Individuals in the veterinary profession are experiencing significant mental health and wellbeing challenges. A holistic view of wellbeing, which encompasses both physical and mental health, underscores their interconnected nature. This integrated approach reduces the artificial separation of wellbeing facets, and highlights how mental states influence not only individuals, but also their interactions with animals, the environment, and others in the workplace.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychopharmacology (Berl)
October 2022
Rationale: Caffeine is the most consumed stimulant worldwide, and there is great interest in understanding its neurophysiological effects. Resting-state electroencephalography (EEG) studies suggest that caffeine enhances arousal, which suppresses the spectral power of alpha frequencies associated with reduced alertness. However, it is unclear whether caffeine's neurophysiological effects vary across the human menstrual cycle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article provides a brief background of key issues in physician burnout, a significant problem in the healthcare industry. The extent and severity of burnout are not well understood; and those seeking help are often stigmatized. A number of different approaches to alleviating burnout have been suggested, but the problem lacks any single or simple solution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAerosp Med Hum Perform
February 2020
Loss-of-control (LOC) is the major cause of transport airplane mishaps. There have been many published reports and papers examining these accidents. While these studies did mention spatial disorientation (SD) as a cause or a factor, none of them analyzed it further.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe used event-related potentials (ERPs) to compare auditory word recognition in children with specific language impairment (SLI group; N=14) to a group of typically developing children (TD group; N=14). Subjects were presented with pictures of items and heard auditory words that either matched or mismatched the pictures. Mismatches overlapped expected words in word-onset (cohort mismatches; see: DOLL, hear: dog), rhyme (CONE -bone), or were unrelated (SHELL -mug).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Speech Lang Hear Res
February 2013
Purpose: A range of studies have shown difficulties in perceiving acoustic and phonetic information in dyslexia; however, much less is known about how such difficulties relate to the perception of individual words. The authors present data from event-related potentials (ERPs) examining the hypothesis that children with dyslexia have difficulties with processing phonemic information within spoken words compared to age-matched readers with typical development.
Method: The authors monitored ERPs to auditory words during a simple picture-word matching task.
We used rapid event-related fMRI to explore factors modulating the activation of orthographic and phonological representations of print during a visual lexical decision task. Stimuli included homophonous word and nonword stimuli (MAID, BRANE), which have been shown behaviorally to produce longer response times due to phonological mediation effects. We also manipulated participants' reliance on orthography by varying the extent to which nonword foils were orthographically typical (wordlike context) or atypical (non-wordlike context) of real words.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehavioral and modeling evidence suggests that words compete for recognition during auditory word identification, and that phonological similarity is a driving factor in this competition. The present study used event-related potentials (ERPs) to examine the temporal dynamics of different types of phonological competition (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present study was designed to investigate the electrophysiological consequences of a mismatch between initial phoneme expectations and the actual spoken input. Participants were presented with a word/nonword prompt with the instruction to delete the initial sound (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe examined phonetic and sensory processes in speech perception using mismatch negativity, an event-related potential component congruent with discrimination, but which occurs for unattended stimuli. Adult listeners (N=16) heard a repeated standard (the syllable 'da') that was interrupted infrequently by a phonetically different 'deviant' syllable ('ba'). The acoustic difference between standard and deviant was manipulated to create both acoustically Strong and Weak deviant stimuli.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res Cogn Brain Res
September 2004
The goal of the present study was to delineate phonology's role in silent reading using event-related brain potential (ERP) techniques. Terminal endings of high cloze sentences were manipulated in four conditions in which the terminal word was: (1) the high cloze ending and thus orthographically, phonologically and semantically congruent (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeveral studies have identified a negativity [the phonological mismatch negativity (PMN)] preceding the N400 during auditory sentence comprehension. The present study investigated whether the PMN reflects a prelexical or lexical stage of spoken word recognition. Event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were recorded to investigate phonological processing independently from lexical/semantic influences during a task requiring metalinguistic analysis of speech stimuli.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Phys Med Rehabil
February 1996
Manual medicine is an important part of the practice of physical medicine and rehabilitation (PM&R). Using a two-part questionnaire, we surveyed PM&R residents to determine their level of interest in manual medicine, their attitudes about this type of treatment, and the amount of formal training in manual medicine offered in PM&R residencies. Questionnaires were sent to all 75 PM&R residency training programs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeventy incontinent female patients were diagnosed as having unstable bladders during a two-year period. The diagnosis was made with a questionnaire, carbon dioxide urethroscopy and pressure profiles according to the technique of Robertson. Forty patients were continent on medication, 11 were improved, 6 showed no improvement, 1 was on a trial of medication at this writing, and 12 were lost to follow-up.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSix hundred fifty-eight laparoscopies were performed at St. Luke's Hospital, Kansas City, Missouri, USA, between March 1, 1976 and February 28, 1977. One hundred sixty-eight (25.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA cervical cytologic diagnosis of inflammatory stypia was made in 319 patients during a 42-month period. Two hundred twenty-five of those patients underwent colposcopy, and biopsy was performed in 155 patients. Mild to severe dysplasia was diagnosed in 115 patients, for a 36% prevalence of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeonatal glucose disappearance (KT) was measured in 26 infants of insulin-dependent diabetic mothers within the first 2 h of life. A significant correlation was found between the KT and the lowest blood glucose (LBG) in the first day of life (r = 0.64, P less than 0.
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