Publications by authors named "Emily Stark"

Crowdsource platforms have been used to study a range of perceptual stimuli such as the graphical perception of scatterplots and various aspects of human color perception. Given the lack of control over a crowdsourced participant's experimental setup, there are valid concerns on the use of crowdsourcing for color studies as the perception of the stimuli is highly dependent on the stimulus presentation. Here, we propose that the error due to a crowdsourced experimental design can be effectively averaged out because the crowdsourced experiment can be accommodated by the Thurstonian model as the convolution of two normal distributions, one that is perceptual in nature and one that captures the error due to variability in stimulus presentation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: The objective of this scoping review is to synthesize and clarify literature on the effectiveness of active and passive range of motion therapy techniques to address range of motion in people with heterotopic ossification (HO), and to provide guidance to therapists in clinical decision-making based on current evidence.

Method: To find articles that included therapeutic interventions to maintain or improve range of motion in people with heterotopic ossification, the authors searched the following databases: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, PubMed, CINAHL, PsychINFO, Web of Science, and OTSeeker. To ensure that the search was comprehensive, the authors also searched Burns and Trauma, Burns Journal, Burns Open, and the Journal of Hand Therapy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Research on individual differences and the framing effect has focused primarily on how variability in rational processing influences choice. However, we propose that measuring only rational processing presents an incomplete picture of how participants are responding to framed options, as orthogonal individual differences in experiential processing might be relevant. In two studies, we utilize the Rational Experiential Inventory, which captures individual differences in rational and experiential processing, to investigate how both processing types influence decisions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The recollective qualities of autobiographical memory are thought to develop over the course of the first two decades of life. We used a 9-year follow-up test of recall of a devastating tornado and of non-tornado-related events from before and after the storm, to compare the recollective qualities of adolescents' (n = 20, ages 11 years, 11 months to 20 years, 8 months) and adults' (n = 14) autobiographical memories. At the time of the tornado, half of the adolescents had been younger than age 6.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Over the first decade of life there are marked improvements in mnemonic abilities. An important question from both a theoretical and applied perspective is the extent of continuity in the nature of memory over this period. The present longitudinal investigation examined declarative memory during the transition from toddlerhood to school-age using both experimental and standardized assessments.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Autogenous vein grafts are commonly used for arterial reconstructive procedures. Their success is limited by the development of intimal hyperplasia (IH), a fibroproliferative disease that predisposes the grafts to occlusive stenosis. Mesenchymal cell proliferation and the deposition of an extracellular matrix characterize neointimal development.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: We previously showed that treatment with liposomally encapsulated dichloromethylene bisphosphonate reduces intimal hyperplasia development and macrophage accumulation in a rat epigastric vein to femoral artery model of intimal hyperplasia. Our objective in this study was to determine the effect of liposomally encapsulated dichloromethylene bisphosphonate on the expression of two cytokines essential to neointimal development, monocyte chemotactic protein-1 (MCP-1) and transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta).

Methods: We injected rats both 2 days preoperatively and 2 weeks postoperatively with liposomally encapsulated dichloromethylene bisphosphonate (Lip-Clod), liposomally encapsulated phosphate-buffered saline solution (Vector), or phosphate-buffered saline solution (PBS), and harvested the grafts at 1 and 4 weeks.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: Myofibroblasts are present transiently in normal healing wounds. However, they have been found to persist in the stroma of neoplasms, fibrotic conditions and other pathological settings. In rat vein grafts, we have observed the prolonged presence of myofibroblasts.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF