Publications by authors named "Ben-David T"

Objective: Patients and therapists possess psychotherapy-related expectations, such as their forecast of what processes will promote improvement. Yet, there remains limited research on such , including their independent and dyadic associations with psychotherapy outcome. In this study, we explored the predictive influence of participants' change process expectations, and their level of congruence, on therapeutic outcomes.

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Predictions of task-based functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) from task-free resting-state (rs) fMRI have gained popularity over the past decade. This method holds a great promise for studying individual variability in brain function without the need to perform highly demanding tasks. However, in order to be broadly used, prediction models must prove to generalize beyond the dataset they were trained on.

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Recent studies suggest that patient-therapist congruence of expectations affects psychotherapy outcome. Nonetheless, most studies assessing expectations in their dyadic context have focused on outcome expectations. This study was aimed to assess whether patients and therapists view expected processes similarly, and whether these beliefs change over time to become more congruent or more dissimilar.

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High-frequency QRS (HFQRS) analysis of surface ECG is a reliable marker of cardiac ischemia (CI). This study aimed to assess the response of HFQRS signals from standard intracardiac electrodes (iHFQRS) to CI in swine and compare them with conventional ST-segment deviations. Devices with three intracardiac leads were implanted in three swine in a controlled environment.

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This article presents an outcome-based ventilation (OBV) framework, which combines competing ventilation impacts into a monetized loss function ($/occ/h) used to inform ventilation rate decisions. The OBV framework, developed for U.S.

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Protein aggregation is a common feature of the protein misfolding or conformational diseases, among them most of the neurodegenerative diseases. These disorders are a major scourge, with scarce if any effective therapies at present. Recent research has identified ER stress as a major mechanism implicated in cytotoxicity in these diseases.

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Background: Strong vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is routinely used to induce and maintain atrial fibrillation (AF) in acute animal studies. Taken as a surrogate of increased vagal tone, such observations suggest an arrhythmogenic role of VNS in AF. In contrast, VNS has been demonstrated to have profound therapeutic effects in heart failure and other ailments.

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Tetranychus turkestani Ugarov and Nikolskii and Tetranychus urticae Koch RF (red form) (Acari: Tetranychidae) are closely related species. Previously, the two species were found in separate agricultural habitats in Israel. Here, additional collections were undertaken and mixed populations of the two species were found.

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The extravasation of tumor cells is a pivotal stage in the formation of hematogenous metastasis. An interaction of selectins expressed on endothelial cells and selectin ligands expressed by tumor cells has been implicated to play a role in extravasation. In the present study we used a human-mouse model to prove the hypothesis that the selectin ligand sialyl Lewis-a (sLe-a) is indeed involved in the in vivo extravasation of colorectal carcinoma (CRC) cells.

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The use of DNA barcodes, short DNA sequences from a standardized region of the genome, has recently been proposed as a tool to facilitate species identification and discovery. Here we show that second internal transcribed spacer of nuclear ribosomal DNA (rDNA-ITS2) barcodes effectively discriminate among 16 species of spider mites (Acari: Tetranychidae) from Israel. The barcode sequences of each species were unambiguously distinguishable from all other species and formed distinct, nonoverlapping monophyletic groups in the maximum-parsimony tree.

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