12 research outputs found

    Perspective taking and systematic biases in object location memory.

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    The aim of the current study was to develop a novel task that allows for the quick assessment of spatial memory precision with minimal technical and training requirements. In this task, participants memorized the position of an object in a virtual room and then judged from a different perspective, whether the object has moved to the left or to the right. Results revealed that participants exhibited a systematic bias in their responses that we termed the reversed congruency effect. Specifically, they performed worse when the camera and the object moved in the same direction than when they moved in opposite directions. Notably, participants responded correctly in almost 100% of the incongruent trials, regardless of the distance by which the object was displaced. In Experiment 2, we showed that this effect cannot be explained by the movement of the object on the screen, but that it relates to the perspective shift and the movement of the object in the virtual world. We also showed that the presence of additional objects in the environment reduces the reversed congruency effect such that it no longer predicts performance. In Experiment 3, we showed that the reversed congruency effect is greater in older adults, suggesting that the quality of spatial memory and perspective-taking abilities are critical. Overall, our results suggest that this effect is driven by difficulties in the precise encoding of object locations in the environment and in understanding how perspective shifts affect the projected positions of the objects in the two-dimensional image

    Personalized health, elearning, and mhealth interventions to improve nutritional status

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    Personalised health through nutrition has been made possible by recent advances in technology. We ran a search strategy in July 2016 to identify all existing studies on mobile/eLearning randomized controlled interventions designed to improve diet, nutrition and/or body weight in adults, at individual or community level. A total of 22 studies met the inclusion and exclusion criteria for inclusion. Most studies found that integrations of technology for delivering and personalizing interventions on diet/nutrition and/or body weight were effective in reducing body-weight in overweight/obese populations (n = 8), preventing weight gain n = 4) and improving certain dietary habits (n = 10). The low cost of eHealth/mHealth interventions and their potential to reach large, sometimes hard-to-reach young population sectors makes them attractive targets for upscaling

    Biodiversity and Taxonomy of the Parasitic Crustacea

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    Crustaceans have independently adopted a parasitic mode of life on numerous occasions, and this chapter reviews the classification and species richness of each of the parasitic clades, which lie within two major pancrustacean lineages, the Multicrustacea and the Oligostraca. Tabulated data are presented on the genera, species richness and host usage of the whale lice (Cyamidae); the generic and species richness of the families of hyperiidean amphipods; the generic and species richness and the host usage of the families and subfamilies of epicaridean isopods; the species richness, salinity regime and host taxon of cymothoid isopods; the generic and species richness and the host usage of the families of Ascothoracida and Rhizocephala; the species of Tantulocarida and their hosts; the generic and species richness and the host usage of the families and family-level groupings of cyclopoid and siphonostomatoid copepods; the species richness and salinity regimes of the genera of Branchiura; and the species richness and host usage of the genera of tongue worms (Pentastomida). Parasitic crustaceans use a total of 15 different phyla as hosts

    Effects of Parasitic Crustacea on Hosts

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    This chapter summarises our understanding of the direct effects that parasiticcrustaceans have on their invertebrate and vertebrate hosts. At the individual hostlevel, the effects of infection with parasitic Crustacea with respect to host pathologicalchanges and the development of disease states are reasonably well understood. However,we have a much poorer understanding of how infection affects the physiological,immunological and reproductive status of hosts, with much of what is known arisingfrom studies of sea lice (caligid copepods) infections of salmonids. Quantifyingsublethal impacts of parasitic Crustacea infection on the biology and ecology of hostsis especially challenging even under controlled laboratory conditions. This is due to thecomplex and poorly understood interactions between parasite, host and environmentaldeterminants, which ultimately influence the outcome and magnitude of the effect.There is very limited information on the effects that parasitic Crustacea have on theirhosts at a population level, as well as on the indirect effects that they may have onspecies that interact with their hosts (community level effects). Our relatively goodunderstanding of effects of sea lice on salmonids has been brought about due to thelarge economic impact that these parasites have on farmed salmonids and the necessityto develop new methods for their control. Unfortunately, the progress for other parasitesand hosts is much slower which is in part due to the lack of experimental systems,research tools and funding
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