for Ethics.
- Author
-
GINGHINĂ, Silvia
- Subjects
- *
VIRTUE ethics , *RESEARCH ethics , *DUTY , *HUMAN rights , *HUMAN experimentation - Abstract
The objective of this paper is to determine to what extent clinical research meets moral criteria. We will briefly present virtue ethics, duty ethics, utilitarian ethics, human rights theory, and end we will end with a few words about moral bioimprovement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Scientific Committee guidance on appraising and integrating evidence from epidemiological studies for use in EFSA's scientific assessments.
- Author
-
More, Simon, Bampidis, Vasileios, Benford, Diane, Bragard, Claude, Hernandez‐Jerez, Antonio, Bennekou, Susanne Hougaard, Koutsoumanis, Konstantinos, Lambré, Claude, Machera, Kyriaki, Mullins, Ewen, Nielsen, Soren Saxmose, Schlatter, Josef, Schrenk, Dieter, Turck, Dominique, Younes, Maged, Fletcher, Tony, Greiner, Matthias, Ntzani, Evangelia, Pearce, Neil, and Vinceti, Marco
- Subjects
- *
RISK assessment , *INFERENTIAL statistics , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *HUMAN experimentation , *COMMITTEES - Abstract
EFSA requested its Scientific Committee to prepare a guidance document on appraising and integrating evidence from epidemiological studies for use in EFSA's scientific assessments. The guidance document provides an introduction to epidemiological studies and illustrates the typical biases, which may be present in different epidemiological study designs. It then describes key epidemiological concepts relevant for evidence appraisal. This includes brief explanations for measures of association, exposure assessment, statistical inference, systematic error and effect modification. The guidance then describes the concept of external validity and the principles of appraising epidemiological studies. The customisation of the study appraisal process is explained including tailoring of tools for assessing the risk of bias (RoB). Several examples of appraising experimental and observational studies using a RoB tool are annexed to the document to illustrate the application of the approach. The latter part of this guidance focuses on different steps of evidence integration, first within and then across different streams of evidence. With respect to risk characterisation, the guidance considers how evidence from human epidemiological studies can be used in dose–response modelling with several different options being presented. Finally, the guidance addresses the application of uncertainty factors in risk characterisation when using evidence from human epidemiological studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The Role of Identity in Human Behavior Research: A Systematic Scoping Review.
- Author
-
Alfrey, Kristie-Lee, Waters, Kim M., Condie, Matthew, and Rebar, Amanda L.
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN behavior , *BEHAVIORAL research , *BEHAVIORISM (Psychology) , *CONTROL (Psychology) , *HUMAN experimentation , *PLANNED behavior theory , *GROUP identity - Abstract
Many theories of motivation recognize a person's identity adds value to the prediction of behavior; albeit indirectly, through constructs such as social norms, self-efficacy, perceived behavioral control, and values. Recently, behavioral research has more directly assessed the influence of identity on behavior; however, it is unclear whether such research aligns with the theoretical establishments of identity. This review investigated the identity theory alignment of existing behavior research by systematically searching, screening, and reviewing identity-behavior relevant papers, across three behavioral psychology databases. Twenty-three papers meet the inclusion criteria for review (original research with a primary focus on identity and behavior, within healthy adult population), and data relating to identity-behavior theoretical viewpoints, research methods, and study findings were extracted and synthesized to provide a scoping overview of current research. Most reviewed papers presented identity as a loosely defined construct; commonly operationalized as social identity, omitting the theorized multiplicity of social and self-identities. Overall outcomes suggested that identity influences behavior indirectly through intention strength, rather than directly as a post-intention mechanism. While existing research has been crucial in illuminating potential influences of identity on behavior, there is a need to strengthen current understandings and theoretical alignments within future research relating to identity and behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Myths and Methodologies: Standardisation in human physiology research—should we control the controllables?
- Author
-
Merrell, Lucy H., Perkin, Oliver J., Bradshaw, Louise, Collier‐Bain, Harrison D., Collins, Adam J., Davies, Sophie, Eddy, Rachel, Hickman, James A., Nicholas, Anna P., Rees, Daniel, Spellanzon, Bruno, James, Lewis J., McKay, Alannah K. A., Smith, Harry A., Turner, James E., Koumanov, Francoise, Maher, Jennifer, Thompson, Dylan, Gonzalez, Javier T., and Betts, James A.
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN physiology , *HUMAN experimentation , *PHYSICAL activity , *MENSTRUAL cycle , *ORAL contraceptives - Abstract
The premise of research in human physiology is to explore a multifaceted system whilst identifying one or a few outcomes of interest. Therefore, the control of potentially confounding variables requires careful thought regarding the extent of control and complexity of standardisation. One common factor to control prior to testing is diet, as food and fluid provision may deviate from participants' habitual diets, yet a self‐report and replication method can be flawed by under‐reporting. Researchers may also need to consider standardisation of physical activity, whether it be through familiarisation trials, wash‐out periods, or guidance on levels of physical activity to be achieved before trials. In terms of pharmacological agents, the ethical implications of standardisation require researchers to carefully consider how medications, caffeine consumption and oral contraceptive prescriptions may affect the study. For research in females, it should be considered whether standardisation between‐ or within‐participants in regards to menstrual cycle phase is most relevant. The timing of measurements relative to various other daily events is relevant to all physiological research and so it can be important to standardise when measurements are made. This review summarises the areas of standardisation which we hope will be considered useful to anyone involved in human physiology research, including when and how one can apply standardisation to various contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The Belmont Report doesn't need reform, our moral imagination does.
- Author
-
Serpico, Kimberley
- Subjects
- *
RESEARCH ethics , *EMPATHY , *IMAGINATION , *INSTITUTIONAL review boards , *BEHAVIORAL research , *JUSTICE , *ETHICS , *HUMAN experimentation - Abstract
In 1974, the United States Congress asked a question prompting a national conversation about ethics: which ethical principles should govern research involving human participants? To embark on an answer, Congress passed the National Research Act, and charged this task to the newly established National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research. The Commission's mandate was modest however, the results were anything but. The outcome was The Belmont Report : a trio of principles - respect for persons, beneficence, and justice - serving as an ethical compass for scientists, researchers, and institutional review boards (IRBs). Almost 50 years later, the utility, legacy, and ingenuity of The Belmont Report continues to be both admired and challenged. Critics argue that Belmont is not fit for the 21st century, while supporters praise Belmont for its enduring wisdom. The goal of this paper is to equip IRB practitioners with the tools necessary to maximally interpret The Belmont Report and meaningfully engage in ethical analysis that reconsiders outmoded legacy thinking and fixed decision-making. Through historical and contextual reflection, this paper describes how IRB practitioners can contemporize review of ethical human research using their moral imagination – a skill found at the intersection of creativity, deliberation, and empathy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Needs and preferences of REB members in the development of a new TCPS 2 training program in Canada.
- Author
-
Xie, Jiale, Stockley, Denise, Hastings Truelove, Amber, Marlin, Susan, Zand, Rachel, Payne, Jennifer, Miller, Miranda, and Soleas, Eleftherios
- Subjects
- *
INSTITUTIONAL review boards , *RESEARCH ethics , *HUMAN experimentation - Abstract
Despite advancements in human research ethics and the growing significance of Research Ethics Board (REB) members, educational opportunities specifically tailored to their needs remain lacking in many countries. In response to this gap, our research aims to understand the demographics, needs, and preferences for educational opportunities of REB members in Canada. We conducted a survey that found REB demographics to be diverse and have different perceptions of their roles on topics such as the evaluation of the scientific merit of studies and responsibilities to stakeholders. We found that REB members in general prefer online tutorials and webinars for their education. Educators interested in facilitating the development of future training programs should consider the needs and preferences of REB members outlined in this publication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. A long‐term prognosis study of human USP8‐mutated ACTH‐secreting pituitary neuroendocrine tumours.
- Author
-
Miao, Hui, Wang, Luo, Gong, Fengying, Duan, Lian, Wang, Linjie, Yao, Yong, Feng, Ming, Deng, Kan, Wang, Renzhi, Xiao, Yu, Ling, Qing, Zhu, Huijuan, and Lu, Lin
- Subjects
- *
NEUROENDOCRINE tumors , *DEUBIQUITINATING enzymes , *CUSHING'S syndrome , *HUMAN experimentation , *ADRENAL insufficiency , *PROGNOSIS - Abstract
Objective: Somatic variants in the ubiquitin‐specific protease 8 (USP8) gene are the most common genetic cause of Cushing disease. We aimed to explore the relationship between clinical outcomes and USP8 status in a single centre. Design, patients and measurements: We investigated the USP8 status in 48 patients with pituitary corticotroph tumours. A median of 62 months of follow‐up was conducted after surgery from November 2013 to January 2015. The clinical, biochemical and imaging features were collected and analysed. Results: Seven USP8 variants (p.Ser718Pro, p.Ser719del, p.Pro720Arg, p.Pro720Gln, p.Ser718del, p.Ser718Phe, p.Lys713Arg) were identified in 24 patients (50%). USP8 variants showed a female predominance (100% vs. 75% in wild type [WT], p =.022). Patients with p.Ser719del showed an older age at surgery compared to patients with the p.Pro720Arg variant (47‐ vs. 24‐year‐olds, p =.033). Patients with p.Pro720Arg showed a higher rate of macroadenoma compared to patients harbouring the p.Ser718Pro variant (60% vs. 0%, p =.037). No significant differences were observed in serum and urinary cortisol and adrenocorticotropin hormone (ACTH) levels. Immediate surgical remission (79% vs. 75%) and long‐term hormone remission (79% vs. 67%) were not significantly different between the two groups. The recurrence rate was 21% (4/19) in patients harbouring USP8 variants and 13% (2/16) in WT patients. Recurrence‐free survival presented a tendency to be shorter in USP8‐mutated individuals (76.7 vs. 109.2 months, p =.068). Conclusions: Somatic USP8 variants accounted for 50% of the genetic causes in this cohort with a significant female frequency. A long‐term follow‐up revealed a tendency toward shorter recurrence‐free survival in USP8‐mutant patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Patient‐Reported Outcome Measures in Routine Clinical Practice: Practical Guidance for Institutional Review Boards.
- Author
-
Bachmann, Justin M., Shiflet, Molly A., Palacios, Julia R., Turer, Robert W., Wallace, Grace H., Rosenbloom, S. Trent, and Rice, Todd W.
- Subjects
- *
PATIENT reported outcome measures , *INSTITUTIONAL review boards , *HUMAN experimentation , *CLINICAL medicine , *MEDICAL care - Abstract
The use of patient‐reported outcome measures (PROMs) is increasingly common in routine clinical practice. As tools to quantify symptoms and health status, PROMs play an important role in focusing health care on outcomes that matter to patients. The uses of PROM data are myriad, ranging from clinical care to survey‐based research and quality improvement. Discerning the boundaries between these use cases can be challenging for institutional review boards (IRBs). In this article, we provide a framework for classifying the three primary PROM use cases (clinical care, human subjects research, and quality improvement) and discuss the level of IRB oversight (if any) necessary for each. One of the most important considerations for IRB staff is whether PROMs are being used primarily for clinical care and thus do not constitute human subjects research. We discuss characteristics of PROMs implemented primarily for clinical care, focusing on: data platform; survey location; questionnaire length; patient interface; and clinician interface. We also discuss IRB oversight of projects involving the secondary use of PROM data that were collected during the course of clinical care, which span human subjects research and quality improvement. This framework provides practical guidance for IRB staff as well as clinicians who use PROMs as communication aids in routine clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Single IRB Review and Local Context Considerations: A Scoping Review.
- Author
-
Morain, Stephanie R., Singleton, Megan K., Tsiandoulas, Kate, Bollinger, Juli, and Sugarman, Jeremy
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN experimentation , *APPLICABLE laws , *PROCEDURAL justice , *PROPORTIONAL navigation , *RESEARCH teams - Abstract
A leading concern about single IRB (sIRB) review for multisite studies, as is now required by federal policies, is whether and how sIRBs consider local context in their review. While several types of local context considerations have been proposed, there is no shared agreement among those charged with the ethics oversight of human subjects research as to the goals and content of local context review, nor the types of research studies for which sIRB review might be inappropriate. Through a scoping review of published scholarship, public comments, and federal guidance documents, we identified five assumed goals for local context review: protecting the rights and welfare of local participants; ensuring compliance with applicable laws and policies; assessing feasibility; promoting the quality of research; and promoting procedural justice. While a variety of content was proposed to be relevant, it was largely grouped into four domains: population/participant‐level characteristics; investigator and research team characteristics; institution‐level characteristics; and state and local laws. Proposed characteristics for exclusion from sIRB requirements reflected both protection‐ and efficiency‐based concerns. These findings can inform ongoing efforts to assess the implications of policies mandating sIRB review, and when exceptions to those policies might be appropriate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Ultrafast 3-D Transcutaneous Super Resolution Ultrasound Using Row-Column Array Specific Coherence-Based Beamforming and Rolling Acoustic Sub-aperture Processing: In Vitro, in Rabbit and in Human Study.
- Author
-
Hansen-Shearer, Joseph, Yan, Jipeng, Lerendegui, Marcelo, Huang, Biao, Toulemonde, Matthieu, Riemer, Kai, Tan, Qingyuan, Tonko, Johanna, Weinberg, Peter D., Dunsby, Chris, and Tang, Meng-Xing
- Subjects
- *
ULTRASONIC imaging , *BEAMFORMING , *IMAGE reconstruction , *HIGH resolution imaging , *HUMAN experimentation - Abstract
This study aimed to realise 3-D super-resolution ultrasound imaging transcutaneously with a row-column array which has far fewer independent electronic channels and a wider field of view than typical fully addressed 2-D matrix arrays. The in vivo image quality of the row-column array is generally poor, particularly when imaging non-invasively. This study aimed to develop a suite of image formation and post-processing methods to improve image quality and demonstrate the feasibility of ultrasound localisation microscopy using a row-column array, transcutaneously on a rabbit model and in a human. To achieve this, a processing pipeline was developed which included a new type of rolling window image reconstruction, which integrated a row-column array specific coherence-based beamforming technique with acoustic sub-aperture processing. This and other processing steps reduced the 'secondary' lobe artefacts, and noise and increased the effective frame rate, thereby enabling ultrasound localisation images to be produced. Using an in vitro cross tube, it was found that the procedure reduced the percentage of 'false' locations from ∼26% to ∼15% compared to orthogonal plane wave compounding. Additionally, it was found that the noise could be reduced by ∼7 dB and the effective frame rate was increased to over 4000 fps. In vivo, ultrasound localisation microscopy was used to produce images non-invasively of a rabbit kidney and a human thyroid. It has been demonstrated that the proposed methods using a row-column array can produce large field of view super-resolution microvascular images in vivo and in a human non-invasively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The effect of instructor communication on affective learning in a supply chain management course.
- Author
-
Johnson, Laquanda Leaven, Park, Arim, and Kelly, Stephanie
- Subjects
SUPPLY chain management ,AFFECTIVE education ,ONLINE education ,HUMAN experimentation ,LEARNING goals - Abstract
The purpose of this study is to understand how instructor clarity and computer‐mediated behaviors influence students' affective learning and technology self‐efficacy in online supply chain management (SCM) courses, which show how the instructor–student relationship affects online learning experiences. Data were collected through an online questionnaire using the Prolific human subject's pool. The data supported a model in which instructors' clarity and computer‐mediated immediate behaviors indirectly influenced students' technology self‐efficacy and affect for the course through the mediation of perceived immediacy. Affect for the instructor did not fit into the final model. The findings in this study help SCM instructors navigate the pedagogical pivot that may be required for the next unexpected event (pandemic, etc.) without compromising student learning goals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.