318 results match your criteria: "University of Saint-Etienne.[Affiliation]"

Is plant acoustic communication fact or fiction?

New Phytol

June 2024

Molecular Phytobacteriology Laboratory, Infectious Disease Research Center, KRIBB, Daejeon, 34141, South Korea.

In recent years, the idea has flourished that plants emit and perceive sound and could even be capable of exchanging information through the acoustic channel. While research into plant bioacoustics is still in its infancy, with potentially fascinating discoveries awaiting ahead, here we show that the current knowledge is not conclusive. While plants do emit sounds under biotic and abiotic stresses such as drought, these sounds are high-pitched, of low intensity, and propagate only to a short distance.

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  • The study evaluates the effectiveness of 13 bleeding risk assessment scores for patients on oral anticoagulants in a family practice setting.
  • The research involved over 3,000 patients with non-valvular atrial fibrillation or venous thromboembolism over one year, analyzing the scores' ability to predict major bleeding events.
  • Results showed that all the scores had poor to moderate predictive accuracy, indicating they may not be reliable tools for assessing bleeding risk in these patients within family practice.
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  • The Ritux 3 trial showed that rituximab is effective and safe as a first-line treatment for pemphigus, although long-term follow-up data was previously lacking.!* -
  • This 7-year follow-up study evaluated the long-term outcomes for patients treated with rituximab alongside prednisone versus those treated with prednisone alone, focusing on disease-free survival and relapse rates.!* -
  • Results indicated that 93% of patients in the rituximab group achieved complete remission without corticosteroids, showing significantly higher disease-free survival and lower relapse rates compared to the prednisone-only group.!*
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Transfusion therapy is an indispensable form of treatment, and an important element of the public health system. Due to its origin, blood's clinical use is associated with various risks that may cause adverse reactions and events. Progress in quality and safety of blood components has eliminated numerous risks, especially those of infectious origin.

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A practical guide to calculating vocal tract length and scale-invariant formant patterns.

Behav Res Methods

September 2024

ENES Bioacoustics Research Laboratory, CRNL Center for Research in Neuroscience in Lyon, University of Saint Étienne, 42023, St-Étienne, France.

Formants (vocal tract resonances) are increasingly analyzed not only by phoneticians in speech but also by behavioral scientists studying diverse phenomena such as acoustic size exaggeration and articulatory abilities of non-human animals. This often involves estimating vocal tract length acoustically and producing scale-invariant representations of formant patterns. We present a theoretical framework and practical tools for carrying out this work, including open-source software solutions included in R packages soundgen and phonTools.

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Nonverbal acoustic parameters of the human voice provide cues to a vocaliser's sex, age, and body size that are relevant in human social and sexual communication, and also increasingly so for computer-based voice recognition and synthesis technologies. While studies have shown some capacity in human listeners to gauge these biological traits from unseen speakers, it remains unknown whether speech complexity improves accuracy. Here, in over 200 vocalisers and 1500 listeners of both sexes, we test whether voice-based assessments of sex, age, height and weight vary from isolated vowels and words, to sequences of vowels and words, to full sentences or paragraphs.

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The current study investigates attitudes toward one form of sex for resources: the so-called sugar relationships, which often involve exchanges of resources for sex and/or companionship. The present study examined associations among attitudes toward sugar relationships and relevant variables (e.g.

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Vocal communication: The enigmatic production of low-frequency purrs in cats.

Curr Biol

December 2023

ENES Bioacoustics Research Laboratory, CRNL, CNRS, Inserm, University of Saint-Etienne, 42000 Saint-Etienne, France; Division of Cognitive Science, Lund University, SE-221 00 Lund, Sweden.

Cat purring, the unusual, pulsed vibration that epitomizes comfort, enjoys a special status in the world of vocal communication research. Indeed, it has long been flagged as a rare exception to the dominant theory of voice production in mammals. A new study presents histological and biomechanical evidence that purring can occur passively, without needing muscle vibration in the larynx controlled by an independent neural oscillator.

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The role of loudness in vocal intimidation.

J Exp Psychol Gen

February 2024

ENES Bioacoustics Research Lab/Lyon Neuroscience Research Centre (CRNL), CNRS UMR5292, INSERM UMR-S 1028, University of Saint-Etienne.

Across many species, a major function of vocal communication is to convey formidability, with low voice frequencies traditionally considered the main vehicle for projecting large size and aggression. Vocal loudness is often ignored, yet it might explain some puzzling exceptions to this frequency code. Here we demonstrate, through acoustic analyses of over 3,000 human vocalizations and four perceptual experiments, that vocalizers produce low frequencies when attempting to sound large, but loudness is prioritized for displays of strength and aggression.

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Beyond speech: Exploring diversity in the human voice.

iScience

November 2023

ENES Bioacoustics Research Lab, CRNL, University of Saint-Etienne, CNRS, Inserm, 23 rue Michelon, 42023 Saint-Etienne, France.

Humans have evolved voluntary control over vocal production for speaking and singing, while preserving the phylogenetically older system of spontaneous nonverbal vocalizations such as laughs and screams. To test for systematic acoustic differences between these vocal domains, we analyzed a broad, cross-cultural corpus representing over 2 h of speech, singing, and nonverbal vocalizations. We show that, while speech is relatively low-pitched and tonal with mostly regular phonation, singing and especially nonverbal vocalizations vary enormously in pitch and often display harsh-sounding, irregular phonation owing to nonlinear phenomena.

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Introduction: Sexual health is essential to the overall health. People suffering from severe mental illness (SMI) experience a deterioration in their sexual health. These patients and their caregivers seem unwilling to engage in a dialogue concerning sexual health within the context of mental health care.

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Variation in formant frequencies has been shown to affect social interactions and sexual competition in a range of avian species. Yet, the anatomical bases of this variation are poorly understood. Here, we investigated the morphological correlates of formants production in the vocal apparatus of African penguins.

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  • Global biodiversity, especially seabird populations like the African penguin, is declining, necessitating effective conservation strategies and population monitoring tools.
  • The research explored the use of passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) to estimate animal populations by analyzing ecstatic display songs (EDSs) in a penguin colony, revealing that environmental factors influence calling rates.
  • Findings indicated that there’s a positive correlation between calling rates and visual counts of penguins, suggesting PAM is a feasible, noninvasive method for monitoring endangered species while highlighting the potential impact of temperature on calling behavior and population dynamics.
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Coordinated group displays featuring precise entrainment of rhythmic behavior between neighbors occur not only in human music, dance and drill, but in the acoustic or optical signaling of a number of species of arthropods and anurans. In this review we describe the mechanisms of phase resetting and phase and tempo adjustments that allow the periodic output of signaling individuals to be aligned in synchronized rhythmic group displays. These mechanisms are well described in some of the synchronizing arthropod species, in which conspecific signals reset an individual's endogenous output oscillators in such a way that the joint rhythmic signals are locked in phase.

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Crocodile perception of distress in hominid baby cries.

Proc Biol Sci

August 2023

ENES Bioacoustics Research Laboratory, CRNL, CNRS, Inserm, University of Saint-Etienne, Saint-Etienne, Rhône-Alpes, France.

It is generally argued that distress vocalizations, a common modality for alerting conspecifics across a wide range of terrestrial vertebrates, share acoustic features that allow heterospecific communication. Yet studies suggest that the acoustic traits used to decode distress may vary between species, leading to decoding errors. Here we found through playback experiments that Nile crocodiles are attracted to infant hominid cries (bonobo, chimpanzee and human), and that the intensity of crocodile response depends critically on a set of specific acoustic features (mainly deterministic chaos, harmonicity and spectral prominences).

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Objective: The current evidence of a relationship between periodic leg movements during sleep (PLMS) and cognitive functioning is limited and inconsistent. This cross-sectional study assessed associations between PLMS and cognitive functioning among community-dwelling older adults.

Methods: We included community-dwelling older adults who underwent a polysomnography and a cognitive assessment.

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Detection of HPV in urine for cervical cancer screening: Feasibilty of an assay system.

J Gynecol Obstet Hum Reprod

October 2023

Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, North Hospital, CHU Saint-Etienne, Saint-Etienne, France; Inserm, SAINBIOSE, U1059, Université Jean-Monnet, CIC1408 F- 42055, Saint-Etienne, France.

The detection of urine HPV is considered as a promosing alternative to increase the screening coverage of cervical cancer. However, the validated assay of urine HPV is still scarse. We described a nouvel assay syetem for the urine-based detection of HPV in the framework of HPV screening.

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The ability to discriminate between different individuals based on identity cues, which is important to support the social behaviour of many animal species, has mostly been investigated in conspecific contexts. A rare example of individual heterospecific discrimination is found in domestic dogs, who are capable of recognising their owners' voices. Here, we test whether grey wolves, the nearest wild relative of dogs, also have the ability to distinguish familiar human voices, which would indicate that dogs' ability is not a consequence of domestication.

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Research on the relationship between obstructive sleep apnea and cognitive functioning has yielded conflicting results, particularly in the older population, and moderators of this association have rarely been studied. Here we investigated the cross-sectional association between obstructive sleep apnea and cognitive functioning as well as the moderating effect of age, sex, apolipoprotein E4, and obesity on this association among community-dwelling older people. We analysed data from 496 participants (71.

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The interpretation of lung auscultation is highly subjective and relies on non-specific nomenclature. Computer-aided analysis has the potential to better standardize and automate evaluation. We used 35.

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Urine-based detection of HPV for cervical cancer screening: Time for standardized tests.

J Med Virol

April 2023

Laboratoire des Agents Infectieux et d'Hygiène, North Hospital, CHU de Saint-Étienne, Saint-Étienne, France.

Cervical cancer is preventable because it has an established etiology, mainly attributed to a detectable pathogen, human papillomavirus (HPV). In 2018, the world health organization issued an unprecedented call for global action to eliminate cervical cancer by 2030. The adaptation of regular screening programs is fundamental to achieve the goal of cervical cancer elimination.

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Platelet concentrate (PC) transfusion seeks to provide haemostasis in patients presenting severe central thrombocytopenia or severe bleeding. PCs may induce adverse reactions (AR) that can occasionally be severe (SAR). PCs contain active biomolecules such as cytokines and lipid mediators.

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