Search results for "Social Behavior"

showing 10 items of 389 documents

Psychometric Evidence of a Multidimensional Measure of Prosocial Behaviors for Spanish Adolescents

2015

Prior theories and scholars rarely distinguished between distinct forms of prosocial behaviors (i.e., actions intended to benefit others) and most scholars operationalize prosocial behaviors as a global construct. Furthermore, stringent tests of psychometric properties of prosocial behavior measures are rare, especially in countries other than the United States. The present study was designed to examine the structure and functions of a multidimensional measure of prosocial behaviors in youth from Spain. Six hundred and 66 adolescents (46% girls; M age = 15.33 years, SD = 0.47 years) from Valencia, Spain, completed the Prosocial Tendencies Measure-Revised (PTM-R), measures of sympathy, persp…

MaleOperationalizationCulturaAdolescentPsychometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectAdolescentsDevelopmental psychologyClinical PsychologyProsocial behaviorAdolescent BehaviorSpainPerspective-takingSurveys and QuestionnairesSympathyDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyHumansFemaleLife-span and Life-course StudiesPsychologyConstruct (philosophy)Social BehaviorSocial psychologymedia_common
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Associations Between Toddler-Age Communication and Kindergarten-Age Self-Regulatory Skills

2014

Purpose In this study, the authors aimed at gaining understanding on the associations of different types of early language and communication profiles with later self-regulation skills by using longitudinal data from toddler age to kindergarten age. Method Children with early language profiles representing expressive delay, broad delay (i.e., expressive, social, and/or symbolic), and typical language development were compared in domains of kindergarten-age executive and regulative skills (attentional/executive functions, regulation of emotions and behavioral activity, and social skills) assessed with parental questionnaires. Results Children with delay in toddler-age language development de…

MaleParentsLinguistics and Languagemedia_common.quotation_subjecteducationitsesäätelyLanguage and LinguisticsSelf-ControlDevelopmental psychologySkills managementExecutive FunctionSpeech and HearingSocial skillsSurveys and QuestionnairesHumansAttentionLanguage Development DisordersLongitudinal StudiestoddlersToddlerChildSocial BehaviorEarly languageviestintämedia_commontaaperotskillscommunicationCommunicationtaidotInfantSelf-controlExecutive functionsLanguage acquisitionLanguage developmentself-regulatoryChild PreschoolRegression AnalysisFemalePsychologyChild LanguageJournal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research
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Psychosocial adjustment and quality of life after renal transplantation in early childhood.

2004

Psychosocial adjustment and quality of life has been reported good in children after a successful renal transplantation (Tx). There are, however, few reports of using standardized methods in evaluating these issues, particularly in small children. We investigated the psychosocial adjustment in 32 children at school age (mean 9.6 +/- 1.6), who had received a renal Tx under the age of 5 yr, using the Achenbach Child Behavior Checklist with data collected from both parents (CBCL) and teachers (CBCL-TRF). Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) was assessed by interviewing the children using a 17-dimensional (17D) health-related measure and compared to HRQOL of 244 normal school children. The ef…

MaleParentsPediatricsmedicine.medical_specialty030232 urology & nephrologyPsychological interventionChild BehaviorCBCL030230 surgeryStatistics Nonparametric03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSex FactorsQuality of lifemedicineHumansChild Behavior ChecklistChildSocial BehaviorTransplantationbusiness.industryTeachingAge FactorsSocial Supportmedicine.diseaseComorbidityKidney TransplantationSelf Concept3. Good healthTransplantationEl NiñoAttention Deficit and Disruptive Behavior DisordersPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthQuality of LifeFemalebusinessPsychosocialAttitude to HealthSocial AdjustmentPediatric transplantation
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Development of tolerance to the antiaggressive effects of morphine

2001

Many reports have demonstrated that there is a development of tolerance to many effects produced by morphine. This study was conducted with the aim of determining whether the antiaggressive actions of morphine develop tolerance after chronic administration. Acute morphine administration produced antiaggressive effects which disappeared after chronic (7 days) treatment in isolated mice. An increase in non-social exploration was observed, representing morphine-induced hyperactivity, after acute treatment, which was not present after chronic administration. In conclusion, there is a development of tolerance to the antiaggressive and motor effects of morphine. Language: en

MalePharmacologyDose-Response Relationship DrugMorphineInjury controlAccident preventionbusiness.industryPoison controlDrug ToleranceMotor ActivitySuicide preventionOccupational safety and healthAggressionMicePsychiatry and Mental healthAnesthesiaInjury preventionExploratory BehaviorMorphinemedicineAnimalsSocial BehaviorbusinessAgonistic Behaviormedicine.drugBehavioral Pharmacology
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Proteomic signature of the Dravet syndrome in the genetic Scn1a-A1783V mouse model.

2021

Abstract Background Dravet syndrome is a rare, severe pediatric epileptic encephalopathy associated with intellectual and motor disabilities. Proteomic profiling in a mouse model of Dravet syndrome can provide information about the molecular consequences of the genetic deficiency and about pathophysiological mechanisms developing during the disease course. Methods A knock-in mouse model of Dravet syndrome with Scn1a haploinsufficiency was used for whole proteome, seizure, and behavioral analysis. Hippocampal tissue was dissected from two- (prior to epilepsy manifestation) and four- (following epilepsy manifestation) week-old male mice and analyzed using LC-MS/MS with label-free quantificati…

MaleProteomics0301 basic medicineProteomeHippocampusEpilepsies MyoclonicHaploinsufficiencyScn1aHippocampusSynaptic TransmissionElevated Plus Maze TestEpilepsyMice0302 clinical medicineTandem Mass Spectrometry11-beta-Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenase Type 1Genetic epilepsyCarbon-Nitrogen LigasesGene Knock-In TechniquesGliosisNeuronal PlasticityBehavior AnimalEpileptic encephalopathyImmunohistochemistryAstrogliosisNeurologyProteomeDisease ProgressionFemaleHaploinsufficiencySignal TransductionRC321-571Dopamine and cAMP-Regulated Phosphoprotein 32Neovascularization PhysiologicNeurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryBiologyNitric Oxide03 medical and health sciencesDravet syndromemedicineAnimalsHyperthermiaSocial Behaviorras-GRF1Proteomic Profilingmedicine.diseaseVascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-2NAV1.1 Voltage-Gated Sodium ChannelDisease Models Animal030104 developmental biologyRotarod Performance TestSynaptic plasticityEpileptic Encephalopathy ; Genetic Epilepsy ; Mice ; Proteome ; Scn1aCalcium-Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase Type 2Open Field TestNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryChromatography Liquid
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Disturbed social behavior and motivation in rats selectively bred for deficient sensorimotor gating

2007

Deficient prepulse inhibition (PPI) of startle reflects disturbed sensorimotor gating found in certain neuropsychiatric disorders. We here tested whether rats selectively bred for deficient PPI are deteriorated in behavioral paradigms used to model negative symptoms of schizophrenia. Rats with low PPI preferred standard rat-chow when having the choice between lever-pressing for reward-pellets or freely available rat-chow, suggesting reduced motivation. Additionally, these rats show deteriorated social behavior during interaction with a juvenile rat. Rats selectively bred for low PPI may therefore be used as a model to study the biological mechanisms and therapeutic strategies of negative sy…

MalePsychosisReflex StartleSensorimotor GatingGatingDevelopmental psychologymedicineAnimalsAttentionRats WistarSelection GeneticSocial BehaviorBiological PsychiatryPrepulse inhibitionAppetitive BehaviorMotivationDepressionmedicine.diseaseSocial relationRatsPsychiatry and Mental healthDisease Models AnimalInhibition PsychologicalPhenotypeAcoustic StimulationSchizophreniaEndophenotypeSchizophreniaFemaleSchizophrenic PsychologyPsychologyNeuroscienceJuvenile ratSchizophrenia research
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Unmatedness promotes the evolution of helping more in diplodiploids than in haplodiploids

2014

The predominance of haplodiploidy (where males develop from unfertilized haploid eggs and females from fertilized diploid eggs) among eusocial species has inspired a body of research that focuses on the possible role of relatedness asymmetries in the evolution of helping and eusociality. Previous theory has shown that in order for relatedness asymmetries to favor the evolution of helping, there needs to be variation in sex ratios among nests in the population (i.e., split sex ratios). In haplodiploid species, unmated females can produce a brood of all males, and this is considered the most likely mechanism for split sex ratios at the origin of helping. In contrast, in diploidiploids unmated…

MaleRange (biology)PopulationZoologyHaploidyBiologyModels BiologicalAnimalsSex RatioSocial Behavioreducationreproductive and urinary physiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticseducation.field_of_studyReproductionhaplodiploidy hypothesisneitsyysBiological EvolutionDiploidyHymenopteraEusocialityBroodReproductive failuresplit sex ratiosHaplodiploidyta1181FemalePloidyaitososiaalisuusAmerican naturalist
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c-fos expression, behavioural, endocrine and autonomic responses to acute social stress in male rats after chronic restraint: modulation by serotonin

2000

The effects in male rats of serotonin depletion (using the neurotoxin 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine) on the cross-sensitization of an acute social stress (defeat by a larger resident male) by previous repeated restraint stress (10 days, 60 min per day) was studied. Previous restraint increased freezing responses during social defeat in sham-operated rats, but this was not observed in those with depleted serotonin (83% or more in different regions of the brain). In contrast, neither heart rate (tachycardia) nor core temperature responses (hyperthermia) were accentuated in previously restrained rats (i.e. neither showed heterotypical sensitization), and neither adapted to repeated restraint (there …

MaleRestraint PhysicalSerotoninmedicine.medical_specialty57-DihydroxytryptamineAutonomic Nervous SystemAmygdalaBody TemperatureRats Sprague-DawleySocial defeatSerotonin AgentsDorsal raphe nucleusHeart RateInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsSocial BehaviorBrain ChemistrySocial stressBehavior AnimalGeneral NeuroscienceCentral nucleus of the amygdalaNeurosecretory SystemsRatsEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureHypothalamusLocus coeruleusSerotoninCorticosteronePsychologyProto-Oncogene Proteins c-fosStress PsychologicalNeuroscience
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Impaired hippocampal neuroligin-2 function by chronic stress or synthetic peptide treatment is linked to social deficits and increased aggression.

2014

Neuroligins (NLGNs) are cell adhesion molecules that are important for proper synaptic formation and functioning, and are critical regulators of the balance between neural excitation/inhibition (E/I). Mutations in NLGNs have been linked to psychiatric disorders in humans involving social dysfunction and are related to similar abnormalities in animal models. Chronic stress increases the likelihood for affective disorders and has been shown to induce changes in neural structure and function in different brain regions, with the hippocampus being highly vulnerable to stress. Previous studies have shown evidence of chronic stress-induced changes in the neural E/I balance in the hippocampus. Ther…

MaleRestraint PhysicalhippocampusmoodCell Adhesion Molecules NeuronalNeurexinstress disordersHippocampusPoison controlNeuroliginNerve Tissue ProteinsReceptors Cell Surfacebehavioral scienceHippocampal formationneuropharmacologyHippocampussocial behaviorRats Sprague-DawleystressmedicineNeuritesAnimalsChronic stressRats WistarSocial BehaviorCells CulturedPharmacologyNeuronsAggressionaggressionneuropeptideschronic restraint stressOrgan SizeanxietyRatsAggressionsociabilityPsychiatry and Mental healthChronic DiseaseOriginal Articleneuroliginmedicine.symptomPsychologyCorticosteronePeptidesNeuroscienceStress PsychologicalSocial behaviorNeuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology
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Facebook profiles reflect actual personality, not self-idealization.

2010

MaleSelf DisclosureAdolescentmedia_common.quotation_subjectFeedback PsychologicalSelf-conceptFriendsTruth DisclosureSocial supportYoung AdultMultidisciplinary approachGermanyPersonalityHumansSocial BehaviorGeneral Psychologymedia_commonInternetMotivationTruth Disclosurebusiness.industryCommunicationSocial SupportSelf ConceptUnited StatesSelf-disclosureIdealizationThe InternetFemalebusinessPsychologySocial psychologyPersonalityPsychological science
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