Publications by authors named "S E Greening"

The ability to rapidly respond to wildlife health events is essential. However, such events are often unpredictable, especially with anthropogenic disturbances and climate-related environmental changes driving unforeseen threats. Many events also are short-lived and go undocumented, making it difficult to draw on lessons learned from past investigations.

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  • - PARP inhibitors show promise in treating castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) with homologous recombination repair (HRR) defects, but the reasons behind resistance are not completely understood.
  • - A study from the TOPARP-B trial found that 79% of BRCA2/PALB2-mutated tumors exhibited reversion mutations at the end of treatment, with many related to POLQ-mediated DNA repair mechanisms.
  • - In cases of BRCA2 homozygous deletions, rare subclones lacking the BRCA2 deletion are selected for after PARP inhibitor treatment, indicating the necessity for restored HRR function in developing resistance.
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  • Research examined how mental imagery could both worsen and help manage negative emotions, focusing on individual factors like imagery vividness and attention control in a large sample (N=989).
  • It found that strong imagery vividness, mediated by attention control, was linked to healthier emotion regulation strategies like reappraisal and harmful ones like rumination.
  • The study suggests that imagery vividness may play a beneficial role in emotional management by enhancing adaptive strategies and reducing negative psychological symptoms.
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  • Previous research suggests a link between working memory and emotion regulation, but evidence on their overlapping neural mechanisms has been inconsistent.
  • This study aimed to predict participants' working memory abilities based on brain activity patterns during emotion regulation, particularly in the dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC).
  • Results showed a positive relationship between activity in the right dlPFC and working memory performance, indicating shared cognitive processes and neural mechanisms between emotion regulation and working memory.
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Research into the effects of acute anxiety on episodic memory has produced inconsistent findings, particularly for threat-neutral information. In two experiments, we tested the hypothesis that anxiety induced by threat of shock can interfere with the use of semantic-organizational processes that benefit memory. In Experiment 1, participants viewed and freely recalled two lists of semantically unrelated neutral words, one encoded in a threatening context (threat blocks) and one encoded without threat (safe blocks).

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