Publications by authors named "Gyory J"

Purpose: Narration within a story grammar framework requires speakers to organize characters and events logically. Despite abundant research characterizing narrative deficits following a traumatic brain injury (TBI), the evolution of narrative story grammar over the first 2 years post-TBI has rarely been explored. This study analyzed story grammar in complex narratives of adults with and without severe TBI to (a) examine between-group differences and (b) investigate longitudinal changes over the first 2 years post-TBI.

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Human subject experiments are performed to evaluate the influence of artificial intelligence (AI) process management on human design teams solving a complex engineering problem and compare that to the influence of human process management. Participants are grouped into teams of five individuals and asked to generate a drone fleet and plan routes to deliver parcels to a given customer market. The teams are placed under the guidance of either a human or an AI external process manager.

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Purpose: To report the 5-year visual, refractive, and patient-reported outcomes following implantation of a trifocal intraocular lens (IOL) during cataract surgery.

Setting: Csolnoky Ferenc University Hospital, Veszprém, Hungary.

Design: Prospective, longitudinal, single-center, interventional study.

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Purpose: To compare the optical performance and quality of life after implantation of a new progressively apodized diffractive multifocal intraocular lens (IOL) and report the visual and patient-reported outcomes and contrast sensitivity.

Setting: Csolnoky Ferenc Hospital, Veszprem, Hungary.

Design: Prospective case series.

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Energetic responses of zooxanthellate reef corals along depth gradients have relevance to the refugia potential of mesophotic coral ecosystems (MCEs). Previous observations suggested that MCEs in the Caribbean are thermally buffered during the warmest parts of the year and occur within or just below the chlorophyll maximum, suggesting abundant trophic resources. However, it is not known if mesophotic corals can maintain constant energy needs throughout the year with changing environmental and biological conditions.

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Article Synopsis
  • Deeper coral reefs are believed to offer protection from thermal stress and bleaching due to lower temperatures and reduced light exposure, challenging the deep reef refugia hypothesis.
  • Over two thermal stress events studied, mesophotic reefs (30-75 m deep) showed a decline in bleaching threshold temperatures with depth, contradicting the idea that deeper reefs are safer from climate impacts.
  • The findings suggest that cooler depths do not provide immunity against climate change, indicating that both deep and shallow coral reefs are similarly vulnerable to rising sea temperatures.
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The persistence of natural metapopulations may depend on subpopulations that exist at the edges of species ranges, removed from anthropogenic stress. Mesophotic coral ecosystems (30-150 m) are buffered from disturbance by depth and distance, and are potentially massive reservoirs of coral diversity and fecundity; yet we know little about the reproductive capabilities of their constituent species and the potential for these marginal environments to influence patterns of coral reef persistence. We investigated the reproductive performance of the threatened depth-generalist coral Orbicella faveolata over the extent of its vertical range to assess mesophotic contributions to regional larval pools.

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Species intolerant of changing climate might avoid extinction within refugia buffered from extreme conditions. Refugia have been observed in the fossil record but are not well documented or understood on ecological time scales. Using a 37-year record from the eastern Pacific across the two most severe El Niño events on record (1982-1983 and 1997 1998) we show how an exceptionally thermally sensitive reef-building hydrocoral, Millepora intricata, twice survived catastrophic bleaching in a deeper-water refuge (> 11 m depth).

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Animal models, in vitro assays and pilot clinical studies suggest that intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide may be useful in the treatment of age-related macular degeneration. The present case study reports the effect of intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide injection on a subretinal neovascular lesion, microglial morphology and quantitative expression of MHC-II antigens. Triamcinolone acetonide significantly decreased MHC-II expression consistent with immunocytochemical observations which revealed condensed microglial morphology.

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Purpose: To evaluate the safety and efficacy of intravitreal triamcinolone after 18 months of follow up in patients with age-related macular degeneration and subfoveal or juxtafoveal choroidal neovascularization considered unsuitable for laser photocoagulation.

Methods: Thirty eyes of 28 patients, referred from general eye clinics as well as the private clinic of one of the authors to a hospital-based retinal out-patient clinic, were treated with an intravitreal injection of triamcinolone (4 mg). The primary outcome measure was the proportion of eyes with loss of six or more lines on a Bailey-Lovie Chart.

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Purpose: To study the efficacy of the anti-inflammatory agent triamcinolone (Kenacort A-40) in patients with exudative age-related macular degeneration and subfoveal and juxtafoveal choroidal new vessels, considered unsuitable for laser photocoagulation.

Method: Thirty eyes of 28 patients were treated with intravitreal injection of triamcinolone. The subsequent visual acuity (VA) of treated eyes was compared with published VA outcomes of untreated eyes.

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