journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38660602/does-precrastination-explain-why-some-observers-are-suboptimal-in-a-visual-search-task
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alasdair D F Clarke, Anna Nowakowska, Kyle Sauerberger, David A Rosenbaum, Thomas R Zentall, Amelia R Hunt
How do we decide where to search for a target? Optimal search relies on first considering the relative informational value of different locations and then executing eye movements to the best options. However, many participants consistently move their eyes to locations that can be easily ascertained to neither contain the target nor provide new information about the target's location. Here, we asked whether this suboptimal search behaviour represents a specific example of a general tendency towards precrastination: starting sub-goals of a task before they are needed, and in so doing, spending longer time on doing the task than is necessary...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38660601/kappa-carrageenan-and-sodium-alginate-based-ph-responsive-hydrogels-for-controlled-release-of-methotrexate
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Muhammad Anees Ur Rehman Qureshi, Nasima Arshad, Atta Rasool, Naveed Kausar Janjua, Muhammad Shoaib Butt, Muhammad Naqeeb Ur Rehman Qureshi, Hammad Ismail
Despite remarkable progress in medical sciences, modern man is still fighting the battle against cancer. In 2022, only in the USA, 640 000 deaths and 2 370 000 patients were reported because of cancer. Chemotherapy is the most widely used for cancer treatments. However, chemotherapeutics have severe physicochemical side effects. Therefore, we have prepared poly(amididoamine) dendrimeric carrageenan (CG), sodium alginate (SA) and poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) hydrogels by using solution casting methodology...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38660600/active-viscoelastic-models-for-cell-and-tissue-mechanics
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bahareh Tajvidi Safa, Changjin Huang, Alexandre Kabla, Ruiguo Yang
Living cells are out of equilibrium active materials. Cell-generated forces are transmitted across the cytoskeleton network and to the extracellular environment. These active force interactions shape cellular mechanical behaviour, trigger mechano-sensing, regulate cell adaptation to the microenvironment and can affect disease outcomes. In recent years, the mechanobiology community has witnessed the emergence of many experimental and theoretical approaches to study cells as mechanically active materials. In this review, we highlight recent advancements in incorporating active characteristics of cellular behaviour at different length scales into classic viscoelastic models by either adding an active tension-generating element or adjusting the resting length of an elastic element in the model...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38660599/do-you-really-believe-that-the-effect-of-economic-incentives-on-the-acceptance-of-real-world-data-in-a-polarized-context
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mike Farjam, Giangiacomo Bravo
Attitudes and expectations towards others are major drivers of political polarization. However, there is limited understanding of their relevance when decisions with high stakes are taken. In this study, we compare self-reported attitudes against economically incentivized estimates of data coming from official sources and offer participants financial rewards for accuracy. Our methodology yields three principal findings. (i) Extreme attitudes from a small partisan subgroup primarily account for the observed partisan divide; this subgroup diminishes when incentivized estimates are considered...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38660598/a-simple-and-fast-method-for-estimating-bat-roost-locations
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lucy Henley, Domhnall Finch, Fiona Mathews, Owen Jones, Thomas E Woolley
Bats play a pivotal role in pest control, pollination and seed dispersal. Despite their ecological significance, locating bat roosts remains a challenging task for ecologists. Traditional field surveys are time-consuming, expensive and may disturb sensitive bat populations. In this article, we combine data from static audio detectors with a bat movement model to facilitate the detection of bat roosts. Crucially, our technique not only provides a point prediction for the most likely location of a bat roost, but because of the algorithm's speed, it can be applied over an entire landscape, resulting in a likelihood map, which provides optimal searching regions...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38660597/children-s-subjective-uncertainty-driven-sampling-behaviour
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Martina de Eccher, Roger Mundry, Nivedita Mani
Are children and adults sensitive to gaps in their knowledge, and do they actively elicit information to resolve such knowledge gaps? In a cross-situational word learning task, we asked 5-year-olds, 6- to 9-year-olds and adults to estimate their knowledge of newly learned word-object associations. We then examined whether participants preferentially sampled objects they reported not knowing the label in order to hear their labels again. We also examined whether such uncertainty-driven sampling behaviour led to improved learning...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38660596/noise-and-opinion-dynamics-how-ambiguity-promotes-pro-majority-consensus-in-the-presence-of-confirmation-bias
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peter Steiglechner, Marijn A Keijzer, Paul E Smaldino, Deyshawn Moser, Agostino Merico
Opinion dynamics are affected by cognitive biases and noise. While mathematical models have focused extensively on biases, we still know surprisingly little about how noise shapes opinion patterns. Here, we use an agent-based opinion dynamics model to investigate the interplay between confirmation bias-represented as bounded confidence-and different types of noise. After analysing where noise can enter social interaction, we propose a type of noise that has not been discussed so far, ambiguity noise. While previously considered types of noise acted on agents either before, after or independent of social interaction, ambiguity noise acts on communicated messages, assuming that socially transmitted opinions are inherently noisy...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38660595/stability-in-social-networks
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Santanu Acharjee, Amlanjyoti Oza
Dunbar's number is the cognitive limit of human beings to maintain stable relationships with other individuals in their social networks, and it is found to be 150. It is based on the neocortex size of humans. Usually, Dunbar's number and related phenomena are studied from the perspective of an individual. Dunbar's number also plays a crucial role in evolutionary psychology and allied areas. However, no study done so far has considered a couple who are in a stable relationship as a system from the perspective of Dunbar's number and its hierarchy layers...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38660594/the-quality-of-caregiver-child-interaction-is-predicted-by-caregivers-perception-of-their-child-s-interests
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rajalakshmi Madhavan, Nivedita Mani
This current study examines the extent to which children's interests and caregivers' sensitivity to their children's interests are associated with the quality of caregiver-child interaction, and subsequent learning. Eighty-one caregiver-child dyads (24-30-month old children) completed an online shared book-reading task where caregivers and children read two e-books with pictures and descriptions of objects from different categories-one previously determined to be of low and one of high interest to the child (with one novel word-object mapping introduced in each book)...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38633354/cable-bacteria-delay-euxinia-and-modulate-phosphorus-release-in-coastal-hypoxic-systems
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laurine D W Burdorf, Sebastiaan J van de Velde, Silvia Hidalgo-Martinez, Filip J R Meysman
Cable bacteria are long, filamentous bacteria with a unique metabolism involving centimetre-scale electron transport. They are widespread in the sediment of seasonally hypoxic systems and their metabolic activity stimulates the dissolution of iron sulfides (FeS), releasing large quantities of ferrous iron (Fe2+ ) into the pore water. Upon contact with oxygen, Fe2+ oxidation forms a layer of iron(oxyhydr)oxides (FeOx ), which in its turn can oxidize free sulfide (H2 S) and trap phosphorus (P) diffusing upward...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38633353/no-evidence-that-a-transmissible-cancer-has-shifted-from-emergence-to-endemism-in-tasmanian-devils
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maximilian R Stammnitz, Kevin Gori, Elizabeth P Murchison
Tasmanian devils are endangered by a transmissible cancer known as Tasmanian devil facial tumour 1 (DFT1). A 2020 study by Patton et al . ( Science 370 , eabb9772 (doi:10.1126/science.abb9772)) used genome data from DFT1 tumours to produce a dated phylogenetic tree for this transmissible cancer lineage, and thence, using phylodynamics models, to estimate its epidemiological parameters and predict its future trajectory. It concluded that the effective reproduction number for DFT1 had declined to a value of one, and that the disease had shifted from emergence to endemism...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38633352/why-care-for-humanity
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lukas Reinhardt, Harvey Whitehouse
Some of the most pressing challenges facing our planet-such as climate change, biodiversity loss, warfare and extreme poverty-require social cohesion and prosocial action on a global scale. How can this be achieved? Previous research suggests that identity fusion-a strong form of group cohesion motivating prosocial action-results from perceptions of shared personally transformative experiences or of common biological essence. Here, we present results from two studies with United States samples exploring each pathway to identity fusion on a global scale...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38633351/navigating-the-unknown-assessing-anthropogenic-threats-to-beaked-whales-family-ziphiidae
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laura J Feyrer, Joy E Stanistreet, Hilary B Moors-Murphy
This review comprehensively evaluates the impacts of anthropogenic threats on beaked whales (Ziphiidae)-a taxonomic group characterized by cryptic biology, deep dives and remote offshore habitat, which have challenged direct scientific observation. By synthesizing information published in peer-reviewed studies and grey literature, we identified available evidence of impacts across 14 threats for each Ziphiidae species. Threats were assessed based on their pathways of effects on individuals, revealing many gaps in scientific understanding of the risks faced by beaked whales...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38633350/modifying-cellulose-fibres-with-carbon-dots-a-promising-approach-for-the-development-of-antimicrobial-fibres
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Remya Radha, Zinb Makhlouf, Rasha Diab, Mohammad H Al-Sayah
This study focuses on the development of antimicrobial fibres for use in medical and healthcare textile industries. Carbon dots (CDs) were designed with boronic acid groups for the attachment to cellulose fibres found in cotton textiles and to enhance their attachment to glycogens on bacterial surfaces. Boronic acid-based and curcumin-based CDs were prepared and characterized using various techniques, showing a nanoscale size and zeta potential values. The CDs inhibited the growth of both Staphylococcus epidermidis and Escherichia coli bacteria, with UV-activated CDs demonstrating improved antibacterial activity...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38633349/the-contribution-of-lower-limb-joint-quasi-stiffness-to-theoretical-leg-stiffness-during-level-uphill-and-downhill-running-at-different-speeds
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Caelyn E Hirschman, Jana R Montgomery, Alena M Grabowski
Humans change joint quasi-stiffness ( k joint ) and leg stiffness (kleg ) when running at different speeds on level ground and during uphill and downhill running. These mechanical properties can inform device designs for running such as footwear, exoskeletons and prostheses. We measured kinetics and kinematics from 17 runners (10 M; 7 F) at three speeds on 0°, ±2°, ±4° and ±6° slopes. We calculated ankle and knee k joint , the quotient of change in joint moment and angular displacement, and theoretical leg stiffness (klegT ) based on the joint external moment arms and k joint ...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38633348/psychometric-evaluation-of-the-trust-in-science-and-scientists-scale
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sarah M Wolff, Glynis M Breakwell, Daniel B Wright
Reliable and valid measurement of trust in science and scientists is important. Assessing levels of such trust is important in determining attitudes and predicting behaviours in response to medical and scientific interventions targeted at managing public crises. However, trust is a complex phenomenon that has to be understood in relation to both distrust and mistrust. The Trust in Science and Scientists Scale has been adopted with increasing frequency in large-scale public health research. Detailed psychometric evaluation of the scale is overdue and makes meaningful comparisons between studies that use the scale difficult...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38633347/-in-vivo-mechanical-characterization-of-arterial-wall-using-an-inverse-analysis-procedure-application-on-an-animal-model-of-intracranial-aneurysm
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
J Raviol, G Plet, J B Langlois, S Si-Mohamed, H Magoariec, C Pailler-Mattei
Intracranial aneurysm is a pathology related to the deterioration of the arterial wall. This work is an essential part of a large-scale project aimed at providing clinicians with a non-invasive patient-specific decision support tool to facilitate the rupture risk assessment. It will lean on the link between the aneurysm shape clinically observed and a database derived from the in vivo mechanical characterization of aneurysms. To supply this database, a deformation device prototype of the arterial wall was developed...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38633346/weak-effect-of-urbanization-on-bdelloid-rotifers-living-in-lichens
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rebecca Partemi, Nicolas Debortoli, Alejandro Martínez, Lyudmila Kamburska, Caroline Souffreau, Hans Matheve, Pieter Vantieghem, Luc De Meester, Karine van Doninck, Thomas Merckx, Diego Fontaneto
Human activities have an overwhelming impact on the natural environment, leading to a deep biodiversity crisis whose effects range from genes to ecosystems. Here, we analysed the effect of such anthropogenic impacts on bdelloid rotifers (Rotifera Bdelloidea), for whom these effects are poorly understood. We targeted bdelloid rotifers living in lichen patches across urbanization gradients in Flanders and Brussels (Belgium). Urbanization was measured as the percentage of built-up area (BU) across different spatial scales, at circles from 50 to 3200 m of radius around the lichen...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38623083/quasi-integrability-and-nonlinear-resonances-in-cold-atoms-under-modulation
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rahul Gupta, Manan Jain, Sudhir R Jain
Quantum dynamics of a collection of atoms subjected to phase modulation has been carefully revisited. We present an exact analysis of the evolution of a two-level system (represented by a spinor) under the action of a time-dependent matrix Hamiltonian. The dynamics is shown to evolve on two coupled potential energy surfaces (PESs): one of them is binding, while the other one is scattering type. The dynamics is shown to be quasi-integrable with nonlinear resonances. The bounded dynamics with intermittent scattering at random moments presents a scenario reminiscent of Anderson and dynamical localization...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38623082/coupling-an-agent-based-model-and-an-ensemble-kalman-filter-for-real-time-crowd-modelling
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Keiran Suchak, Minh Kieu, Yannick Oswald, Jonathan A Ward, Nick Malleson
Agent-based modelling has emerged as a powerful tool for modelling systems that are driven by discrete, heterogeneous individuals and has proven particularly popular in the realm of pedestrian simulation. However, real-time agent-based simulations face the challenge that they will diverge from the real system over time. This paper addresses this challenge by integrating the ensemble Kalman filter (EnKF) with an agent-based crowd model to enhance its accuracy in real time. Using the example of Grand Central Station in New York, we demonstrate how our approach can update the state of an agent-based model in real time, aligning it with the evolution of the actual system...
April 2024: Royal Society Open Science
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