Publications by authors named "D P Dickinson"

Translation of maternal mRNAs is crucial for early embryonic development. In cell fates become determined from the first division without new transcription, making this organism ideal for studying post-transcriptional regulation of lineage specification. Using low-input ribosome profiling combined with RNA sequencing on precisely staged embryos, we measured protein translation during the first four cell cycles of development.

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In gaining word knowledge, children's semantic representations are initially imprecise before becoming gradually refined. We developed and tested a framework for a digital receptive vocabulary assessment that captured varied levels of representation as children learn words. At pre-test and post-test, children selected one of four images to match a word's meaning: a correct target, a conceptually-related foil, a thematically-related foil, and a phonologically-similar foil.

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Little is known about how gamblers form probability assessments. This paper reports on a preregistered study that administered an incentivized Bayesian choice task to n = 465 self-reported gamblers and non-gamblers. The task elicits subjective probability assessments and allows one to estimate the degree to which distinct information sources are weighted in forming probability assessments.

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Cognitive deficits in people with bipolar disorder (BD) may be the result of the illness or its treatment, but they could also reflect genetic risk factors shared between BD and cognition. We investigated this question using empirical genetic relationships within a sample of patients with BD and their unaffected relatives. Participants with bipolar I, II, or schizoaffective disorder ("narrow" BD, n = 69), related mood disorders ("broad" BD, n = 135), and their clinically unaffected relatives (n = 227) completed five cognitive tests.

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Article Synopsis
  • Following recovery from COVID-19, many survivors experience long COVID, affecting around 23.7 million Americans and leading to significant economic losses due to workplace absenteeism.
  • Neurological symptoms linked to long COVID stem from the virus persisting in the nasal cells, causing inflammation in the central nervous system, with no current treatments effectively clearing this infection.
  • The study investigates the safety and antiviral efficacy of a green-tea-derived compound, EC16m, formulated as nanoparticles, aiming to address persistent SARS-CoV-2 infections and promote recovery of neurological functions.
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