8 research outputs found

    Crossmodal duration perception in aging adults

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    Temporal perception in the elderly population is impaired in unisensory and multisensory contexts. How aging affects one aspect of temporal processing, duration perception, remains unknown. In young adults, the auditory modality has a much higher resolution of duration discrimination over the visual system. The auditory system also has the capability to influence visual duration perception due to the dominance of the auditory modality in temporal discriminability. This influence diminishes with increasing duration difference between the auditory and visual stimuli. This project aimed to examine whether audition dominates vision in duration perception in a similar way in the elderly. Due to wider temporal windows that older adults have for other temporal perceptions, older adults should experience these influence effect over greater duration differences than young adults. The results of this project concluded that age was not a significant factor determining the extent of auditory influences on visual duration perception. The alignment of auditory and visual stimuli was the greatest factor determining influence effects

    Effects of aging on cross-modal duration perception

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    Unconventional Obturator Artery Nutrient Branch: Image of an Anatomical Variation

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    Variations in vascular anatomy are of great concern to surgeons, as proper identification of aberrant arteries can reduce the risk of iatrogenic injury and improve patient outcomes. Several studies have highlighted the irregular branching pattern of pelvic arteries, with a recent focus on the obturator artery (OA). The OA has an inconstant origin from the internal iliac artery, external iliac artery, or inferior epigastric artery. Within the pelvis, the OA can give off muscular branches and nutrient vessels to the ilium and pubis. Though occasionally described in text, few resources employ images of human donors that depict branches arising from the OAs. Out of the 34 hemisected pelves studied, we identified 1 individual with a substantial nutrient vessel branching unilaterally from the OA. Herein, we present the first image of this unconventional nutrient artery. This vessel should be highlighted given that its size and course make it particularly vulnerable during intrapelvic surgeries such as pelvic lymph node dissection or in procedures requiring arterial embolization of the OA

    A Hypothesis on the Origin and Evolution of Tubulin

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    Microtubule targeting agents: from biophysics to proteomics

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    This review explores various aspects of the interaction between microtubule targeting agents and tubulin, including binding site, affinity, and drug resistance. Starting with the basics of tubulin polymerization and microtubule targeting agent binding, we then highlight how the three-dimensional structures of drug-tubulin complexes obtained on stabilized tubulin are seeded by precise biological and biophysical data. New avenues opened by thermodynamics analysis, high throughput screening, and proteomics for the molecular pharmacology of these drugs are presented. The amount of data generated by biophysical, proteomic and cellular techniques shed more light onto the microtubule-tubulin equilibrium and tubulin-drug interaction. Combining these approaches provides new insight into the mechanism of action of known microtubule interacting agents and rapid in-depth characterization of next generation molecules targeting the interaction between microtubules and associated modulators of their dynamics. This will facilitate the design of improved and/or alternative chemotherapies targeting the microtubule cytoskeleton

    Connectedness as a Core Conservation Concern: An Interdisciplinary Review of Theory and a Call for Practice

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