3,660 research outputs found
Programming the brain : towards intervention strategies
Synthetic glucocorticoids such as dexamethasone are frequently used to enhance pulmonary development in preterm ventilator-dependent infants. In contrast to the short-term benefit on survival and lung maturation, early glucocorticoid exposure has been shown to adversely affect neurodevelopmental processes. Both human and animal studies have reported acute and long-lasting impairments, including shortening of the lifespan in rodents. Therefore, the objective of the studies described in this thesis was to investigate, using an animal model: 1) the short- and long-term consequences of neonatal dexamethasone treatment and 2) the possibility to prevent these effects using pharmacological and behavioural intervention strategies. We reported that systemic dexamethasone treatment acutely affects brain development by suppressing cell proliferation and glial activity. These acute effects on the brain can be partially prevented by central glucocorticoid receptor antagonist pre-treatment, which might serve as a protective strategy against the adverse effects of dexamethasone treatment on the developing brain. Although neonatal dexamethasone exposure clearly affects the developmental trajectory, we did not observe the frequently described detrimental long-lasting consequences of this treatment. We showed that daily handling of the neonate, which was an inevitable component of our experimental design and leads to enhanced levels of maternal care towards the offspring, may compensate for some of the adverse effects of dexamethasone treatment. We conclude that the impact of neonatal glucocorticoid exposure highly depends on interactions with other components of the early environment and is therefore susceptible to pharmacological and behavioural intervention strategies.Corcept Therapeutics, LifeSpan Network of Excellence, IRTG, J.E. Jurriaanse Stichting, Noldus Information TechnologyUBL - phd migration 201
Can Europe recover without credit?
Data from 135 countries covering five decades suggests that creditless recoveries, in which
the stock of real credit does not return to the pre-crisis level for three years after the GDP
trough, are not rare and are characterised by remarkable real GDP growth rates: 4.7 percent
per year in middle-income countries and 3.2 percent per year in high-income countries.
However, the implications of these historical episodes for the current European situation are
limited, for two main reasons. First, creditless recoveries are much less common in highincome
countries, than in low-income countries which are financially undeveloped. European
economies heavily depend on bank loans and research suggests that loan supply played a
major role in the recent weak credit performance of Europe. There are reasons to believe that,
despite various efforts, normal lending has not yet been restored. Limited loan supply could
be disruptive for the European economic recovery and there has been only a minor
substitution of bank loans with debt securities. Second, creditless recoveries were associated
with significant real exchange rate depreciation, which has hardly occurred so far in most of
Europe. This stylised fact suggests that it might be difficult to re-establish economic growth
in the absence of sizeable real exchange rate depreciation, if credit growth does not return
Cooperative phenotype predicts climate change belief and pro-environmental behaviour
Understanding the psychological causes of variation in climate change belief and pro-environmental behaviour remains an urgent challenge for the social sciences. The “cooperative phenotype” is a stable psychological preference for cooperating in social dilemmas that involve a tension between individual and collective interest. Since climate change poses a social dilemma on a global scale, this issue may evoke similar psychological processes as smaller social dilemmas. Here, we investigate the relationships between the cooperative phenotype and climate change belief and behaviour with a representative sample of New Zealanders (n = 897). By linking behaviour in a suite of economic games to self-reported climate attitudes, we show robust positive associations between the cooperative phenotype and both climate change belief and pro-environmental behaviour. Furthermore, our mediation analyses support a motivated reasoning model in which the relationship between the cooperative phenotype and pro-environmental behaviour is fully mediated by climate change belief. These findings suggest that common psychological mechanisms underlie cooperation in both micro-scale social dilemmas and larger-scale social dilemmas like climate change.Results and discussions Methods - Power analysis - Participants and sampling - Materials - Procedure - Statistical analyse
(4-Nitrophenolato)(subphthalocyaninato)boron(III)1
The main feature of the structure of the title compound, C30H16BN7O3 or NO2PhO-BsubPc, are pairs of molecules linked through π-interactions between the concave faces of the BsubPc fragments at a distance of 3.5430 (11) Å across an inversion centre. However, the angle between the planes of the five- and six-menbered rings involved in this interaction is 1.44 (10)°, causing the interacting BsubPcs units to be slightly askew rather than parallel as is typical for π-stacking interactions
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