Publications by authors named "Melanie Clement"

Article Synopsis
  • Lichens are complex symbiotic organisms that contain fungi, algae or cyanobacteria, and various microorganisms, and are known for producing antibiotic compounds like (+)-usnic acid.
  • A study examined the impact of (+)-usnic acid on several lichen-associated bacterial strains, revealing its strong inhibitory effect on Gram-positive bacteria, yet some bacteria, including the usnic acid producer, Streptomyces cyaneofuscatus, were not affected.
  • The research also identified a less active ethanolamine derivative of (+)-usnic acid and developed a methylated form through molecular networking, showcasing how some bacteria can resist antibiotic properties and the usefulness of technology in biotransformation studies.
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French participants learned English pseudowords either with the orthographic form displayed under the corresponding picture (Audio-Ortho) or without (Audio). In a naming task, pseudowords learned in the Audio-Ortho condition were produced faster and with fewer errors, providing a first piece of evidence that orthographic information facilitates the learning and on-line retrieval of productive vocabulary in a second language. Formant analyses, however, showed that productions from the Audio-Ortho condition were more French-like (i.

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Although Canada has not experienced a major terrorist attack, an increased global pending threat has put preparedness at the top of the Canadian government's agenda. Given its strong multicultural community and close proximity to the recently targeted United States, the Canadian experience is unique. However, minimal research exists on the public's reactions to terrorism threats and related preparedness strategies.

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Evidence in the disaster mental health literature indicates that psychosocial consequences of terrorism are a critical component of chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN) events, both at the clinical level and the normal behavioral and emotional levels. Planning for such psychosocial aspects should be an integral part of emergency preparedness. As Canada and other countries build the capacity to prevent, mitigate, and manage CBRN threats and events, it is important to recognize the range of social, psychological, emotional, spiritual, behavioral, and cognitive factors that may affect victims and their families, communities, children, the elderly, responders, decision makers, and others at all phases of terrorism, from threat to post-impact recovery.

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According to statistical models, the acquisition function of contingency judgement is due to confidence increasing with sample size. According to associative models, the function reflects the accumulation of associative strength on which the judgement is based. Which view is right? Thirty university students assessed the relation between a fictitious medication and a symptom of skin discoloration in conditions that varied sample size (4, 6, 8 or 40 trials) and contingency (delta P = .

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