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Brain Research Bulletin Jun 2024The ability to accurately encode the temporal information of sensory events and hence to make prompt action is fundamental to humans' prompt behavioral decision-making....
The ability to accurately encode the temporal information of sensory events and hence to make prompt action is fundamental to humans' prompt behavioral decision-making. Here we examined the ability of ensemble coding (averaging multiple inter-intervals in a sound sequence) and subsequent immediate reproduction of target duration at half, equal, or double that of the perceived mean interval in a sensorimotor loop. With magnetoencephalography (MEG), we found that the contingent magnetic variation (CMV) in the central scalp varied as a function of the averaging tasks, with a faster rate for buildup amplitudes and shorter peak latencies in the "half" condition as compared to the "double" condition. ERD (event-related desynchronization) -to-ERS (event-related synchronization) latency was shorter in the "half" condition. A robust beta band (15-23Hz) power suppression and recovery between the final tone and the action of key pressing was found for time reproduction. The beta modulation depth (i.e., the ERD-to-ERS power difference) was larger in motor areas than in primary auditory areas. Moreover, results of phase slope index (PSI) indicated that beta oscillations in the left supplementary motor area (SMA) led those in the right superior temporal gyrus (STG), showing SMA to STG directionality for the processing of sequential (temporal) auditory interval information. Our findings provide the first evidence to show that CMV and beta oscillations predict the coupling between perception and action in time averaging.
PubMed: 38942396
DOI: 10.1016/j.brainresbull.2024.111021 -
Urology Jun 2024To determine whether early vs. delayed autotransplantation are associated with adverse outcomes in patients undergoing renal autotransplantation.
OBJECTIVE
To determine whether early vs. delayed autotransplantation are associated with adverse outcomes in patients undergoing renal autotransplantation.
METHODS
Patients who underwent renal autotransplantation from June 2012 to September 2022 were divided into two groups based on timing of autotransplant in relation to initial intervention or diagnosis (early cohort: ≤1-year; delayed cohort: >1-year). Primary outcomes were perioperative complications, aborted surgery, renal function (glomerular filtration rate [GFR]), and postoperative complications at most recent follow-up.
RESULTS
Autotransplantation patients (N=72) were predominantly female (68%) and White (54%), with a median age of 49 years. 90% of patients had undergone previous interventions, including stenting (40%) and nephrostomy tubes (49%), primarily for obstruction (64%). Early vs. delayed cohorts had median preoperative disease durations of 143 (IQR 83-222) vs. 673 days (IQR 529-1,703, p<0.001), with similar median follow-up times (879 vs. 818 days, p=0.8). Groups were similar in demographics and comorbidities. There were no significant differences in rates of aborted surgery (15% vs. 4.2%, p=0.3), perioperative complications (15% vs. 17%, p>0.9), long-term complications (49% vs. 48%, p>0.9), or changes in GFR (median change +3 vs. +4, p=0.7). Outcomes were comparable across preoperative disease durations ranging from 6 to 24 months. These findings were confirmed following adjustments for sex, body mass index, American Society of Anesthesiologists classification, race, preoperative creatinine levels, laterality, gastroesophageal reflux disease, diabetes, hypertension, nephrolithiasis, hyperlipidemia, history of colon surgery, urologic surgery, abdominal surgery, and prior interventions in separate logistic models.
CONCLUSIONS
Disease duration before autotransplantation does not influence outcomes, offering reassurance for clinical decision-making in complex cases.
PubMed: 38942394
DOI: 10.1016/j.urology.2024.06.050 -
The Journal of Pediatrics Jun 2024
PubMed: 38942356
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2024.114173 -
The Science of the Total Environment Jun 2024Livestock and poultry products are an essential human food source. However, the rapid development of the livestock sector (LS) has caused it to become a significant...
Livestock and poultry products are an essential human food source. However, the rapid development of the livestock sector (LS) has caused it to become a significant source of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Consequently, investigating the spatio-temporal characteristics and evolution of GHG emissions is crucial to facilitate the green development of the LS and achieve "peak carbon and carbon neutrality". This study combined life cycle assessment (LCA) with the IPCC Tier II method to construct a novel GHG emissions inventory. The GHG emissions of 31 provinces in China from 2000 to 2021 were calculated, and their spatio-temporal characteristics were revealed. Then, the stochastic impacts by regression on population, affluence, and technology (STIRPAT) model was used to identify the main driving factors of GHG emissions in six regions of China and explore the emission reduction potential. The results showed that GHG emissions increased and then decreased from 2000 to 2021, following a gradual and steady trend. The peak of 628.55 Mt CO-eq was reached in 2006. The main GHG-producing segments were enteric fermentation, slaughtering and processing, and manure management, accounting for 45.39 %, 26.34 %, and 23.08 % of total GHG emissions, respectively. Overall, the center of gravity of GHG emissions in China migrated northward, with spatial aggregation observed since 2016. The high emission intensity regions were mainly located west of the "Hu Huanyong line". Economic efficiency and emissions intensity were the main drivers of GHG emissions. Under the baseline scenario, GHG emissions are not projected to peak until 2050. Therefore, urgent action is needed to promote the low-carbon green development of the LS in China. The results can serve as scientific references for the macro-prevention and control of GHG emissions, aiding strategic decision-making. Additionally, they can provide new ideas for GHG accounting in China and other countries around the world.
PubMed: 38942305
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.174301 -
Biological Psychiatry. Cognitive... Jun 2024The mechanisms linking neural and behavioral indices of reduced reward sensitivity in depression, particularly in children, remain unclear. Reward positivity (RewP), a...
BACKGROUND
The mechanisms linking neural and behavioral indices of reduced reward sensitivity in depression, particularly in children, remain unclear. Reward positivity (RewP), a neural index of reward processing, has been consistently associated with depression. Separately, recent studies using the drift-diffusion model (DDM) on behavioral data have delineated computational indices of reward sensitivity. Therefore, the present study examined whether RewP is a neural mediator of DDM-based indices of reward processing in predicting pediatric depression across varying levels of symptom severity.
METHODS
A community sample of 166 girls, aged 8 to 14 years, completed two tasks. The first was a reward guessing task from which RewP was computed using electroencephalography; the second was a probabilistic reward-based decision-making task. On this second task, DDM analysis was applied to behavioral data to quantify the efficiency of accumulating reward-related evidence (drift rate) and potential baseline bias (starting point) towards the differently rewarded choices. Depression severity was measured using the self-report Children's Depression Inventory (CDI).
RESULTS
RewP was correlated with drift rate, but not starting point bias, towards the more rewarded choice. Furthermore, RewP completely mediated the association between a slower drift rate towards the more rewarded option and higher depression symptom severity.
CONCLUSION
Our findings suggest that reduced neural sensitivity to reward feedback might be a neural mechanism underscoring behavioral insensitivity to reward in children and adolescents with higher depression symptom severity, offering novel insights into the relationship between neural and computational indices of reward processing in this context.
PubMed: 38942146
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpsc.2024.06.007 -
Acta Tropica Jun 2024System Dynamics (SD) models have been used to understand complex, multi-faceted dengue transmission dynamics, but a gap persists between research and actionable public...
System Dynamics (SD) models have been used to understand complex, multi-faceted dengue transmission dynamics, but a gap persists between research and actionable public health tools for decision-making. Spain is an at-risk country of imported dengue outbreaks, but only qualitative assessments are available to guide public health action and control. We propose a modular SD model combining temperature-dependent vector population, transmission parameters, and epidemiological interactions to simulate outbreaks from imported cases accounting for heterogeneous local climate-related transmission patterns. Under our assumptions, 15 provinces sustain vector populations capable of generating outbreaks from imported cases, with heterogeneous risk profiles regarding seasonality, magnitude and risk window shifting from late Spring to early Autum. Results being relative to given vector-to-human populations allow flexibility when translating outcomes between geographic scales. The model and the framework are meant to serve public health by incorporating transmission dynamics and quantitative-qualitative input to the evidence-based decision-making chain. It is a flexible tool that can easily adapt to changing contexts, parametrizations and epidemiological settings thanks to the modular approach.
PubMed: 38942132
DOI: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2024.107304 -
NeuroImage Jun 2024People perform collectively better than individuals, a phenomenon known as the collective benefit. To pursue the benefit, they may learn from previous behaviors, come to...
People perform collectively better than individuals, a phenomenon known as the collective benefit. To pursue the benefit, they may learn from previous behaviors, come to know whose initial opinion should be valued, and develop the inclination to take it as the collective one. Such learning may affect interpersonal brain communication. To test these hypotheses, this study recruited participant dyads to conduct a perceptual task on which they made individual decisions first and then the collective one. The enhanced interpersonal brain synchronization (IBS) between participants was explored when individual decisions were in disagreement vs. agreement. Computational modeling revealed that participant dyads developed the dyad inclination of taking the higher-able participants', not the lower-able ones', decisions as their collective ones. Brain analyses unveiled the enhanced IBS at frontopolar areas, premotor areas, supramarginal gyri, and right temporal-parietal junctions. The premotor IBS correlated negatively with dyad inclination and collective benefit in the absence of correction. The Granger causality analyses further supported the negative relation of dyad inclination with inter-brain communication. This study highlights that dyads learn to weigh individuals' decisions, resulting in dyad inclinations, and explores associated inter-brain communication, offering insights into the dynamics of collective decision-making.
PubMed: 38942103
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2024.120700 -
American Journal of Veterinary Research Jun 2024Referencing growing concerns over the recruitment and retention of faculty in academic veterinary medicine, the authors hypothesized that among surveyed veterinary...
OBJECTIVE
Referencing growing concerns over the recruitment and retention of faculty in academic veterinary medicine, the authors hypothesized that among surveyed veterinary residents and early-career faculty, work-life balance and workplace climate and culture are stronger motivators than financial considerations, regardless of demographic factors such as gender, race/ethnicity, and area of specialization.
SAMPLE
541 participants were included in data analysis.
METHODS
A mixed methods approach was utilized, incorporating both quantitative data and qualitative, free-text responses to better understand veterinary career choices by contextualizing factors associated with academic medicine.
RESULTS
Factors underpinning career-related decision-making were ranked by level of importance as (1) workplace environment/culture, (2) personal well-being/work-life balance, (3) salary and bonuses, (4) geographic location, (5) facilities and resources, (6) benefits, and (7) schedule flexibility. Desires for workload balance, schedule flexibility, support from leadership, and mentorship and collaboration were among the top themes of qualitative responses for both residents and early career faculty respondents. Factors influencing career decision-making for resident and early-career faculty are varied. Workplace environment, work-life balance, and schedule flexibility are areas that academic institutions can address and continue to improve and that are likely to positively impact entry into academia and the desire to stay.
CLINICAL RELEVANCE
This study sought to understand factors related to career decision-making and interest in academic veterinary medicine among residents and early-career faculty. Understanding these factors can support efforts to recruit and retain faculty in academic veterinary medicine.
PubMed: 38942061
DOI: 10.2460/ajvr.24.03.0082 -
British Journal of Hospital Medicine... Jun 2024Prompt diagnosis of lymphoma facilitates early treatment and improves outcomes for patients. For non-haemato-oncologists, it is important to have an understanding of how... (Review)
Review
Prompt diagnosis of lymphoma facilitates early treatment and improves outcomes for patients. For non-haemato-oncologists, it is important to have an understanding of how lymphoma can present and the initial work-up. This review is intended to provide clinicians with background to aid clinical decisional making at presentation and when managing treatment related complications. There will be particular emphasis on emergency presentations (tumour lysis syndrome, management of patients with a mediastinal mass, infections in lymphoma patients) and novel treatment options which have unique toxicities often requiring multi-specialty expertise.
Topics: Humans; Lymphoma; Clinical Decision-Making; Tumor Lysis Syndrome
PubMed: 38941979
DOI: 10.12968/hmed.2024.0053 -
British Journal of Hospital Medicine... Jun 2024Seroma formation is the most common complication following breast surgery. However, there is little evidence on the readability of online patient education materials on... (Review)
Review
Seroma formation is the most common complication following breast surgery. However, there is little evidence on the readability of online patient education materials on this issue. This study aimed to assess the accessibility and readability of the relevant online information. This systematic review of the literature identified 37 relevant websites for further analysis. The readability of each online article was assessed through using a range of readability formulae. The average Flesch-Reading Ease score for all patient education materials was 53.9 (± 21.9) and the average Flesch-Kincaid reading grade level was 7.32 (± 3.1), suggesting they were 'fairly difficult' to read and is higher than the recommended reading level. Online patient education materials regarding post-surgery breast seroma are at a higher-than-recommended reading grade level for the public. Improvement would allow all patients, regardless of literacy level, to access such resources to aid decision-making around undergoing breast surgery.
Topics: Humans; Seroma; Patient Education as Topic; Female; Comprehension; Internet; Health Literacy; Postoperative Complications; Breast Diseases; Mastectomy; Consumer Health Information
PubMed: 38941972
DOI: 10.12968/hmed.2024.0058