Publications by authors named "D J Miletich"

Space travel has grown during the past 2 decades, and is expected to surge in the future with the establishment of an American Space Force, businesses specializing in commercial space travel, and National Aeronautics and Space Administration's planned sustained presence on the moon. Accompanying this rise, treating physicians are bracing for a concomitant increase in space-related medical problems, including back pain. Back pain is highly prevalent in astronauts and space travelers, with most cases being transient and self-limiting (space adaptation back pain).

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Introduction: Bereavement is one of the most common and stressful life experiences one can endure. Typical grief reactions follow a course of recovery in which individuals come to terms with the loss and resume functioning within weeks to months. However, for some, grief remains indefinitely distressing.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Recent studies suggest the right temporo-parietal junction (rTPJ) influences moral reasoning, particularly concerning accidental versus attempted harms, but findings differ across research.
  • - The current study found that transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) notably impacted judgments on accidental harms, revealing that low stimulation increased severity judgments while higher stimulation decreased them.
  • - These results imply that the rTPJ plays a complex role in moral judgments, especially concerning mitigating factors that affect moral responsibility, and highlight the importance of specific design parameters in tDCS research.
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Although absolute counts of U.S. service men who experience sexual trauma are comparable to service women, little is known about the impact of sexual trauma on men.

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Humans gain a wide range of knowledge through interacting with the environment. Each aspect of our perceptual experiences offers a unique source of information about the world-colours are seen, sounds heard and textures felt. Understanding how perceptual input provides a basis for knowledge is thus central to understanding one's own and others' epistemic states.

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