Publications by authors named "Nogueira W"

The Amazon region has the largest hydrographic basin in the world. The rivers act as roads, and boats serve as vehicles for transporting passengers and cargo to large urban centers, municipalities, riverside communities, villages, and settlements. The Amazon River transportation system faces critical gaps due to the lack of land infrastructure in certain areas, which makes rivers essential for commerce and access to isolated communities.

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The Rio Doce Hydrographic Basin (RDB) lies almost completely in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest, a highly threatened tropical rainforest. The RDB has suffered dramatic anthropogenic impacts during the last two centuries and is currently one of the most degraded regions in southeastern Brazil. In this paper, we gathered 140,742 bird records collected since the early 19th by more than two thousand naturalists, professional scientists, and citizen scientists.

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Article Synopsis
  • Cochlear implants help restore speech understanding in people with severe hearing loss, but how users perceive sounds compared to normal hearing is still unclear.
  • A study examined the brain's response to speech sounds (phoneme-related potentials) in both cochlear implant users and normal hearing individuals, focusing on attention effects.
  • Results showed similar early responses in both groups, but cochlear implant users had reduced activity for later responses, suggesting potential areas for improving speech assessment and tailored rehabilitation strategies.
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  • The study aims to compile and summarize information about desmoplastic fibroma in the jaw bones, focusing on its key characteristics.
  • A systematic review identified 66 articles detailing 96 cases, revealing a higher prevalence in females and younger patients, particularly affecting the mandible, with painless swelling as the primary symptom.
  • Surgical removal is the standard treatment with a recurrence rate of 10.8%, and histopathological analysis shows specific cellular and molecular features that require more research for understanding the tumor's development.
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Combining a cochlear implant with contralateral acoustic hearing typically enhances speech understanding, although this improvement varies among CI users and can lead to an interference effect. This variability may be associated with the effectiveness of the integration between electric and acoustic stimulation, which might be affected by the temporal mismatch between the two listening sides. Finding methods to compensate for the temporal mismatch might contribute to the optimal adjustment of bimodal devices and to improve hearing in CI users with contralateral acoustic hearing.

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Background: Cochlear implants (CI) are implantable medical devices that enable the perception of sounds and the understanding of speech by electrically stimulating the auditory nerve in case of inner ear damage. The stimulation takes place via an array of electrodes surgically inserted in the cochlea. After CI implantation, cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) is used to evaluate the position of the electrodes.

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Freshwater availability is essential, and its maintenance has become an enormous challenge. Due to population growth and climate changes, freshwater sources are becoming scarce, imposing the need for strategies for its reuse. Currently, the constant discharge of waste into water bodies from human activities leads to the dissemination of pathogenic bacteria, negatively impacting water quality from the source to the infrastructure required for treatment, such as the accumulation of biofilms.

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Objective: In cochlear implant users with residual acoustic hearing, compound action potentials (CAPs) can be evoked by acoustic (aCAP) or electric (eCAP) stimulation and recorded through the electrodes of the implant. We propose a novel computational model to simulate aCAPs and eCAPs in humans, considering the interaction between combined electric-acoustic stimulation that occurs in the auditory nerve.

Methods: The model consists of three components: a 3D finite element method model of an implanted cochlea, a phenomenological single-neuron spiking model for electric-acoustic stimulation, and a physiological multi-compartment neuron model to simulate the individual nerve fiber contributions to the CAP.

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For people with profound hearing loss, a cochlear implant (CI) is able to provide access to sounds that support speech perception. With current technology, most CI users obtain very good speech understanding in quiet listening environments. However, many CI users still struggle when listening to music.

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Temporal envelope modulations (TEMs) are one of the most important features that cochlear implant (CI) users rely on to understand speech. Electroencephalographic assessment of TEM encoding could help clinicians to predict speech recognition more objectively, even in patients unable to provide active feedback. The acoustic change complex (ACC) and the auditory steady-state response (ASSR) evoked by low-frequency amplitude-modulated pulse trains can be used to assess TEM encoding with electrical stimulation of individual CI electrodes.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study aimed to assess the awareness of HIV infection among construction workers in Brazil, revealing that specific socioeconomic and cultural factors contribute to their increased vulnerability to STIs.
  • - Conducted with 381 workers, findings showed a mostly male demographic with limited education and lower income levels, and while the average knowledge score was 63.3%, higher education correlated with better understanding of transmission and prevention methods.
  • - Overall, the results indicated a concerning lack of knowledge regarding HIV among construction workers, underscoring the need for targeted educational interventions to reduce their risk of infection.
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Cochlear implants (CIs) provide a solution for individuals with severe sensorineural hearing loss to regain their hearing abilities. When someone experiences this form of hearing impairment in both ears, they may be equipped with two separate CI devices, which will typically further improve the CI benefits. This spatial hearing is particularly crucial when tackling the challenge of understanding speech in noisy environments, a common issue CI users face.

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Objective: To analyze the sexual behaviors of university students during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Method: Mixed study, carried out on four campuses of a public university in Paraíba, Brazil, between March 2021 and April 2022. The research followed ethical precepts.

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Peroxidase (PO) has been applied in different areas of industrial biotechnology, including the control of contaminants like aflatoxin B in fish feeds. However, its potential negative interactions with the macro and micro components of feeds have not been evaluated. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of PO's addition to a feed on compounds like fatty acids and polyphenols using an in vitro simulation of the digestive tract of the tilapia.

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This study aimed to analyze effect of physical exercise in hemogasometric and electrolytic profiles of young Mangalarga Marchador horses beginning training for gait competitions. Six Mangalarga Marchador gaited horses with 6 months of training were evaluated. The ages ranged from three and a half to five years and included four stallions and two mares, with mean (±S.

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Background: Mutations in the BRCA1/2 (BRCA) genes are associated with response to poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors (PARPi). In addition, there are different homologous recombination deficiency (HRD) biomarkers available in clinical practice [e.g.

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Cochlear implants (CIs) have proven to be successful at restoring the sensation of hearing in people who suffer from profound sensorineural hearing loss. CI users generally achieve good speech understanding in quiet acoustic conditions. However, their ability to understand speech degrades drastically when background interfering noise is present.

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Speech understanding in cochlear implant (CI) users presents large intersubject variability that may be related to different aspects of the peripheral auditory system, such as the electrode-nerve interface and neural health conditions. This variability makes it more challenging to proof differences in performance between different CI sound coding strategies in regular clinical studies, nevertheless, computational models can be helpful to assess the speech performance of CI users in an environment where all these physiological aspects can be controlled. In this study, differences in performance between three variants of the HiRes Fidelity 120 (F120) sound coding strategy are studied with a computational model.

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The growing group of cochlear implant (CI) users includes subjects with preserved acoustic hearing on the opposite side to the CI. The use of both listening sides results in improved speech perception in comparison to listening with one side alone. However, large variability in the measured benefit is observed.

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Cochlear implants (CIs) are implantable medical devices that can partially restore hearing to people suffering from profound sensorineural hearing loss. While these devices provide good speech understanding in quiet, many CI users face difficulties when listening to music. Reasons include poor spatial specificity of electric stimulation, limited transmission of spectral and temporal fine structure of acoustic signals, and restrictions in the dynamic range that can be conveyed via electric stimulation of the auditory nerve.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examined the ability of soybean meal-derived peroxidase (PO) to reduce aflatoxin B (AFB) in fish feed during production.
  • Optimal conditions for maximum AFB reduction (90%) were found at an enzyme activity of 0.035 U/g, 32°C, 6 hours, and 70% humidity.
  • Implementing PO in feed production could enhance food safety in aquaculture while also offering a sustainable use for soybean meal that would otherwise go to waste.
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Cochlear implant (CI) recipients with preserved acoustic low-frequency hearing in the implanted ear are a growing group among traditional CI users who benefit from hybrid electric-acoustic stimulation (EAS). However, combined ipsilateral electric and acoustic stimulation also introduces interactions between the two modalities that can affect the performance of EAS users. A computational model of a single auditory nerve fiber that is excited by EAS was developed to study the interaction between electric and acoustic stimulation.

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is the causative bacterial agent of the zoonotic disease known as caseous lymphadenitis, and it presents several mechanisms of response to host defenses, including the presence of virulence factors (VFs). The genomes of these bacteria have several polymorphic markers known as microsatellites, or simple sequence repeats (SSRs), that can be used to characterize the genome, to study possible polymorphisms existing among strains, and to verify the effects of such polymorphic markers in coding regions and regions associated with VFs. In this study, several SSRs were identified within coding regions throughout the 54 genomes of this species, revealing possible polymorphisms associated with coding regions that could be used as strain-specific or serotype-specific identifiers of .

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