12 research outputs found
Catastrophizing and Risk-Taking
Background: Catastrophizing, when an individual overestimates the probability of a severe negative outcome, is related to various aspects of mental ill-health. Here, we further characterize catastrophizing by investigating the extent to which self-reported catastrophizing is associated with risk-taking, using an online behavioural task and computational modelling.
Methods: We performed two online studies: a pilot study (n = 69) and a main study (n = 263). In the pilot study, participants performed the Balloon Analogue Risk Task (BART), alongside two other tasks (reported in the Supplement), and completed mental health questionnaires. Based on the findings from the pilot, we explored risk-taking in more detail in the main study using two versions of the Balloon Analogue Risk task (BART), with either a high or low cost for bursting the balloon.
Results: In the main study, there was a significant negative relationship between self-report catastrophizing scores and risk-taking in the low (but not high) cost version of the BART. Computational modelling of the BART task revealed no relationship between any parameter and Catastrophizing scores in either version of the task.
Conclusions: We show that increased self-reported catastrophizing may be associated with reduced behavioural measures of risk-taking, but were unable to identify a computational correlate of this effect
Catastrophizing and Risk-Taking
Background: Catastrophizing, when an individual overestimates the probability of a severe negative outcome, is related to various aspects of mental ill-health. Here, we further characterize catastrophizing by investigating the extent to which self-reported catastrophizing is associated with risk-taking, using an online behavioural task and computational modelling. Methods: We performed two online studies: a pilot study (n=69) and a main study (n=263). In the pilot study, participants performed the Balloon Analogue Risk Task (BART), alongside two other tasks (reported in the Supplement), and completed mental health questionnaires. Based on the findings from the pilot, we explored risk-taking in more detail in the main study using two versions of the Balloon Analogue Risk task (BART), with either a high or low cost for bursting the balloon. Results: In the main study, there was a significant negative relationship between self-report catastrophizing scores and risk-taking in the low (but not high) cost version of the BART. Computational modelling of the BART task revealed no relationship between any parameter and Catastrophizing scores in either version of the task. Conclusions: We show that increased self-reported catastrophizing may be associated with reduced behavioural measures of risk-taking, but were unable to identify a computational correlate of this effect
Catastrophizing is associated with reduced risk-taking
Protocols, data and code for two online studies investigating the cognitive processes associated with catastrophizing
Greening cities – To be socially inclusive?: About the alleged paradox of society and ecology in cities
Greening cities, namely installing new parks, rooftop gardens or planting trees along the streets, undoubtedly contributes to an increase in wellbeing and enhances the attractiveness of open spaces in cities. At the same time, we observe an increasing use of greening strategies as ingredients of urban renewal, upgrading and urban revitalization as primarily market-driven endeavours targeting middle class and higher income groups sometimes at the expense of less privileged residents. This paper reflects on the current debate of the social effects of greening using selected examples. We discuss what trade-offs between social and ecological developments in cities mean for the future debate on greening cities and a socially balanced and inclusive way of developing our cities for various groups of urban dwellers. We conclude that current and future functions and features of greening cities have to be discussed more critically including a greater awareness of social impacts
Structure and function of the human skin microbiome
An abundant and diverse collection of bacteria, fungi and viruses inhabit the human skin. These microorganisms have been reported to vary between individuals and between different sites on the skin. The factors responsible for the unique variability of the skin microbiome are only partially understood, but results suggest host genetic and environmental influences play a major role. Today, the steady accumulation of data describing the skin microbiome, combined with experiments designed to test the biological functions of surface microbes, have provided new insights into links between human physiology and skin microbiota. This review describes some of the current information regarding the skin microbiome and their impact on human health. Specifically, this review seeks to summarize the present understanding of the function of microbe–host interactions on the skin and highlight some unique features that distinguish skin commensals from pathogenic microbes
The Kelp Forest Challenge: A collaborative global movement to protect and restore 4 million hectares of kelp
Marine kelp forests cover 1/3 of our world's coastlines, are heralded as a nature-based solution to address socio-environmental
issues, connect hundreds of millions of people with the ocean, and support a rich web of biodiversity throughout
our oceans. But they are increasingly threatened with some areas reporting over 90% declines in kelp forest cover in living
memory. Despite their importance and the threats they face, kelp forests are entirely absent from the international conservation
dialogue. No international laws, policies, or targets focus on kelp forests and very few countries consider them in their
national policy. The Kelp Forest Challenge addresses that gap. Together with 252 kelp experts, professionals, and citizens
from 25 countries, the Kelp Forest Challenge was developed as a grassroots vision of what the world can achieve for kelp
forest conservation. It is a global call to restore 1 million and protect 3 million hectares of kelp forests by 2040. This is a
monumental challenge, that will require coordination across multiple levels of society and the mobilization of immense
resources. Pledges may therefore include area for protection or restoration, enabling pledges which assist in conservation
(funding, equipment, professional expertise, capacity building), or awareness-based pledges which increase awareness or
education about kelp forests. Correspondingly, participants may be from government, scientific institutions, private sector,
NGOs, community groups, or individuals. This challenge is the beginning of a 17-year mission to save our kelp forests and
anyone and any organisation is invited to participate
The (not so) controversial role of DNA methylation in epigenetic inheritance across generations.
It has been demonstrated originally in plants that phenotypic traits,
such as floral symmetry, can be caused by changes of methylation
patterns of specific genes. Such traits can be transgenerationally
inherited for multiple generations and remain associated with cytosine
methylation patterns. Whether genomic methylation may also contribute to
epigenetic inheritance across generations in vertebrates and notably in
mammals is still more controversial. One reason for this tentativeness
is the dual occurrence of global genomic de-methylation first in
pre-implantation embryos and subsequently in primordial germ cells
(PGCs) of mammals. Although gene focused cases of epigenetic inheritance
associated with genomic DNA methylation have been well studied mostly
in rodents (such as imprinted genes and the Agouti viable yellow, Avy,
allele), it is still a matter of debate whether genomic DNA methylation
may provide a more general mechanism for the epigenetic inheritance of
acquired traits across generations. We review the current literature on
this topic with a focus on the potential role of DNA methylation for
epigenetic inheritance across generations in mammals