Publications by authors named "Faber P"

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  • The study investigates the unexplored variations in DNA methylation at CpG sites in airway epithelial cells from children with and without allergic asthma, using whole-genome bisulfite sequencing.
  • Researchers designed a custom array to highlight these high-value CpGs and used it alongside existing arrays to analyze allergic sensitization in children from different birth cohorts.
  • Results showed that the custom array contained CpGs with intermediate methylation levels, which were significantly associated with allergic sensitization and gene expression regulation.
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  • Blood feeding is important for studying mosquitoes and other blood-feeding insects, but traditional methods can be costly and require ethical approvals.
  • A new blood feeder made from common lab materials is introduced, costing under $100 and needing minimal technical skills to operate.
  • Though the engorgement and hatch rates were lower with the artificial feeder, it successfully maintained a healthy mosquito colony for 10 generations, suggesting potential for cost-effective research in resource-limited settings.
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  • Urban heat islands (UHIs) are widespread in cities, but their impact in tropical informal settlements, like Makassar, Indonesia, is not well understood, particularly given the health risks associated with elevated temperatures.
  • Over a 29-year period, researchers used satellite data and ground temperature measurements to show that UHIs in Makassar can be as much as 9.2°C higher, with informal settlements experiencing a 6.3°C increase, driven by changes in surrounding non-urban areas.
  • Maintaining green and blue spaces can help mitigate extreme UHI effects; areas further from coastlines and with low vegetation index (NDVI < 0.2) face significantly higher temperatures, making effective urban planning that prioritizes green space essential for combating
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The health and economic impacts of extreme heat on humans are especially pronounced in populations without the means to adapt. We deployed a sensor network across 12 informal settlements in Makassar, Indonesia to measure the thermal environment that people experience inside and outside their homes. We calculated two metrics to assess the magnitude and frequency of heat stress conditions, wet bulb temperature and wet bulb globe temperature, and compared our data to that collected by weather stations.

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Background: The intense interactions between people, animals and environmental systems in urban informal settlements compromise human and environmental health. Inadequate water and sanitation services, compounded by exposure to flooding and climate change risks, expose inhabitants to environmental contamination causing poor health and wellbeing and degrading ecosystems. However, the exact nature and full scope of risks and exposure pathways between human health and the environment in informal settlements are uncertain.

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  • The RISE study investigates how upgrading informal urban settlements can improve public health by reducing exposure to contaminated environments in Makassar, Indonesia, and Suva, Fiji.
  • It is a cluster randomised controlled trial with 12 settlements in each city, where half will receive a water-sensitive infrastructure intervention while the others serve as controls.
  • The study focuses on health outcomes in children under 5, examining gastrointestinal pathogens, antimicrobial resistance, and broader factors like ecological biodiversity and community well-being.
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Objective: Huntington's disease (HD) is characterized by psychiatric, cognitive, and motor disturbances. The study aimed to determine electroencephalography (EEG) global state and microstate changes in HD and their relationship with cognitive and behavioral impairments.

Methods: EEGs from 20 unmedicated HD patients and 20 controls were compared using global state properties (connectivity and dimensionality) and microstate properties (EEG microstate analysis).

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Neural activity is known to oscillate within discrete frequency bands and the synchronization between these rhythms is hypothesized to underlie information integration in the brain. Since strict synchronization is only possible for harmonic frequencies, a recent theory proposes that the interaction between different brain rhythms is facilitated by transient harmonic frequency arrangements. In this line, it has been recently shown that the transient occurrence of 2:1 harmonic cross-frequency relationships between alpha and theta rhythms (i.

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Bipolar disorder (BD) is a chronic illness with a relapsing and remitting time course. Relapses are manic or depressive in nature and intermitted by euthymic states. During euthymic states, patients lack the criteria for a manic or depressive diagnosis, but still suffer from impaired cognitive functioning as indicated by difficulties in executive and language-related processing.

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  • Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) are problems in blood vessels that can cause serious issues like epilepsy and stroke, especially when inherited from a specific genetic mutation.
  • Scientists studied different types of genes in two models of mice (acute and chronic) to see how CCMs affect them differently. They found many genes acting differently depending on whether the problem was new or old.
  • Their findings suggest that new problems are more about cell growth, while long-term issues are related to inflammation and how cells stick together, plus they think certain small pieces of RNA in the blood could help in understanding or diagnosing the disease better.
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  • The study aimed to find important genes and functions related to cerebral cavernous malformation (CCM) by analyzing RNA from different species and types of the disease.
  • Researchers looked at RNA from human CCM samples, mouse cells, and tiny worms to identify different genes that were active or inactive in these models.
  • They found common genes and functions that are important for understanding how CCM works, which could help in future research to develop treatments.
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Human brain electric activity can be measured at high temporal and fairly good spatial resolution via electroencephalography (EEG). The EEG microstate analysis is an increasingly popular method used to investigate this activity at a millisecond resolution by segmenting it into quasi-stable states of approximately 100 ms duration. These so-called EEG microstates were postulated to represent atoms of thoughts and emotions and can be classified into four classes of topographies A through D, which explain up to 90% of the variance of continuous EEG.

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Two phases of Transcendental Meditation (TM)-transcending and undirected mentation-were compared to each other and to task-free resting using multichannel EEG recorded from 20 TM practitioners. An EEG microstate analysis identified four classes of microstates which were labeled A, B, C and D, based on their similarity to previously published classes. For each class of microstates, mean duration, coverage and occurrence were computed.

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People seem to have difficulties when perceiving events whose outcome has no influence on the outcome of future events. This illusion that patterns exist where there are none may lead to adverse consequences, such as escalating losses in financial trading or gambling debt. Despite the enormous social consequences of these cognitive biases, however, their neural underpinnings are poorly understood.

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Unlabelled: Accumulating evidence has supported the fallopian tube rather than the ovary as the origin for high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC). To understand the relationship between putative precursor lesions and metastatic tumors, we performed whole-exome sequencing on specimens from eight HGSOC patient progression series consisting of serous tubal intraepithelial carcinomas (STIC), invasive fallopian tube lesions, invasive ovarian lesions, and omental metastases. Integration of copy number and somatic mutations revealed patient-specific patterns with similar mutational signatures and copy-number variation profiles across all anatomic sites, suggesting that genomic instability is an early event in HGSOC.

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Though instrumental in numerous disciplines, context has no universally accepted definition. In specialized knowledge resources it is timely and necessary to parameterize context with a view to more effectively facilitating knowledge representation, understanding, and acquisition, the main aims of terminological knowledge bases. This entails distinguishing different types of context as well as how they interact with each other.

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Functional states of the brain are constituted by the temporally attuned activity of spatially distributed neural networks. Such networks can be identified by independent component analysis (ICA) applied to frequency-dependent source-localized EEG data. This methodology allows the identification of networks at high temporal resolution in frequency bands of established location-specific physiological functions.

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The introduction of scanning/transmission electron microscopes (S/TEM) with sub-Angstrom resolution as well as fast and sensitive detection solutions support direct observation of dynamic phenomena in-situ at the atomic scale. Thereby, in-situ specimen holders play a crucial role: accurate control of the applied in-situ stimulus on the nanostructure combined with the overall system stability to assure atomic resolution are paramount for a successful in-situ S/TEM experiment. For those reasons, MEMS-based TEM sample holders are becoming one of the preferred choices, also enabling a high precision in measurements of the in-situ parameter for more reproducible data.

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The protein kinase R (PKR) functions in the antiviral response by controlling protein translation and inflammatory cell signaling pathways. We generated a transgenic, knock-in mouse in which the endogenous PKR is expressed with a point mutation that ablates its kinase activity. This novel animal allows us to probe the kinase-dependent and -independent functions of PKR.

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Viral oncogene expression is insufficient for neoplastic transformation of human cells, so human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated cancers will also rely upon mutations in cellular oncogenes and tumor suppressors. However, it has been difficult so far to distinguish incidental mutations without phenotypic impact from causal mutations that drive the development of HPV-associated cancers. In this study, we addressed this issue by conducting a functional screen for genes that facilitate the formation of HPV E6/E7-induced squamous cell cancers in mice using a transposon-mediated insertional mutagenesis protocol.

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The momentary, global functional state of the brain is reflected by its electric field configuration. Cluster analytical approaches consistently extracted four head-surface brain electric field configurations that optimally explain the variance of their changes across time in spontaneous EEG recordings. These four configurations are referred to as EEG microstate classes A, B, C, and D and have been associated with verbal/phonological, visual, subjective interoceptive-autonomic processing, and attention reorientation, respectively.

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Objectives: Weight loss (WL) is associated with a decrease in total and resting energy expenditure (EE). We aimed to investigate whether (1) diets with different rate and extent of WL determined different changes in total and resting EE and if (2) they influenced the level of adaptive thermogenesis, defined as the decline in total or resting EE not accounted by changes in body composition.

Methods: Three groups of six, obese men participated in a total fast for 6 days to achieve a 5% WL and a very low calorie (VLCD, 2.

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Meditation is a self-induced and willfully initiated practice that alters the state of consciousness. The meditation practice of Zazen, like many other meditation practices, aims at disregarding intrusive thoughts while controlling body posture. It is an open monitoring meditation characterized by detached moment-to-moment awareness and reduced conceptual thinking and self-reference.

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Functional dissociation between brain processes is widely hypothesized to account for aberrations of thought and emotions in schizophrenic patients. The typically small groups of analyzed schizophrenic patients yielded different neurophysiological findings, probably because small patient groups are likely to comprise different schizophrenia subtypes. We analyzed multichannel eyes-closed resting EEG from three small groups of acutely ill, first episode productive schizophrenic patients before start of medication (from three centers: Bern N = 9; Osaka N = 9; Berlin N = 12) and their controls.

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