One Condition (one + condition)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Eye remember you two: gaze direction modulates face recognition in a developmental study

DEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE, Issue 5 2006
Alastair D. Smith
The effects of gaze direction on memory for faces were studied in children from three different age groups (6,7, 8,9, and 10,11 years old) using a computerized version of a task devised by Hood, Macrae, Cole-Davies and Dias (2003). Participants were presented with a sequence of faces in an encoding phase, and were then required to judge which faces they had previously encountered in a surprise two-alternative forced-choice recognition test. In one condition, stimulus eye gaze was either direct or deviated at the viewing phase, and eyes were closed at the test phase. In another condition, stimulus eyes were closed at the viewing phase, with either direct or deviated gaze at the test phase. Modulation of gaze direction affected hit rates, with participants demonstrating greater accuracy for direct gaze targets compared to deviated gaze targets in both conditions. Reaction times (RT) to correctly recognized stimuli were faster for direct gaze stimuli at the viewing phase, but not at the test phase. The age group of participants differentially affected these measures: there was a greater hit rate advantage for direct gaze stimuli in older children, although RTs were less affected by age. These findings suggest that while the facilitation of face recognition by gaze direction is robust across encoding and recognition stages, the efficiency of the process is affected by the stage at which gaze is modulated. [source]


The Co-Occurrence of Chronic Diseases and Geriatric Syndromes: The Health and Retirement Study

JOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 3 2009
Pearl G. Lee MD
OBJECTIVES: To analyze the co-occurrence, in adults aged 65 and older, of five conditions that are highly prevalent, lead to substantial morbidity, and have evidence-based guidelines for management and well-developed measures of medical care quality. DESIGN: Secondary data analysis of the 2004 wave of the Health and Retirement Study (HRS). SETTING: Nationally representative health interview survey. PARTICIPANTS: Respondents in the 2004 wave of the HRS aged 65 and older. MEASUREMENTS: Self-reported presence of five index conditions (three chronic diseases (coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure, and diabetes mellitus) and two geriatric syndromes (urinary incontinence and injurious falls)) and demographic information (age, sex, race, living situation, net worth, and education). RESULTS: Eleven thousand one hundred thirteen adults, representing 37.1 million Americans aged 65 and older, were interviewed. Forty-five percent were aged 76 and older, 58% were female, 8% were African American, and 4% resided in a nursing home. Respondents with more conditions were older and more likely to be female, single, and residing in a nursing home (all P<.001). Fifty-six percent had at least one of the five index conditions, and 23% had two or more. Of respondents with one condition, 20% to 55% (depending on the index condition) had two or more additional conditions. CONCLUSION: Five common conditions (3 chronic diseases, 2 geriatric syndromes) often co-occur in older adults, suggesting that coordinated management of comorbid conditions, both diseases and geriatric syndromes, is important. Care guidelines and quality indicators, rather than considering one condition at a time, should be developed to address comprehensive and coordinated management of co-occurring diseases and geriatric syndromes. [source]


Cultural Variations in the Placebo Effect: Ulcers, Anxiety, and Blood Pressure

MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY QUARTERLY, Issue 1 2000
Daniel E. Moerman
An analysis of the control groups in double-blind trials of medicines demonstrates broad variation,from 0 to 100 percent,in placebo effectiveness rates for the same treatment for the same condition. In two cases considered here, drug healing rates covary with placebo healing rates; placebo healing is the ultimate and inescapable "complementary medicine. " Several factors can account for the dramatic variation in placebo healing rates, including cultural ones. But because variation differs by illness, large placebo effects for one condition do not necessarily anticipate large placebo effects for other conditions as well. Deeper understanding of the intimate relationship between cultural and biological processes will require close ethnographic scrutiny of the meaningfulness of medical treatment in different societies, [placebo effect, ulcer disease, anxiety, hypertension, cross-cultural variation] [source]


Inbreeding depression and multiple regions showing heterozygote advantage in Drosophila melanogaster exposed to stress

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, Issue 13 2006
ÁLVARO G. A. FERREIRA
Abstract Recent studies that reveal a correlation between heterozygosity and fitness in natural populations have rekindled interest in whether balancing selection is widespread or an evolutionary oddity. We therefore quantified heterozygote advantage at 12 microsatellite markers in both inbred and outbred crosses of Drosophila grown under different forms of environmental stress. As expected, inbreeding depression reduces fitness relative to the outbred controls. In addition, many loci exhibit heterozygote advantage over and above any effect due to inbreeding, with ,30% of markers showing an effect in any given culture condition and ,75% of markers showing an effect in at least one of the four culture conditions. To explore the extent of linkage disequilibrium surrounding these loci we further typed four new markers close to each of the three strongest hits. We find a pattern where the extent of heterozygote excess tends to decline to nonsignificance within around 1.5 megabases (Mb) either side of the original hit. Crude extrapolation suggests 12 genes or regions experience detectable levels of heterozygote advantage in any one condition and as many as 25 overall. Thus, balancing selection is widespread and is likely to play an important role in maintaining genetic variability. [source]


Disentangling effects of auditory distraction and of stimulus-response sequence

PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 2 2009
Urte Roeber
Abstract When we pay attention to one task, irrelevant changes may interfere. The effect of changes on behavioral and electrophysiological responses has been studied in two separate research fields: Research on Distraction states that a rare irrelevant change takes attention away from the primary task. Research on Sequences states that any change in stimulus or response incurs a cost or benefit depending on the kind of change. To disentangle distraction from sequence effects, we made task-irrelevant changes rare in one condition and frequent in another while also assessing stimulus and response changes from trial to trial. Participants used key presses to classify syllables presented in two different, irrelevant voice pitches. We found that distraction and sequence interacted to alter reaction times and errors on the primary task and also to alter ERP markers of distraction (P3a). The sequential effects cannot, however, fully account for distraction. [source]


Time course of vocal modulation during isolation in common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus)

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY, Issue 8 2010
Chieko Yamaguchi
Abstract Common marmosets vocalize phee calls as isolation calls, which seem to facilitate their reunion with family groups. To identify multiple acoustic properties with different time courses, we examined acoustic modulations of phees during different social contexts of isolation. Subject marmosets were totally isolated in one condition, were visually isolated and could exchange vocalizations in another condition, and were visually isolated and subsequently totally isolated in a third condition. We recorded 6,035 phees of 10 male,female marmoset pairs and conducted acoustic analysis. The marmosets frequently vocalized phees that were temporally elongated and louder during isolation, with varying time courses of these changes in acoustic parameters. The vocal rates and sound levels of the phees increased as soon as the marmosets saw their pair mates being taken away, and then gradually calmed down. The phee duration was longer in conditions during which there were no vocal responses from their pair mates. Louder vocalizations are conspicuous and seem to be effective for long-distance transmission, whereas shorter call duration during vocal exchanges might avoid possible vocal overlap between mates. Am. J. Primatol. 72:681,688, 2010. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]


Conditional Bail Decision Making in the Magistrates' Court

THE HOWARD JOURNAL OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE, Issue 1 2004
Mandeep K. Dhami
In the present study, magistrates made bail decisions on systematically designed hypothetical cases. It was found that on average, magistrates attached more than one condition to bail, and they were limited in the types of conditions they imposed. Although there was no difference in the consistency of magistrates' conditional and unconditional bail decisions, magistrates were more likely to disagree on a case when deciding to grant conditional bail, and they were less confident in their conditional bail decisions. In addition, magistrates' imposition of conditions was affected by both legal and extra-legal factors. Implications for enhancing magistrates' performance are discussed. [source]


Does Trial presentation medium matter in jury simulation research?

APPLIED COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 5 2010
Evaluating the effectiveness of eyewitness expert testimony
This study assesses whether mock jurors' perceptions of eyewitness expert testimony vary based on the level of ecological validity,video or transcript trial presentation medium. In Experiment 1, 496 jury-eligible mock jurors were presented a simulated trial. Each served in one condition in a 3 (no expert or eyewitness expert either with or without prosecution rebuttal witness),×,2 (trial presentation medium: Video or transcript) design. Participants were generally less certain of the defendant's guilt after the eyewitness expert testimony, and affective and cognitive ratings of the expert testimony were higher in the transcript than video condition. However, there were no significant interactions of modality with expert conditions, thus reducing concerns that jury simulation research must be conducted with live or video trials to be externally valid. Findings were replicated in Experiment 2 using the testimony of a different eyewitness expert rated to have a more dynamic communication style. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Memory conformity: can eyewitnesses influence each other's memories for an event?

APPLIED COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 5 2003
Fiona Gabbert
The current study investigated memory conformity effects between individuals who witness and then discuss a criminal event, employing a novel procedure whereby each member of a dyad watches a different video of the same event. Each video contained unique items that were thus seen only by one witness. Dyads in one condition were encouraged to discuss the event before each witness (individually) performed a recall test, while in a control condition dyads were not allowed to discuss the event prior to recall. A significant proportion (71%) of witnesses who had discussed the event went on to mistakenly recall items acquired during the discussion. There were no age-related differences in susceptibility to these memory conformity effects in younger (18,30 years) as compared to older (60,80 years) participants. Possible social and cognitive mechanisms underlying the distortions of memory due to conformity are discussed. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Cost drivers of public hospital occupational therapy outpatient care

AUSTRALIAN OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY JOURNAL, Issue 4 2001
Karen Grimmer
This study examined the associations between various patient-related, demographic and episode-based factors, and the length of time associated with completed episodes of outpatient (ambulatory) occupational therapy care. Data were provided over a 10-month period by eight public hospitals in three Australian states. An episode described occupational therapy outpatient management for one patient with one condition, and consisted of start and finish dates, and all the occasions of service in between. The median value of the total patient-attributable time of an occupational therapy episode of care was 70 min. Factors that were strongly associated with long occupational therapy episodes were age, communication issues and hospital location (metropolitan or country). This study provides the basis for future investigations into the costs of providing ,best practice' occupational therapy outpatient services. [source]


The effect of providing choices on skill acquisition and competing behavior of children with autism during discrete trial instruction

BEHAVIORAL INTERVENTIONS, Issue 1 2002
Bobby Newman
Discrete trial instruction was carried out for three students with autism. An alternating treatments design was implemented. In one condition, teachers chose the reinforcers to be used and the order in which programs were conducted. In a second condition, students chose the order of programs and the reinforcers to be used. Speed of skill acquisition and the presence of competing behavior such as tantrums, aggression, escape attempts or idiosyncratic noncompliance responses were measured. Speed of skill acquisition did not differ between the two conditions, but competing behavior was markedly reduced during student choice conditions. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Bayesian Nonparametric Modeling for Comparison of Single-Neuron Firing Intensities

BIOMETRICS, Issue 1 2010
Athanasios Kottas
Summary We propose a fully inferential model-based approach to the problem of comparing the firing patterns of a neuron recorded under two distinct experimental conditions. The methodology is based on nonhomogeneous Poisson process models for the firing times of each condition with flexible nonparametric mixture prior models for the corresponding intensity functions. We demonstrate posterior inferences from a global analysis, which may be used to compare the two conditions over the entire experimental time window, as well as from a pointwise analysis at selected time points to detect local deviations of firing patterns from one condition to another. We apply our method on two neurons recorded from the primary motor cortex area of a monkey's brain while performing a sequence of reaching tasks. [source]


The purification, crystallization and preliminary diffraction of a glycerophosphodiesterase from Enterobacter aerogenes

ACTA CRYSTALLOGRAPHICA SECTION F (ELECTRONIC), Issue 7 2006
Colin J. Jackson
The metallo-glycerophosphodiesterase from Enterobacter aerogenes (GpdQ) has been cloned, expressed in Escherichia coli and purified. Initial screening of crystallization conditions for this enzyme resulted in the identification of needles from one condition in a sodium malonate grid screen. Removal of the metals from the enzyme and subsequent optimization of these conditions led to crystals that diffracted to 2.9,Å and belonged to space group P213, with unit-cell parameter a = 164.1,Å. Self-rotation function analysis and VM calculations indicated that the asymmetric unit contains two copies of the monomeric enzyme, corresponding to a solvent content of 79%. It is intended to determine the structure of this protein utilizing SAD phasing from transition metals or molecular replacement. [source]