Publications by authors named "T Cunningham"

Article Synopsis
  • - This study looks at how sleep disturbances affect emotional well-being daily, with a focus on how exercise and social interaction might play a role in this relationship.
  • - Using data from 455 participants over 20 days, researchers found that better sleep efficiency leads to more positive feelings and less negative feelings, while poor sleep quality has the opposite effect.
  • - The study revealed that exercise can help lessen the negative impact of bad sleep on emotions, while more social interaction can enhance the benefits of good sleep on emotional health.
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The National Ignition Facility uses a soft x-ray opacity spectrometer for x-ray spectral imaging in high-energy-density experiments. The increased demand for a better spectral resolution prompted the investigation into the Agfa D4 film. Characterization is already under way for the film.

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Article Synopsis
  • Homozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia (HoFH) is a rare genetic disorder that causes extremely high LDL cholesterol levels, leading to heart disease at an early age; lomitapide is a medication designed to lower these cholesterol levels in affected adults and is being tested for safety and efficacy in children.
  • The APH-19 study involved 43 pediatric patients aged 5-17 years on existing cholesterol treatments; they received varying doses of lomitapide over a 24-week period to measure its effect on LDL cholesterol levels and other lipid parameters.
  • Results indicated a significant decrease in LDL cholesterol by 53.5% after 24 weeks of treatment, suggesting lomitapide may be effective for managing cholesterol
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Article Synopsis
  • The study reviews various psychological factors that might predict recidivism in intimate partner violence (IPV), identifying a lack of comprehensive research on these risk factors up to now.* -
  • A systematic analysis of studies from 1945 to 2024 focused on longitudinal research involving criminal justice samples, leading to the inclusion of 25 applicable studies.* -
  • Key psychological factors linked to IPV reoffending were categorized into five groups, with personality traits being the most frequently researched predictor, alongside anger, trauma, and cognitive deficits, although methodological flaws in the studies were noted.*
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