Unlabelled: Glacier-fed streams are permanently cold, ultra-oligotrophic, and physically unstable environments, yet microbial life thrives in benthic biofilm communities. Within biofilms, microorganisms rely on secondary metabolites for communication and competition. However, the diversity and genetic potential of secondary metabolites in glacier-fed stream biofilms remain poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Clinicians are increasingly interested in self-reported hearing-specific quality of life (HQoL) for cochlear implant (CI) recipients, including pediatric CI recipients.
Purpose: (1) To compare HQoL of adolescent CI recipients to those of peers with typical hearing (TH); (2) to examine, longitudinally, HQoL for a set of CI recipients; and (3) to determine the effects of child, demographic, audiological, speech perception, and language variables on adolescent HQoL.
Research Design: Hearing Environments and Reflections on Quality of Life (HEARQL) questionnaires were completed by children with CIs at elementary (HEARQL-26) and adolescent (HEARQL-28) ages.
Background: Permafrost microbiomes are of paramount importance for the biogeochemistry of high latitude soils and while endemic biosynthetic domain sequences involved in secondary metabolism have been found in polar surface soils, the biosynthetic potential of permafrost microbiomes remains unexplored. Moreover, the nature of these ecosystems facilitates the unique opportunity to study the distribution and diversity of biosynthetic genes in relic DNA from ancient microbiomes. To explore the biosynthesis potential in permafrost, we used adenylation (AD) domain sequencing to evaluate non-ribosomal peptide (NRP) production in permafrost cores housing microbiomes separated at kilometer and kiloyear scales.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProviding treatment side effect information to patients increases the risk of harm due to the nocebo effect. Nocebo education, in which patients learn about nocebo effects, is a novel strategy that can be used across a variety of situations and individuals to decrease unpleasant treatment side effects. It is currently unclear which psychological changes are induced by nocebo education, which is information required to maximize this intervention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn three preregistered studies, we investigated whether implicit treatment expectations, using a relational implicit measure (the MT-PEP), vary between participants provided opposing information about novel medical treatments (Studies 1 and 2) or who responded based on normative beliefs toward common over-the-counter drugs (Study 3). The studies revealed large Cohen's d effect sizes of both novel and well-known treatment information within the implicit measure. The studies also provide evidence of convergent validity, with MT-PEP scores associated with explicit beliefs about medicine and over-the-counter drug familiarity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Psychol Health Well Being
November 2024
The perception of taking a generic, relative to brand, medication has been demonstrated to exacerbate the nocebo effect. Conversely, positive attribute framing has been shown to attenuate the nocebo effect. However, little is known about the longevity of positive attribute framing nor how it interacts with generic versus brand treatment cues.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: With evidence for large nocebo effects in pain, guidelines for nocebo-minimizing strategies regarding side effect disclosure are emerging. While the ethical implications and effectiveness of such strategies have been the subject of investigations, the perspective of healthcare users are missing despite the stakes for patient autonomy.
Methods: In an online survey, 2766 adults (≥18 years) from a general population sample in Europe and North America responded to questions related to nocebo familiarity, nocebo beliefs and attitudes towards side effect disclosure.
A single tunable filter simplifies complexity, reduces insertion loss, and minimizes size compared to frequency switchable filter banks commonly used for radio frequency (RF) band selection. Magnetostatic wave (MSW) filters stand out for their wide, continuous frequency tuning and high-quality factor. However, MSW filters employing electromagnets for tuning consume excessive power and space, unsuitable for consumer wireless applications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOur understanding of the role of secondary metabolites in microbial communities is challenged by intrinsic limitations of culturing bacteria under laboratory conditions and hence cultivation independent approaches are needed. Here, we present a protocol termed Secondary Metabolite FISH (SecMet-FISH), combining advantages of gene-targeted fluorescence in situ hybridization (geneFISH) with in-solution methods (in-solution FISH) to detect and quantify cells based on their genetic capacity to produce secondary metabolites. The approach capitalizes on the conserved nature of biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) encoding adenylation (AD) and ketosynthase (KS) domains, and thus selectively targets the genetic basis of non-ribosomal peptide and polyketide biosynthesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Latent inhibition occurs when exposure to a stimulus prior its direct associative conditioning impairs learning. Results from naturalistic studies suggest that latent inhibition disrupts the learning of dental fear from aversive associative conditioning and thereby reduces the development of dental phobia. Although theory suggests latent inhibition occurs because pre-exposure changes the expected relevance and attention directed to the pre-exposed stimulus, evidence supporting these mechanisms in humans is limited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Dental stimuli can evoke fear after being paired - or conditioned - with aversive outcomes (e.g., pain).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: To minimize nocebo effects, it may be possible to employ authorized concealment, in which clinicians tell patients about the nocebo phenomenon and ask if they would prefer not to be informed about mild treatment side effects.
Objective: The objective of the study was to understand public evaluations of authorized concealment for reducing nocebo effects.
Methods: An online cross-sectional survey was completed by a demographically diverse US national community sample between June 2 and 6, 2023.
Informing patients about potential side effects of pain treatment is a requirement that protects patients and aids decision making, but it increases the likelihood of unwanted nocebo side effects. If patients do not desire all side-effect information, it may be possible to ethically reduce nocebo effects through authorized concealment of side effects, whereby patients and clinicians engage in shared decision-making to regulate the disclosure of side-effect information. Currently, there is no experimental data clarifying the factors that causally influence desire for side-effect information in pain treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo common elements in patient care are reoccurring painful events (eg, blood draws) and verbal suggestions from others for lessened pain. Research shows that verbal suggestions for lower pain can decrease subsequent pain perception from novel noxious stimuli, but it is less clear how these suggestions and prior painful experiences combine to influence the perception of a reoccurring painful event. The presented experiment tested the hypothesis that the order of these 2 factors influence pain perception for a reoccurring painful event.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the search for novel drug candidates, diverse environmental microbiomes have been surveyed for their secondary metabolite biosynthesis potential, yet little is known about the biosynthetic diversity encoded by divergent microbiomes from different ecosystems, and the environmental parameters driving this diversity. Here, we used targeted amplicon sequencing of adenylation (AD) and ketosynthase (KS) domains along with 16S sequencing to delineate the unique biosynthetic potential of microbiomes from three separate habitats (soil, water, and sediments) exhibiting unique small spatial scale physicochemical gradients. The estimated richness of AD domains was highest in marine sediments with 656 ± 58 operational biosynthetic units (OBUs), while the KS domain richness was highest in soil microbiomes with 388 ± 67 OBUs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Speech Lang Hear Res
December 2022
Purpose: This study examined the extent to which prelingual cochlear implant (CI) users show a slowed speaking rate compared with typical-hearing (TH) talkers when repeating various speech stimuli and whether the slowed speech of CI users relates to their immediate verbal memory.
Method: Participants included 10 prelingually deaf teenagers who received CIs before the age of 5 years and 10 age-matched TH teenagers. Participants repeated nonword syllable strings, word strings, and center-embedded sentences, with conditions balanced for syllable length and metrical structure.
Objective: Lack of choice over treatment may increase the nocebo effect, whereby unpleasant side effects can be triggered by the treatment context, beyond any inherent physiological effects of the treatment itself. Excessive choice may also increase the nocebo effect. The current studies tested these possibilities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo protect themselves from COVID-19, people follow the recommendations of the authorities, but they also resort to placebos. To stop the virus, it is important to understand the factors underlying both types of preventive behaviour. This study examined whether our model (developed based on the Health Belief Model and the Transactional Model of Stress) can explain participation in WHO-recommended and placebo actions during the pandemic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The aim of this study was to determine whether suprasegmental speech perception contributes unique variance in predictions of reading decoding and comprehension for prelingually deaf children using two devices, at least one of which is a cochlear implant (CI).
Method: A total of 104, 5- to 9-year-old CI recipients completed tests of segmental perception (e.g.
Deep neural networks with applications from computer vision to medical diagnosis are commonly implemented using clock-based processors, in which computation speed is mainly limited by the clock frequency and the memory access time. In the optical domain, despite advances in photonic computation, the lack of scalable on-chip optical non-linearity and the loss of photonic devices limit the scalability of optical deep networks. Here we report an integrated end-to-end photonic deep neural network (PDNN) that performs sub-nanosecond image classification through direct processing of the optical waves impinging on the on-chip pixel array as they propagate through layers of neurons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF