Search results for "Behavior"

showing 10 items of 13975 documents

Impact of Three Kinds of Early Interventions on Developmental Profile in Toddlers with Autism Spectrum Disorder

2022

Autism spectrum disorder is a neurodevelopmental disorder with a rising prevalence disorder. This high-cost/high-burden condition needs evidence-based behavioral treatments that are able to reduce the impact of symptoms on children’s functioning. This retrospective chart review study compared the impact of different types of early interventions on toddlers diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder developmental profile. Analyses were conducted on 90 subjects (mean = 27.76 months, range 18–44 months; M:F = 4.29:1), of which 36 children underwent the usual treatment, 13 children underwent an intervention based on early intensive behavioral intervention (EIBI) and 41 children rece…

early intensive behavioral interventionearly interventionautism spectrum disorder; early intervention; early start denver model; early intensive behavioral intervention; treatment outcometreatment outcomeautism spectrum disorderGeneral MedicineSettore MED/39 - Neuropsichiatria Infantileearly start denver modelJournal of Clinical Medicine
researchProduct

Early marriage and cultural constructions of adulthood in two slums in Dar es Salaam.

2018

This study examines under-18 marriage in urban Tanzania from an ethnographic perspective. Due to poverty and high unemployment, some girls aspire to early marriage. Two pathways to early marriage are identified: first, poverty and gendered economic disparities motivate girls to begin transactional sexual activity at an early age, leading parents to favour early marriage as a risk-reduction measure. Second, educational opportunities are often closed off to girls before marriage, as a result of which early marriage becomes the only culturally approved pathway that allows girls to present themselves to others as a self-sufficient agent. These pathways are reinforced by cultural and religious c…

early marriageMalenaisetHealth (social science)Urban PopulationEconomicsavioliittoTanzaniaDevelopmental psychology0302 clinical medicineTransactional leadershipPregnancyPoverty AreasEthnography030212 general & internal medicineSociologyMarriageköyhyysyoung womenbiologyTansaniaMiddle AgedtytötHigh unemploymentFemale0305 other medical scienceAdultAdolescentIllegitimacySexual BehaviorTransactional sexEducationeducational opportunity03 medical and health sciencesYoung AdultSex FactorsDar es salaamDevelopment economicsPremarital sexta616HumansAged030505 public healthPovertyPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthkoulutusmahdollisuudetbiology.organism_classificationTanzaniaAttitudeikäkulttuuriset järjestelmättransactional sexCulture, healthsexuality
researchProduct

Dysfunction of the mesolimbic circuit to food odors in women with anorexia and bulimia nervosa: A fMRI study

2019

Brain reward dysfunction in eating disorders has been widely reported. However, whether the neural correlates of hedonic and motivational experiences related to food cues are differentially affected in anorexia nervosa of restrictive type (ANr), bulimia nervosa (BN), and healthy control (HC) participants remains unknown. Here, 39 women (14 ANr, 13 BN, and 12 HC) underwent fMRI while smelling food or non-food odors in hunger and satiety states during liking and wanting tasks. ANr and BN patients reported less desire to eat odor-cued food and odor-cued high energy-density food (EDF), respectively. ANr patients exhibited lower ventral tegmental area (VTA) activation than BN patients to food od…

eating disorder;reward circuit;liking and wanting;energy-density food;metabolic state;olfactionlikingAudiologywantingtrouble de l'alimentationliking and wantingBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineOriginal ResearchalimentationBulimia nervosametabolic state05 social sciencesdigestive oral and skin physiologypréférence alimentaireVentral tegmental areaEating disordersPsychiatry and Mental healthmedicine.anatomical_structureNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyNeurologyAnorexia nervosa (differential diagnoses)Incentive salienceeating disorderAlimentation et Nutritiondensité énergétiqueBrain stimulation reward[SDV.NEU]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]medicine.symptompsychological phenomena and processesenergy-density foodolfactionmedicine.medical_specialtyreward circuitAnorexiaeating disorders050105 experimental psychologylcsh:RC321-571Ventral pallidum03 medical and health sciencesmedicineFood and Nutrition0501 psychology and cognitive scienceslcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryBiological Psychiatrybusiness.industryNeurosciencesmedicine.diseaserécompenseNeurons and Cognitionbusiness[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and Nutrition030217 neurology & neurosurgerytype métaboliqueNeuroscience
researchProduct

The operational sex ratio of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus populations: the case of the Mediterranean marine protected area of Ustica Island (…

2009

We investigated, with a series of field and laboratory observations, the possible effect of the starfish Marthasteria glacialis predation on the operational sex ratio (OSR), i.e. the number of sexually mature males divided by the total number of sexually mature adults of both sexes at any one time, of the edible sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus. The OSR was estimated three times during the sea urchin summer spawning period (July 2004, June 2005 and July 2006) on barren substrates of Ustica Island Marine Protected Area (Southern Tyrrhenian Sea, Italy). Four sites were selected: two characterized by high M. glacialis density (take zone C) and two controls with low starfish density (no-take zo…

echinoidEcologybiologyStarfishAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationParacentrotus lividusPredationScuba divingFisherystarfishTyrrhenian Sea.biology.animalAdult sex ratioMarine protected areaOperational sex ratioSea urchinnatural predationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSex ratioMarine Protected Area
researchProduct

On hidden heterogeneity in directional asymmetry – can systematic bias be avoided?

2006

8 pages; International audience; Directional asymmetry (DA) biases the analysis of fluctuating asymmetry (FA) mainly because among-individual differences in the predisposition for DA are difficult to detect. However, we argue that systematic bias mainly results from predictable associations between signed right-left asymmetry and other factors, i.e. from systematic variation in DA. We here demonstrate methods to test and correct for this, by analysing bilateral asymmetry in size and shape of an irregular sea urchin. Notably, in this model system, DA depended significantly on body length and geographic origin, although mean signed asymmetry (mean DA) was not significant in the sample as a wh…

echinoidmedia_common.quotation_subjectModel systemMESH : Analysis of VarianceSystematic variationEnvironmentBiologyAsymmetryFunctional LateralityStatistical powerFluctuating asymmetry[ SDV.BDD.MOR ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Development Biology/Morphogenesiscase studySpecies SpecificityStatisticsAnimalsMESH : Species Specificitydevelopmental stabilityMESH : EvolutionMESH : FranceMESH : Functional LateralityEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonMESH : Sea UrchinsAnalysis of VarianceBilateral asymmetryMESH : Variation (Genetics)MESH : Reproducibility of Resultsfluctuating asymmetryGenetic VariationReproducibility of ResultsContrast (statistics)methodologyBiological EvolutionMESH : EnvironmentSea UrchinsGeographic originAbatus cordatusFranceMESH : Animalsdirectional asymmetry
researchProduct

Respostas e adaptações de comunidades de colêmbolos (Hexapoda: Collembola) a condições de inundação e hipoxia

2009

Standard ecological methods (pitfall traps, trunk eclectors and soil cores) were used to evaluate collembolan community responses to different flooding intensities. Three sites of a floodplain habitat near Mainz, Germany, with different flooding regimes were investigated. The structures of collembolan communities are markedly different depending on flooding intensity. Sites more affected by flooding are dominated by hygrophilic and hygrotolerant species, whereas the hardwood floodplain is dominated by mesophilic species. The survival strategies of the hygrophilic and hygrotolerant species include egg diapause and passive drifting. The physiological adaptations to hypoxic conditions of sever…

ecological adaptationinundationbehavioral adaptationegg diapauseadaptação comportamentaladaptação ecológicainundaçãomorphological adaptationadaptação morfológicaadaptação fisiológicaphysiological adaptationdiapausa dos ovos
researchProduct

Consistent phenological shifts in the making of a biodiversity hotspot: the Cape flora

2011

Abstract Background The best documented survival responses of organisms to past climate change on short (glacial-interglacial) timescales are distributional shifts. Despite ample evidence on such timescales for local adaptations of populations at specific sites, the long-term impacts of such changes on evolutionary significant units in response to past climatic change have been little documented. Here we use phylogenies to reconstruct changes in distribution and flowering ecology of the Cape flora - South Africa's biodiversity hotspot - through a period of past (Neogene and Quaternary) changes in the seasonality of rainfall over a timescale of several million years. Results Forty-three dist…

ecological nichesFloraEvolutionClimate ChangeBiodiversityClimate changesequence dataevolutionary responsesBiology580 Plants (Botany)MagnoliopsidaSouth AfricaCapeAdaptive radiationQH359-425Survival responsesskin and connective tissue diseasesrapid evolutionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyEcological nicheEvolutionary BiologyEcologyheterogeneous environmentsPhenologyEcologyEPS-4flowering timeBiodiversityBiological EvolutionBiosystematiekfossil recordBiodiversity hotspot10121 Department of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany1105 Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicssouthern africaclimate-changeBiosystematicssense organsadaptive radiationResearch ArticleBMC Evolutionary Biology
researchProduct

Co‐occurrence patterns in a steppe bird community: insights into the role of dominance and competition

2023

Spatial co-occurrence patterns are determined by environmental factors, such as food availability or habitat characteristics and by biotic associations. When resources are limited, competition which implies a dominant hierarchy can shape species assemblage. Here, we study space and time co-occurrence of steppe passerines during the breeding season in a natural steppe habitat, its modulation by environmental filtering, potential biotic interactions and random processes. We applied the joint species distribution model of hierarchical modelling of species community (HMSC) to data on species presence–absence and environmental, temporal and spatial covariates acquired from seven plots in a natur…

ecological nichesvuorovaikutusympäristösteppe passerinesympäristötekijätbiotic associationsSteppe passerinesMedio AmbienteSpecies co-occurrencespecies co-occurrenceelinympäristölinnutlajitBiotic associationsluonnonsuojeluDominant hierarchyResource partitioningresource partitioningEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsdominant hierarchyEcological nichesOikos
researchProduct

Individual vulnerability to stress is associated with increased demand for intravenous heroin self-administration in rats

2019

AbstractOpioid use is a widespread epidemic, and traumatic stress exposure is a critical risk factor in opioid use and relapse. There is a significant gap in our understanding of how stress contributes to heroin use, and there are limited studies investigating individual differences underlying stress reactivity and subsequent stress-induced heroin self-administration. We hypothesized that greater individual vulnerability to stress would predict higher demand for heroin self-administration in a within-subjects rodent model of stress and heroin use comorbidity. Male rats were exposed to inescapable intermittent swim stress and individual biological (corticosterone) or behavioral (open field, …

economic demandheroin demandCognitive NeuroscienceOpen fieldlcsh:RC321-571Heroin03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neurosciencestresschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineCorticosteronemental disorderscue reinstatementmedicinelcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryOriginal Research030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesbusiness.industrystress reinstatementswim-stressStressorTraumatic stressExtinction (psychology)medicine.diseaseComorbidityNeuropsychology and Physiological Psychologychemistrypost-traumatic stress disorderheroinSelf-administrationbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeurosciencemedicine.drugClinical psychology
researchProduct

Evolutionary genomics can improve prediction of species' responses to climate change

2020

Abstract Global climate change (GCC) increasingly threatens biodiversity through the loss of species, and the transformation of entire ecosystems. Many species are challenged by the pace of GCC because they might not be able to respond fast enough to changing biotic and abiotic conditions. Species can respond either by shifting their range, or by persisting in their local habitat. If populations persist, they can tolerate climatic changes through phenotypic plasticity, or genetically adapt to changing conditions depending on their genetic variability and census population size to allow for de novo mutations. Otherwise, populations will experience demographic collapses and species may go ext…

eco‐evolutionary dynamicsComments and OpinionsRange (biology)Species distributionlcsh:EvolutionBiodiversityeco-evolutionary dynamics10127 Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studiesmodelslcsh:QH359-425GeneticsComment and OpinionKeystone speciesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsLocal adaptationgenomic quantitative geneticsbusiness.industryEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental niche modellingGeographyBiodiversity loss570 Life sciences; biology590 Animals (Zoology)Biological dispersalbusinessGlobal biodiversity
researchProduct