Publications by authors named "T Forest"

Article Synopsis
  • Intra and inter-pathologist variability complicates the evaluation of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) biopsy results, hindering patient selection and assessment quality in clinical trials.
  • A study analyzed 120 histology slides with and without AI assistance to evaluate its impact on pathologists' reliability in fibrosis staging, especially for early fibrosis stages.
  • Results showed that AI assistance significantly improved concordance among pathologists, increasing agreement rates for clinical trial inclusion and exclusion, which could enhance the overall efficiency and reliability of MASH-related clinical research.
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Caregivers play an outsized role in shaping early life experiences and development, but we often lack mechanistic insight into how exactly caregiver behavior scaffolds the neurodevelopment of specific learning processes. Here, we capitalized on the fact that caregivers differ in how predictable their behavior is to ask if infants' early environmental input shapes their brains' later ability to learn about predictable information. As part of an ongoing longitudinal study in South Africa, we recorded naturalistic, dyadic interactions between 103 (46 females and 57 males) infants and their primary caregivers at 3-6 months of age, from which we calculated the predictability of caregivers' behavior, following caregiver vocalization and overall.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The European green woodpecker (Picus viridis) has a newly assembled genome that is 1.28 billion base pairs long, created using advanced sequencing techniques.
  • - This genome assembly captures 89.4% of known bird genes, containing 15,805 genes and around 30.1% repetitive elements, offering a detailed genetic profile of the species.
  • - Comparisons with the chicken genome reveal the fragmented structure of the woodpecker's genome, and additional resequencing of historical and contemporary samples aims to enhance understanding of the species' population history.
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Article Synopsis
  • Contiguous genome assemblies are crucial for understanding the genetic makeup of organisms, but creating them in molluscs is tough due to large genomes, genetic variation, and repetitive DNA.
  • The first genome assembly for a threatened species of freshwater mussel was produced but was fragmented because it used short-read sequencing.
  • An improved genome assembly was achieved by combining long-read and short-read sequencing, resulting in a comprehensive assembly with over 48,000 predicted protein-coding genes, aiding in the study and conservation of this species.
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Trajectories of cognitive and neural development suggest that, despite early emergence, the ability to extract environmental patterns changes across childhood. Here, 5- to 9-year-olds and adults (N = 211, 110 females, in a large Canadian city) completed a memory test assessing what they remembered after watching a stream of shape triplets: the particular sequence in which the shapes occurred and/or their group-level structure. After accounting for developmental improvements in overall memory, all ages remembered specific transitions, while memory for group membership was only observed in older children and adults (age by test-type interaction η  = .

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