Publications by authors named "W A Nogueira"

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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Article Synopsis
  • 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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