Publications by authors named "Nataliya Rybnikova"

Article Synopsis
  • Questionnaires are commonly used in mental health research but have limitations; their self-reported data can be subjective and only reflect a snapshot in time.
  • The paper introduces a new framework that includes a third dimension—robustness to deep uncertainty—alongside existing validity axes to enhance the generalizability of mental health assessments.
  • By analyzing mental health data from before and during the Covid-19 pandemic, the study emphasizes how this new dimension interacts with traditional validity measures and its importance in understanding mental health across different populations.
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Unlabelled: The physical structure of cities is the result of self-organization processes in which profit-maximizing developers are key players. The recent Covid-19 pandemic was a natural experiment by means of which it is possible to gain insights into shifts in the spatial structure of cities by studying developers' behavior. Behavioral changes of urbanites triggered by the quarantine and lockdown periods, such as home-based work and online shopping on scales that were unthinkable heretofore, are expected to persist.

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Data on artificial night-time light (NTL), emitted from the areas, and captured by satellites, are available at a global scale in format. In the meantime, data on properties of NTL give more information for further analysis. Such data, however, are available locally or on a commercial basis only.

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Several population-level studies revealed a positive association between breast cancer (BC) incidence and artificial light at night (ALAN) exposure. However, the effect of short-wavelength illumination, implicated by laboratory research and small-scale cohort studies as the main driving force behind BC-ALAN association, has not been supported by any population-level study carried out to date. We investigated a possible link between BC and ALAN of different subspectra using a multi-spectral year-2011 satellite image, taken from the International Space Station, and superimposing it with year-2013 BC incidence data available for the Great Haifa Metropolitan Area in Israel.

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Artificial lights raise night sky luminance, creating the most visible effect of light pollution-artificial skyglow. Despite the increasing interest among scientists in fields such as ecology, astronomy, health care, and land-use planning, light pollution lacks a current quantification of its magnitude on a global scale. To overcome this, we present the world atlas of artificial sky luminance, computed with our light pollution propagation software using new high-resolution satellite data and new precision sky brightness measurements.

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Widespread use of artificial light at night (ALAN) might contribute to the global burden of hormone-dependent cancers. Previous attempts to verify this association in population-level studies have been sparse. Using GLOBOCAN, US-DMSP, and World Bank 2010-2012 databases, we studied the association between ALAN and prostate cancer (PC) incidence in 180 countries worldwide, controlling for several country-level confounders.

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