Search results for "behavioral"

showing 10 items of 3011 documents

The Approach Behavior to Angry Words in Athletes—A Pilot Study

2019

An increasing number of studies have found that athletes have a higher level of aggression than non-athletes. Anger is an important factor in the generation of aggressive behavior, and anger has been found to relate to both approach behavior and avoidance behavior. The present pilot study compared the aggression level of athletes and non-athletes using the Buss-Perry Aggression Questionnaire, and examined the responses of participants to anger-related stimuli using the manikin task, a paradigm that measures approach-avoidance behavior. In total, 15 athletes and 15 non-athletes finished the questionnaire and the manikin task, which included two conditions. In the anger approach condition, pa…

Brain activity and meditationmedia_common.quotation_subjectCognitive Neurosciencetheta oscillationPoison controlAngerSuicide preventionbehavioral disciplines and activitieslcsh:RC321-57103 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineInjury preventionmental disordersmedicineaggressive behaviorlcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry030304 developmental biologymedia_commonOriginal Research0303 health sciencesbiologyAthletesAggressionangerHuman factors and ergonomicsbiology.organism_classificationNeuropsychology and Physiological Psychologyathletesbehavior and behavior mechanismsbehavioral approach systemmedicine.symptomPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgerypsychological phenomena and processesClinical psychologyNeuroscienceFrontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
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Do Pied Flycatcher Females Defend an Extra Nest Hole Against Conspecific Females?

1999

AbstractIn birds, females are often aggressive against conspecific females during the breeding. There are many explanations for this intrasexual aggression by females: e.g., nest site or food resource defence, prevention of intraspecific brood parasitism or infanticide, and monopolization of paternal care. A pair might also benefit by defending an alternative nest site in addition to the current nest site. Here, I study by experimentation whether pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca) females defend an extra nest box as an alternative nesting site. Further, I examine whether females behave differently when their mate is present vs not present. I measured the reactions by resident females to a…

Brood parasiteEcologyFicedulaZoologyBiologybiology.organism_classificationIntraspecific competitionBehavioral NeuroscienceNestAgonistic behaviourAnimal Science and ZoologyParental investmentNest boxPaternal careBehaviour
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Development and validation of the neighborhood environment walkability scale for youth across six continents

2019

Abstract Background The IPEN International Physical Activity and Environment Network Adolescent project was conducted using common study protocols to document the strength, shape, and generalizability of associations of perceived neighborhood environment attributes with adolescents’ physical activity and overweight/obesity using data from 15 countries. Countries did not use identical versions of the Neighborhood Environment Walkability Scale for Youth (NEWS-Y) to measure perceived neighborhood environment attributes. Therefore, this study derived a measurement model for NEWS-Y items common to all IPEN Adolescent countries and developed a scoring protocol for the IPEN Adolescent version of t…

Built environmentHealth BehaviorMedicine (miscellaneous)WalkingCardiovascularAdolescentsMedical and Health SciencesACCESSIBILITYDevelopmental psychology0302 clinical medicineResidence CharacteristicsSurveys and QuestionnairesMedicine and Health SciencesSOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS030212 general & internal medicinelcsh:RC620-627Built environmentPediatricNutrition and Dieteticslcsh:Public aspects of medicineIPEN ADULTGlobal16. Peace & justiceConfirmatory factor analysisStrokelcsh:Nutritional diseases. Deficiency diseasesWalkabilityScale (social sciences)HEALTH OUTCOMESRELIABILITYPublic Health0305 other medical sciencePsychologyBEHAVIORPediatric Research InitiativeAdolescentPARTICIPATIONeducationPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationPooled analysesConfirmatory factor analysisEducation03 medical and health sciencesClinical ResearchBehavioral and Social ScienceMEASURED PHYSICAL-ACTIVITYHumansGeneralizability theoryObesityCategorical variableSocioeconomic statusExercise030505 public healthQuestionnairePreventionMethodologyConstruct validityReproducibility of Resultslcsh:RA1-1270social sciencesAdolescent BehaviorInternational Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity
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Mood, Physical, and Mental Load in Spanish Teachers of Urban School: The Role of Intensive or Split Shift

2019

Psychosocial risk factors threaten the health of teachers, who are considered to be a group at high risk of suffering burnout syndrome. The objective of this study is to measure the levels of work satisfaction, burnout, engagement, emotional stability, fatigue, and mood of teachers, depending on their workday: intensive or split shift. A nonexperimental, descriptive–comparative research design is proposed for this study. A follow-up questionnaire has been developed to assess a teacher’s levels of physical fatigue, mental fatigue, and mood at the beginning and end of the 9 days of work analyzed. The study sample consisted of 125 teachers (102 women and 23 men) with a mean age of 38.67 years…

Burnout syndromeeducation05 social sciences050301 educationPhysical healthbehavioral disciplines and activitiesMental healthOccupational safety and healthEducationUrban StudiesMoodmental disorders0502 economics and businessJob satisfactionMental loadPsychology0503 educationPsychosocial050203 business & managementClinical psychologyEducation and Urban Society
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Cannabinoid type-1 receptor signaling in central serotonergic neurons regulates anxiety-like behavior and sociability.

2015

The endocannabinoid (eCB) system possesses neuromodulatory functions by influencing the release of various neurotransmitters, including γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and glutamate. A functional interaction between eCBs and the serotonergic system has already been suggested. Previously, we showed that cannabinoid type-1 (CB1) receptor mRNA and protein are localized in serotonergic neurons of the raphe nuclei, implying that the eCB system can modulate serotonergic functions. In order to substantiate the physiological role of the CB1 receptor in serotonergic neurons of the raphe nuclei, we generated serotonergic 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) neuron-specific CB 1 receptor-deficient mice, using the Cr…

CB1 receptorCannabinoid receptormedicine.medical_treatmentCognitive NeuroscienceCre recombinaseBiologySerotonergiclcsh:RC321-571Behavioral Neurosciencemedicinelcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryOriginal Researchmusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyGlutamate receptorraphe nucleianxietyEndocannabinoid systemserotoninsociabilityNeuropsychology and Physiological Psychologynervous systemlipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)CannabinoidSerotoninRaphe nucleiNeurosciencepsychological phenomena and processesNeuroscienceFrontiers in behavioral neuroscience
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Adolescents with Neuropsychiatric Disorders during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Focus on Emotional Well-Being and Parental Stress

2022

(1) Introduction: The aim of our research was to explore emotional/behavioral changes in adolescents with neuropsychiatric conditions during the COVID-19 pandemic, and parental stress levels through a standardized assessment, comparing the data collected before and during the first months of lockdown. Moreover, an additional goal was to detect a possible relationship between emotional/behavioural symptoms of adolescents and the stress levels of their parents. (2) Methods: We enrolled 178 Italian adolescents aged between 12–18 that were referred to the Child Neuropsychiatry Unit of the University Hospital of Salerno with different neuropsychiatric diagnoses. Two standardized questionnaires w…

CBCLLeadership and ManagementHealth Policyneuropsychiatric disorderCOVID-19Health Informaticsparental stressemotional behavioral symptomsneuropsychiatric disordersemotional behavioral symptomHealth Information ManagementadolescentPSIadolescentsCOVID-19; neuropsychiatric disorders; adolescents; emotional behavioral symptoms; parental stress; CBCL; PSIHealthcare
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CD36 as a lipid sensor

2011

International audience; CD36 is a multifunctional protein homologous to the class B scavenger receptor SR-B1 mainly found in tissues with a sustained lipid metabolism and in several hematopoieic cells. CD36 is thought to be involved in various physiological and pathological processes like angiogenesis, thrombosis, atherogenesis, Alzheimer's disease or malaria. An additive emerging function for CD36 is a role as a lipid sensor. Location of CD36 and orthologue molecules in plasma membrane of cells in contact with the external environment (e.g. gustatory, intestinal or olfactory epithelia) allows the binding of exogenous-derived ligands including dietary lipids, diglycerides from bacterial wal…

CD36 AntigensAngiogenesisFat preference[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]CD36Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptorExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyBiology03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineLipid-binding proteinparasitic diseasesAnimalsScavenger receptor030304 developmental biologyG protein-coupled receptorNeuronschemistry.chemical_classificationBehavior0303 health sciencesInnate immune systemCell MembraneBrainLipid metabolismLipid MetabolismLipidsImmunity InnateLipid receptors3. Good healthBiochemistrychemistrybiology.protein[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and Nutrition030217 neurology & neurosurgeryFunction (biology)Physiology & Behavior
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Noise-induced behavioral change driven by transient chaos

2022

We study behavioral change in the context of a stochastic, non-linear consumption model with preference adjusting, interdependent agents. Changes in long-run consumption behavior are modelled as noise induced transitions between coexisting attractors. A particular case of multistability is considered: two fixed points, whose immediate basins have smooth boundaries, coexist with a periodic attractor, with a fractal immediate basin boundary. If a trajectory leaves an immediate basin, it enters a set of complexly intertwined basins for which final state uncertainty prevails. The standard approach to predicting transition events rooted in the stochastic sensitivity function technique due to Mil…

CO-EXISTING ATTRACTORSVDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200::Økonomi: 210::Økonometri: 214General MathematicsApplied MathematicsGeneral Physics and AstronomyMULTISTABILITYBEHAVIORAL CHANGESNON-ATTRACTING CHAOTIC SETStatistical and Nonlinear PhysicsSTOCHASTIC DYNAMICSSTOCHASTIC SYSTEMSNON-ATTRACTING CHAOTIC SETSSTATISTICSVDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200::Økonomi: 210CHAOTIC SETSDYNAMICAL SYSTEMSNOISE-INDUCED TRANSITIONCRITICAL LINESCONSUMER BEHAVIORSTOCHASTIC MODELSCONFIDENCE REGIONFORECASTINGNOISE-INDUCED TRANSITIONSTRANSIENT CHAOS
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Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on Children and Adolescents with Neuropsychiatric Disorders: Emotional/Behavioral Symptoms and Parental Stress.

2022

The objective of our study was to evaluate the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the emotional and behavioral symptoms in minors with neuropsychiatric disorders and on parental stress through a standardized neuropsychological assessment, comparing the data collected before the pandemic with those collected during the lock-down. Another goal of our study was to analyze the relationship between parental stress and behavioral/emotional symptoms in children. Our study was conducted on 383 families of patients who had already been referred at the Child Neuropsychiatry Unit of the University Hospital of Salerno for different neuropsychiatric conditions. All the parents completed two neuropsychol…

COVID-19; neuropsychiatric disorders; children; adolescents; emotional behavioral symptoms; parental stressProblem BehaviorPandemicAdolescentParentingHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthCOVID-19parental stressNeuropsychiatric disorderParental streCommunicable Disease ControlHumansChildChildrenPandemicsEmotional behavioral symptomHumanInternational journal of environmental research and public health
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Pharmacokinetics of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors

2000

The five selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), fluoxetine, fluvoxamine, paroxetine, sertraline, and citalopram, have similar antidepressant efficacy and a similar side effect profile. They differ, however, in their pharmacokinetic properties. Under steady-state concentrations, their half-lives range between 1 and 4 days for fluoxetine (7 and 15 days for norfluoxetine) and between 21 (paroxetine) and 36 (citalopram) hr for the other SSRIs. Sertraline and citalopram show linear and fluoxetine, fluvoxamine, and paroxetine nonlinear pharmacokinetics. SSRIs underlie an extensive metabolism with high interindividual variability, whereby cytochrome P450 (CYP) isoenzymes play a major rol…

CYP2D6FluvoxamineCitalopramPharmacologyCitalopramSerotonergicbehavioral disciplines and activitiesFluoxetineSertralinemental disordersmedicineHumansDrug InteractionsPharmacology (medical)Serotonin Uptake InhibitorsPharmacologyClinical Trials as TopicFluoxetineSertralinebusiness.industryParoxetineParoxetineFluvoxaminebusinessSelective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitorsmedicine.drugPharmacology & Therapeutics
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