303 results on '"Ioannidis K"'
Search Results
2. Exploring decision-making performance in young adults with mental health disorders: a comparative study using the Cambridge gambling task
- Author
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Effah, R., primary, Ioannidis, K., additional, Grant, J.E., additional, and Chamberlain, S.R., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. 4CPS-040 Adherence to guidelines and prescribing trends of statins in patients with acute coronary syndrome
- Author
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Ioannidis, K, primary, Scarlatinis, I, additional, Antonelos, N, additional, Chatzigeorgiou, N, additional, Vlachou, M, additional, Chatzidimitriou, G, additional, Stathopoulou, P, additional, Papandreou, V, additional, Karavitaki, M, additional, and Markantonis, SL, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Ex vivo detection and quantification of apically extruded volatile compounds and disinfection by-products by SIFT-MS, during chemomechanical preparation of infected root canals
- Author
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Ioannidis, K, Batty, C, Turner, C, Smith, D, Deb, S, and Mannocci, F
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. On the trajectory of discrimination: A meta-analysis and forecasting survey capturing 44 years of field experiments on gender and hiring decisions
- Author
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Schaerer, M, Plessis, C, Nguyen, M, Aert, R, Tiokhin, L, Lakens, D, Clemente, E, Pfeiffer, T, Dreber, A, Johannesson, M, Clark, C, Uhlmann, E, Abraham, A, Adamus, M, Akinci, C, Alberti, F, Alsharawy, A, Alzahawi, S, Anseel, F, Arndt, F, Balkan, B, Baskin, E, Bearden, C, Benotsch, E, Bernritter, S, Black, S, Bleidorn, W, Boysen, A, Brienza, J, Brown, M, Brown, S, Brown, J, Buckley, J, Buttliere, B, Byrd, N, Cigler, H, Capitan, T, Cherubini, P, Chong, S, Ciftci, E, Conrad, C, Conway, P, Costa, E, Cox, J, Cox, D, Cruz, F, Dawson, I, Demiral, E, Derrick, J, Doshi, S, Dunleavy, D, Durham, J, Elbaek, C, Ellis, D, Ert, E, Espinoza, M, Fullbrunn, S, Fath, S, Furrer, R, Fiala, L, Fillon, A, Forsgren, M, Fytraki, A, Galarza, F, Gandhi, L, Garrison, S, Geraldes, D, Ghasemi, O, Gjoneska, B, Gothilander, J, Gruhn, D, Grieder, M, Hafenbradl, S, Halkias, G, Hancock, R, Hantula, D, Harton, H, Hoffmann, C, Holzmeister, F, Horak, F, Hosch, A, Imada, H, Ioannidis, K, Jaeger, B, Janas, M, Janik, B, Kc, R, Keel, P, Keeley, J, Keller, L, Kenrick, D, Kiely, K, Knutsson, M, Kovacheva, A, Kovera, M, Krivoshchekov, V, Krumrei-Mancuso, E, Kulibert, D, Lacko, D, Lemay, E, Leung, D, Li, F, Lin, H, Lorenzo, K, Lorenzo-Luaces, L, Lou, N, Lovakov, A, Luzardo, A, Macaulay, S, Madan, C, Mahmoud, O, Makel, M, Mari, S, Fages, D, Marsh, A, Mccarthy, R, Mercier, B, Milfont, T, Mittlaender, S, Montoya, A, Moyer, A, Myrseth, K, Navarro-Martinez, D, Nelson, A, Neyse, L, Minghui, N, Niszczota, P, Obrecht, N, Otterbring, T, Panlilio, Z, Park, L, Pauer, S, Pavlov, Y, Pentek, I, Pereyra, J, Perkowski, P, Pew, E, Peynircioglu, Z, Pezzo, M, Pirrone, A, Plonsky, O, Porfirio, J, Pownall, M, Prochnicki, M, Protzko, J, Roer, J, Rahnev, D, Reis, H, Rios, K, Rodrigues, D, Rodriguez, P, Roth, Y, Ruffle, B, Samahita, M, Schmidt, A, Schoemann, M, Schoenegger, P, Schwebel, D, Segovia, A, Sherman, J, Siegenthaler, S, Siem, B, Sirota, M, Smith, E, Stamatogiannakis, A, Stewart-Williams, S, Storage, D, Su, Y, Talbert, E, Todd, A, Tonin, M, Trautmann, S, Travaglino, G, Tsang, J, Veldhuizen, R, Varnum, M, Walf, A, Wallrich, L, Wang, K, Ward, D, Waugh, C, Wingen, T, Woike, J, Wollbrant, C, Wu, S, Wylie, K, Xiao, Q, Xue, S, Yakobi, O, Zayas, V, Zheng, J, Zhong, Y, Zogmaister, C, Zolopa, C, Lisa, N, Chin Wen, O, Dmitry, G, Schaerer M., Plessis C. D., Nguyen M. H. B., Aert R. C. M. V., Tiokhin L., Lakens D., Clemente E. G., Pfeiffer T., Dreber A., Johannesson M., Clark C. J., Uhlmann E. L., Abraham A. T., Adamus M., Akinci C., Alberti F., Alsharawy A. M., Alzahawi S., Anseel F., Arndt F., Balkan B., Baskin E., Bearden C. E., Benotsch E. G., Bernritter S., Black S. R., Bleidorn W., Boysen A. P., Brienza J. P., Brown M., Brown S. E. V., Brown J. W., Buckley J., Buttliere B., Byrd N., Cigler H., Capitan T., Cherubini P., Chong S. Y., Ciftci E. E., Conrad C. D., Conway P., Costa E., Cox J. A., Cox D. J., Cruz F., Dawson I. G. J., Demiral E. E., Derrick J. L., Doshi S., Dunleavy D. J., Durham J. D., Elbaek C. T., Ellis D. A., Ert E., Espinoza M. P., Fullbrunn S. C., Fath S., Furrer R., Fiala L., Fillon A. A., Forsgren M., Fytraki A. T., Galarza F. B., Gandhi L., Garrison S. M., Geraldes D., Ghasemi O., Gjoneska B., Gothilander J., Gruhn D., Grieder M., Hafenbradl S., Halkias G., Hancock R., Hantula D. A., Harton H. C., Hoffmann C. P., Holzmeister F., Horak F., Hosch A. -K., Imada H., Ioannidis K., Jaeger B., Janas M., Janik B., Kc R. P., Keel P. K., Keeley J. W., Keller L., Kenrick D. T., Kiely K. M., Knutsson M., Kovacheva A., Kovera M. B., Krivoshchekov V., Krumrei-Mancuso E. J., Kulibert D., Lacko D., Lemay E. P., Leung D. W., Li F., Lin H., Lorenzo K. E., Lorenzo-Luaces L., Lou N. M., Lovakov A., Luzardo A., MacAulay S. C., Madan C. R., Mahmoud O., Makel M. C., Mari S., Fages D. M., Marsh A. A., McCarthy R. J., Mercier B., Milfont T. L., Mittlaender S., Montoya A. K., Moyer A., Myrseth K. O. R., Navarro-Martinez D., Nelson A. J., Neyse L., Minghui N., Niszczota P., Obrecht N. A., Otterbring T., Panlilio Z. A., Park L. E., Pauer S., Pavlov Y. G., Pentek I., Pereyra J. S., Perkowski P., Pew E., Peynircioglu Z. F., Pezzo M. V., Pirrone A., Plonsky O., Porfirio J. C. C., Pownall M., Prochnicki M. M., Protzko J., Roer J. P., Rahnev D., Reis H. T., Rios K., Rodrigues D. L., Rodriguez P., Roth Y., Ruffle B. J., Samahita M., Schmidt A., Schoemann M., Schoenegger P., Schwebel D. C., Segovia A. M., Sherman J. W., Siegenthaler S., Siem B., Sirota M., Smith E. R., Stamatogiannakis A., Stewart-Williams S., Storage D., Su Y., Talbert E. J., Todd A. R., Tonin M., Trautmann S. T., Travaglino G. A., Tsang J. -A., Veldhuizen R. V., Varnum M. E. W., Walf A. A., Wallrich L., Wang K., Ward D. E., Waugh C. E., Wingen T., Woike J. K., Wollbrant C. E., Wu S., Wylie K., Xiao Q., Xue S. Y., Yakobi O., Zayas V., Zheng J., Zhong Y., Zogmaister C., Zolopa C. S., Lisa N., Chin Wen O., Dmitry G., Schaerer, M, Plessis, C, Nguyen, M, Aert, R, Tiokhin, L, Lakens, D, Clemente, E, Pfeiffer, T, Dreber, A, Johannesson, M, Clark, C, Uhlmann, E, Abraham, A, Adamus, M, Akinci, C, Alberti, F, Alsharawy, A, Alzahawi, S, Anseel, F, Arndt, F, Balkan, B, Baskin, E, Bearden, C, Benotsch, E, Bernritter, S, Black, S, Bleidorn, W, Boysen, A, Brienza, J, Brown, M, Brown, S, Brown, J, Buckley, J, Buttliere, B, Byrd, N, Cigler, H, Capitan, T, Cherubini, P, Chong, S, Ciftci, E, Conrad, C, Conway, P, Costa, E, Cox, J, Cox, D, Cruz, F, Dawson, I, Demiral, E, Derrick, J, Doshi, S, Dunleavy, D, Durham, J, Elbaek, C, Ellis, D, Ert, E, Espinoza, M, Fullbrunn, S, Fath, S, Furrer, R, Fiala, L, Fillon, A, Forsgren, M, Fytraki, A, Galarza, F, Gandhi, L, Garrison, S, Geraldes, D, Ghasemi, O, Gjoneska, B, Gothilander, J, Gruhn, D, Grieder, M, Hafenbradl, S, Halkias, G, Hancock, R, Hantula, D, Harton, H, Hoffmann, C, Holzmeister, F, Horak, F, Hosch, A, Imada, H, Ioannidis, K, Jaeger, B, Janas, M, Janik, B, Kc, R, Keel, P, Keeley, J, Keller, L, Kenrick, D, Kiely, K, Knutsson, M, Kovacheva, A, Kovera, M, Krivoshchekov, V, Krumrei-Mancuso, E, Kulibert, D, Lacko, D, Lemay, E, Leung, D, Li, F, Lin, H, Lorenzo, K, Lorenzo-Luaces, L, Lou, N, Lovakov, A, Luzardo, A, Macaulay, S, Madan, C, Mahmoud, O, Makel, M, Mari, S, Fages, D, Marsh, A, Mccarthy, R, Mercier, B, Milfont, T, Mittlaender, S, Montoya, A, Moyer, A, Myrseth, K, Navarro-Martinez, D, Nelson, A, Neyse, L, Minghui, N, Niszczota, P, Obrecht, N, Otterbring, T, Panlilio, Z, Park, L, Pauer, S, Pavlov, Y, Pentek, I, Pereyra, J, Perkowski, P, Pew, E, Peynircioglu, Z, Pezzo, M, Pirrone, A, Plonsky, O, Porfirio, J, Pownall, M, Prochnicki, M, Protzko, J, Roer, J, Rahnev, D, Reis, H, Rios, K, Rodrigues, D, Rodriguez, P, Roth, Y, Ruffle, B, Samahita, M, Schmidt, A, Schoemann, M, Schoenegger, P, Schwebel, D, Segovia, A, Sherman, J, Siegenthaler, S, Siem, B, Sirota, M, Smith, E, Stamatogiannakis, A, Stewart-Williams, S, Storage, D, Su, Y, Talbert, E, Todd, A, Tonin, M, Trautmann, S, Travaglino, G, Tsang, J, Veldhuizen, R, Varnum, M, Walf, A, Wallrich, L, Wang, K, Ward, D, Waugh, C, Wingen, T, Woike, J, Wollbrant, C, Wu, S, Wylie, K, Xiao, Q, Xue, S, Yakobi, O, Zayas, V, Zheng, J, Zhong, Y, Zogmaister, C, Zolopa, C, Lisa, N, Chin Wen, O, Dmitry, G, Schaerer M., Plessis C. D., Nguyen M. H. B., Aert R. C. M. V., Tiokhin L., Lakens D., Clemente E. G., Pfeiffer T., Dreber A., Johannesson M., Clark C. J., Uhlmann E. L., Abraham A. T., Adamus M., Akinci C., Alberti F., Alsharawy A. M., Alzahawi S., Anseel F., Arndt F., Balkan B., Baskin E., Bearden C. E., Benotsch E. G., Bernritter S., Black S. R., Bleidorn W., Boysen A. P., Brienza J. P., Brown M., Brown S. E. V., Brown J. W., Buckley J., Buttliere B., Byrd N., Cigler H., Capitan T., Cherubini P., Chong S. Y., Ciftci E. E., Conrad C. D., Conway P., Costa E., Cox J. A., Cox D. J., Cruz F., Dawson I. G. J., Demiral E. E., Derrick J. L., Doshi S., Dunleavy D. J., Durham J. D., Elbaek C. T., Ellis D. A., Ert E., Espinoza M. P., Fullbrunn S. C., Fath S., Furrer R., Fiala L., Fillon A. A., Forsgren M., Fytraki A. T., Galarza F. B., Gandhi L., Garrison S. M., Geraldes D., Ghasemi O., Gjoneska B., Gothilander J., Gruhn D., Grieder M., Hafenbradl S., Halkias G., Hancock R., Hantula D. A., Harton H. C., Hoffmann C. P., Holzmeister F., Horak F., Hosch A. -K., Imada H., Ioannidis K., Jaeger B., Janas M., Janik B., Kc R. P., Keel P. K., Keeley J. W., Keller L., Kenrick D. T., Kiely K. M., Knutsson M., Kovacheva A., Kovera M. B., Krivoshchekov V., Krumrei-Mancuso E. J., Kulibert D., Lacko D., Lemay E. P., Leung D. W., Li F., Lin H., Lorenzo K. E., Lorenzo-Luaces L., Lou N. M., Lovakov A., Luzardo A., MacAulay S. C., Madan C. R., Mahmoud O., Makel M. C., Mari S., Fages D. M., Marsh A. A., McCarthy R. J., Mercier B., Milfont T. L., Mittlaender S., Montoya A. K., Moyer A., Myrseth K. O. R., Navarro-Martinez D., Nelson A. J., Neyse L., Minghui N., Niszczota P., Obrecht N. A., Otterbring T., Panlilio Z. A., Park L. E., Pauer S., Pavlov Y. G., Pentek I., Pereyra J. S., Perkowski P., Pew E., Peynircioglu Z. F., Pezzo M. V., Pirrone A., Plonsky O., Porfirio J. C. C., Pownall M., Prochnicki M. M., Protzko J., Roer J. P., Rahnev D., Reis H. T., Rios K., Rodrigues D. L., Rodriguez P., Roth Y., Ruffle B. J., Samahita M., Schmidt A., Schoemann M., Schoenegger P., Schwebel D. C., Segovia A. M., Sherman J. W., Siegenthaler S., Siem B., Sirota M., Smith E. R., Stamatogiannakis A., Stewart-Williams S., Storage D., Su Y., Talbert E. J., Todd A. R., Tonin M., Trautmann S. T., Travaglino G. A., Tsang J. -A., Veldhuizen R. V., Varnum M. E. W., Walf A. A., Wallrich L., Wang K., Ward D. E., Waugh C. E., Wingen T., Woike J. K., Wollbrant C. E., Wu S., Wylie K., Xiao Q., Xue S. Y., Yakobi O., Zayas V., Zheng J., Zhong Y., Zogmaister C., Zolopa C. S., Lisa N., Chin Wen O., and Dmitry G.
- Abstract
A preregistered meta-analysis, including 244 effect sizes from 85 field audits and 361,645 individual job applications, tested for gender bias in hiring practices in female-stereotypical and gender-balanced as well as male-stereotypical jobs from 1976 to 2020. A “red team” of independent experts was recruited to increase the rigor and robustness of our meta-analytic approach. A forecasting survey further examined whether laypeople (n = 499 nationally representative adults) and scientists (n = 312) could predict the results. Forecasters correctly anticipated reductions in discrimination against female candidates over time. However, both scientists and laypeople overestimated the continuation of bias against female candidates. Instead, selection bias in favor of male over female candidates was eliminated and, if anything, slightly reversed in sign starting in 2009 for mixed-gender and male-stereotypical jobs in our sample. Forecasters further failed to anticipate that discrimination against male candidates for stereotypically female jobs would remain stable across the decades.
- Published
- 2023
6. Anchoring on valuations and perceived informativeness
- Author
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Ioannidis, K, Ioannidis, K [0000-0003-2858-4688], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
38 Economics ,Behavioral and Social Science ,3803 Economic Theory ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science - Published
- 2023
7. Manifesto for a European research network into Problematic Usage of the Internet
- Author
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Fineberg, NA, Demetrovics, Z, Stein, DJ, Ioannidis, K, Potenza, MN, Grünblatt, E, Brand, M, Billieux, J, Carmi, L, King, DL, Grant, JE, Yücel, M, Dell'Osso, B, Rumpf, HJ, Hall, N, Hollander, E, Goudriaan, A, Menchon, J, Zohar, J, Burkauskas, J, Martinotti, G, Van Ameringen, M, Corazza, O, Pallanti, S, and Chamberlain, SR
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. “Jeep Disease” and Optimal Treatment Strategy for Sacrococcygeal Pilonidal Sinus in a High Volume Tertiary Military Medical Center
- Author
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Chatzoulis, George A., Pharmakis, D., Milias, K., Ioannidis, K., Tzikos, G., Delligianidis, D., Kellidou, Paraskevi, Passos, I., Christopoulos, C., Mouchasiris, C., Christodoulou, T., Chatzoulis, K., Karagiozopoulos, T., and Spyridopoulos, P.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Placebo effects in randomised trials of pharmacologic and neurostimulation treatments for mental disorders: an umbrella review
- Author
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Huneke, N., Amin, J., Baldwin, D., Bellato, A., Brandt, V., Chamberlain, S., Correll, C., Eudave, L., Garner, M., Gosling, C., Hill, C., Hou, R., Howes, O., Ioannidis, K., Köhler-Forsberg, O., Marzulli, L., Reed, C., Sinclair, J., Singh, S., Solmi, M., and Cortese, S.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Cdt1 overexpression drives colorectal carcinogenesis through origin overlicensing and DNA damage
- Author
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Petropoulos, M. Champeris Tsaniras, S. Nikou, S. Maxouri, S. Dionellis, V.S. Kalogeropoulou, A. Karamichali, A. Ioannidis, K. Danalatos, I.-R. Obst, M. Naumann, R. Delinasios, G.J. Gorgoulis, V.G. Roukos, V. Anastassiadis, K. Halazonetis, T.D. Bravou, V. Lygerou, Z. Taraviras, S. and Petropoulos, M. Champeris Tsaniras, S. Nikou, S. Maxouri, S. Dionellis, V.S. Kalogeropoulou, A. Karamichali, A. Ioannidis, K. Danalatos, I.-R. Obst, M. Naumann, R. Delinasios, G.J. Gorgoulis, V.G. Roukos, V. Anastassiadis, K. Halazonetis, T.D. Bravou, V. Lygerou, Z. Taraviras, S.
- Abstract
Chromatin licensing and DNA replication factor 1 (CDT1), a protein of the pre-replicative complex, is essential for loading the minichromosome maintenance complex (MCM) helicases onto the origins of DNA replication. While several studies have shown that dysregulation of CDT1 expression causes re-replication and DNA damage in cell lines, and CDT1 is highly expressed in several human cancers, whether CDT1 deregulation is sufficient to enhance tumorigenesis in vivo is currently unclear. To delineate its role in vivo, we overexpressed Cdt1 in the mouse colon and induced carcinogenesis using azoxymethane/dextran sodium sulfate (AOM/DSS). Here, we show that mice overexpressing Cdt1 develop a significantly higher number of tumors with increased tumor size, and more severe dysplastic changes (high-grade dysplasia), compared with control mice under the same treatment. These tumors exhibited an increased growth rate, while cells overexpressing Cdt1 loaded greater amounts of Mcm2 onto chromatin, demonstrating origin overlicensing. Adenomas overexpressing Cdt1 showed activation of the DNA damage response (DDR), apoptosis, formation of micronuclei, and chromosome segregation errors, indicating that aberrant expression of Cdt1 results in increased genomic and chromosomal instability in vivo, favoring cancer development. In line with these results, high-level expression of CDT1 in human colorectal cancer tissue specimens and colorectal cancer cell lines correlated significantly with increased origin licensing, activation of the DDR, and microsatellite instability (MSI). © 2022 The Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland. © 2022 The Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland.
- Published
- 2023
11. Competition and moral behavior: A meta-analysis of forty-five crowd-sourced experimental designs
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Huber, Celine, Dreber, A., Huber, J.W., Johannesson, M., Kirchler, M., Weitzel, G.U., Abellán, Miguel, Adayeva, Xeniya, Ay, Ferhat, Barron, K., Berry, Zachariah, Bönte, Werner, Brütt, Katharina, Bulutay, Muhammed, Campos-Mercade, Pol, Cardella, Eric, Claassen, M., Cornelissen, G., Dawson, I., Delnoij, Joyce, Demiral, E., Dimant, Eugen, Doerflinger, J.T., Dold, M., Emery, Cécile, Fiala, Lenka, Fiedler, Susann, Freddi, Eleonora, Fries, Tilman, Gasiorowska, Agata, Glogowsky, Ulrich, M. Gorny, Paul, Gretton, J.D., Grohmann, Antonia, Hafenbrädl, Sebastian, Handgraaf, Michel, Hanoch, Yaniv, Hart, E., Hennig, Max, Hudja, Stanton, Hütter, M., Hyndman, Kyle, Ioannidis, K., Isler, Ozan, Jeworrek, Sabrina, Jolles, D., Juanchich, Marie, KC, R.P., Khadjavi, Menusch, Kugler, Tamar, Li, Shuwen, Lucas, Beth, Mak, Vincent, Mechtel, Mario, Merkle, Christoph, Meyers, E., Mollerstrom, Johanna, Nesterov, Alexander, Neyse, Levent, Nieken, Petra, Nussberger, Anne-Marie, Palumbo, Helena, Peters, Kristian, Pirrone, A., Qin, X., Rahal, R.M., Rau, H., Rincke, Johannes, Ronzani, Piero, Roth, Yefim, Saral, A.S., Schmitz, J.M., Schneider, F.M., Schram, A., Schudy, Simeon, Schweitzer, M.E., Schwieren, Christiane, Scopelliti, Irene, Sirota, Miroslav, Sonnemans, J., Soraperra, Ivan, Spantig, Lisa, Steimanis, Ivo, Steinmetz, J., Suetens, Sigrid, Theodoropoulou, Andriana, Urbig, Diemo, Vorlaufer, Tobias, Waibel, Joschka, Woods, D.B., Yakobi, Ofir, Yilmaz, O., Zaleskiewicz, Tomasz, Zeisberger, S.M., Holzmeister, F., Huber, Celine, Dreber, A., Huber, J.W., Johannesson, M., Kirchler, M., Weitzel, G.U., Abellán, Miguel, Adayeva, Xeniya, Ay, Ferhat, Barron, K., Berry, Zachariah, Bönte, Werner, Brütt, Katharina, Bulutay, Muhammed, Campos-Mercade, Pol, Cardella, Eric, Claassen, M., Cornelissen, G., Dawson, I., Delnoij, Joyce, Demiral, E., Dimant, Eugen, Doerflinger, J.T., Dold, M., Emery, Cécile, Fiala, Lenka, Fiedler, Susann, Freddi, Eleonora, Fries, Tilman, Gasiorowska, Agata, Glogowsky, Ulrich, M. Gorny, Paul, Gretton, J.D., Grohmann, Antonia, Hafenbrädl, Sebastian, Handgraaf, Michel, Hanoch, Yaniv, Hart, E., Hennig, Max, Hudja, Stanton, Hütter, M., Hyndman, Kyle, Ioannidis, K., Isler, Ozan, Jeworrek, Sabrina, Jolles, D., Juanchich, Marie, KC, R.P., Khadjavi, Menusch, Kugler, Tamar, Li, Shuwen, Lucas, Beth, Mak, Vincent, Mechtel, Mario, Merkle, Christoph, Meyers, E., Mollerstrom, Johanna, Nesterov, Alexander, Neyse, Levent, Nieken, Petra, Nussberger, Anne-Marie, Palumbo, Helena, Peters, Kristian, Pirrone, A., Qin, X., Rahal, R.M., Rau, H., Rincke, Johannes, Ronzani, Piero, Roth, Yefim, Saral, A.S., Schmitz, J.M., Schneider, F.M., Schram, A., Schudy, Simeon, Schweitzer, M.E., Schwieren, Christiane, Scopelliti, Irene, Sirota, Miroslav, Sonnemans, J., Soraperra, Ivan, Spantig, Lisa, Steimanis, Ivo, Steinmetz, J., Suetens, Sigrid, Theodoropoulou, Andriana, Urbig, Diemo, Vorlaufer, Tobias, Waibel, Joschka, Woods, D.B., Yakobi, Ofir, Yilmaz, O., Zaleskiewicz, Tomasz, Zeisberger, S.M., and Holzmeister, F.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 293094.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access), Does competition affect moral behavior? This fundamental question has been debated among leading scholars for centuries, and more recently, it has been tested in experimental studies yielding a body of rather inconclusive empirical evidence. A potential source of ambivalent empirical results on the same hypothesis is design heterogeneity?variation in true effect sizes across various reasonable experimental research protocols. To provide further evidence on whether competition affects moral behavior and to examine whether the generalizability of a single experimental study is jeopardized by design heterogeneity, we invited independent research teams to contribute experimental designs to a crowd-sourced project. In a large-scale online data collection, 18,123 experimental participants were randomly allocated to 45 randomly selected experimental designs out of 95 submitted designs. We find a small adverse effect of competition on moral behavior in a meta-analysis of the pooled data. The crowd-sourced design of our study allows for a clean identification and estimation of the variation in effect sizes above and beyond what could be expected due to sampling variance. We find substantial design heterogeneity?estimated to be about 1.6 times as large as the average standard error of effect size estimates of the 45 research designs?indicating that the informativeness and generalizability of results based on a single experimental design are limited. Drawing strong conclusions about the underlying hypotheses in the presence of substantive design heterogeneity requires moving toward much larger data collections on various experimental designs testing the same hypothesis.
- Published
- 2023
12. Direct Quantitation of Psilocybin and Psilocin by One-Dimensional 1H and 31P qNMR in a revived Greek specimen of Psilocybe cyanescens
- Author
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Magiatis, P, primary, Dadiotis, E, additional, Antonopoulos, R K, additional, Ioannidis, K, additional, Mitsis, V, additional, Melliou, E, additional, and Gonou-Zagou, Z, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Inflammatory Pseudotumor of the Spleen
- Author
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Chatzoulis, G, Passos, Ioannis, Ioannidis, K, Georgopoulos, C, and Spyridopoulos, P
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The Open Anchoring Quest Dataset: Anchored Estimates from 96 Studies on Anchoring Effects
- Author
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Röseler, Lukas, Weber, Lucia, Helgerth, Katharina, Stich, Elena, Günther, Miriam, Tegethoff, Paulina, Wagner, Felix, Antunovic, M., Barrera-Lemarchand, F., Halali, E., Ioannidis, K., Genschow, O., Milstein, N., Molden, D. C., Papenmeier, F., Pavlovic, Z., Rinn, R., Schreiter, M. L., Zimdahl, M. F., Bahník, Š., Bermeitinger, C., Blower, F. B. N., Bögler, H. L., Burgmer, P., Cheek, N. N., Dorsch, L., Fels, S., Frech, M.-L., Freira, L., Harris, A. J. L., Häusser, J. A., Hedgebeth, M. V., Henkel, M., Horvath, D., Intelmann, P., Klamar, A., Knappe, E., Köppel, L.-M., Krueger, S. M., Lagator, S., Lopez-Boo, F., Navajas, J., Norem, J. K., Novak, J., Onuki, Y., Page, E., Rebholz, T. R., Sartorio, M., Schindler, S., Shanks, D. R., Siems, M.-C., Stäglich, P., Starkulla, M., Stitz, M., Straube, T., Thies, K., Thum, E., Ueda, K., Undorf, M., Urlichich, D., Vadillo, M. A., Wolf, H., Zhou, A., Schütz, A., Ioannidis, Konstantinos [0000-0003-2858-4688], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
anchoring-and-adjustment ,Business psychology ,assimilation ,Anchor ,judgment and decision making ,estimates ,anchor ,4202 Epidemiology ,42 Health Sciences ,social psychology, judgment and decision making, cognitive psychology ,31 Biological Sciences - Abstract
People’s estimates are biased toward previously considered numbers (anchoring). We have aggregated all available data from anchoring studies that included at least two anchors into one large dataset. Data were standardized to comprise one estimate per row, coded according to a wide range of variables, and are available for download and analyses online (https://metaanalyses.shinyapps.io/OpAQ/). Because the dataset includes both original and meta-data it allows for fine-grained analyses (e.g., correlations of estimates for different tasks) but also for meta-analyses (e.g., effect sizes for anchoring effects).
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. On the digital twinning of load tests in railway bridges. Case study: High speed railway network, Extremadura, Spain
- Author
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Casas, Joan Ramon, Frangopol, Dan M., Turmo, Jose, Chacón, R., Posada, Hector, Ramonell, C., Sierra, Pablo, Rodríguez, A., Koulalis, Ilias, Ioannidis, K., Vrochidis, S., Tomar, Rahul, Freitag, S., Wagmeister, Stefan, Teodorovic, Mirko, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament d'Enginyeria Civil i Ambiental, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Doctorat en Enginyeria de la Construcció, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Doctorat en Anàlisi Estructural, and Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. ATEM - Anàlisi i Tecnologia d'Estructures i Materials
- Subjects
Enginyeria civil::Materials i estructures::Tipologies estructurals [Àrees temàtiques de la UPC] ,Ponts ,Bridges - Abstract
This paper shows the developments on the digital twinning of a set of new High speed Railway bridges located in South Western Spain. The aim of this digitization is the generation of a twin-driven maintenance planning. This research is performed within the frame of a H2020 European project called ASHVIN, related to the use of Digital Twins for Design, Construction and Maintenance purposes within the AEC sector. The project provides a series of demo cases for all stages. One of the demo cases is a series of new bridges belonging to a high speed train network in Extremadura, Spain. The demo case is aimed at establishing sensor-based and image-based requirements, procedures and examples for the generation of realistic virtual replica of the physical bridges. The twins are deemed to as living assets that can be updated during operation. The paper depicts actions and deployments undertaken during the routine static load tests. The efforts related to sensoring, simulation, modelling, assessment and validation can be wrapped up systematically for further use during regular operation of the asset. All authors acknowledge the funding of Ashvin, “Assistants for Healthy, Safe, and Productive Virtual Construction Design, Operation & Maintenance using a Digital Twin” a H2020 project under agreement 958161. Objectius de Desenvolupament Sostenible::9 - Indústria, Innovació i Infraestructura
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Adolescent friendships predict later resilient functioning across psychosocial domains in a healthy community cohort
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van Harmelen, A.-L., Kievit, R. A., Ioannidis, K., Neufeld, S., Jones, P. B., Bullmore, E., Dolan, R., Fonagy, P., and Goodyer, I.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Digital Hazards for Feeding and Eating - meta-analysis and discussion of putative mechanisms
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Ioannidis, K., primary
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Associations between COVID-19 pandemic impact, dimensions of behavior and eating disorders: a longitudinal UK-based study
- Author
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Ioannidis, K., primary
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Population characteristics of Juniperus drupacea (Cupressaceae) at the westernmost marginal area of its world distribution (Mt. Parnon, Greece)
- Author
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Daskalakou, E.N. Oikonomidis, S. Boutsios, S. Ioannidis, K. Thanos, C.A. and Daskalakou, E.N. Oikonomidis, S. Boutsios, S. Ioannidis, K. Thanos, C.A.
- Abstract
Juniperus drupacea Labill. is a relict, dioecious tree/shrub found in Turkey, Syria, Lebanon and Israel, while in Europe it is native only in Greece (on Mt. Parnon and in a restricted area of Mt. Taygetos). According to the IUCN Red List criteria, J. drupacea has been assessed as endangered (EN) for Europe, with major threats being grazing of saplings, overexploitation of its wood and climate change. For the first time to our knowledge, the structure of the diverse stands of J. drupacea across its entire population range on Mt. Parnon is being studied. Thirteen monitoring plots (20 × 25 m) have been selected and established to cover fully both the species’ geographic distribution on Mt. Parnon as well as the heterogeneity of its habitats. The morphometric traits (gender, canopy height, canopy base height, diameter at breast height and number of trunks) for each individual within the plots were recorded during the monitoring periods of 2020 and 2021. The Female / Male individual ratios, in both the northern and the southern area of the species’ range deviate significantly from the expected ratio 1:1 of the evolutionary stable strategy, it should be noted that from the 729 individuals recorded 254 were juveniles. Canopy height may reach 11.5 m with a DBH up to 132 cm whereas individuals are usually multi-trunked (1-9 trunks were recorded). The average tree density was 1121.5 ± 139.8 individuals per hectare for the entire mountainous population range. © 2022 Foundation Pro Herbario Mediterraneo. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2022
20. Cortical dopamine reduces the impact of motivational biases governing automated behaviour
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Scholz, V., Hook, R.W., Kandroodi, M.R., Algermissen, J., Ioannidis, K., Christmas, D., Valle, S., Robbins, T.W., Grant, J.E., Chamberlain, S.R., Ouden, H.E.M. den, Scholz, V., Hook, R.W., Kandroodi, M.R., Algermissen, J., Ioannidis, K., Christmas, D., Valle, S., Robbins, T.W., Grant, J.E., Chamberlain, S.R., and Ouden, H.E.M. den
- Abstract
08 maart 2022, Contains fulltext : 247514.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access), Motivations shape our behaviour: the promise of reward invigorates, while in the face of punishment, we hold back. Abnormalities of motivational processing are implicated in clinical disorders characterised by excessive habits and loss of top-down control, notably substance and behavioural addictions. Striatal and frontal dopamine have been hypothesised to play complementary roles in the respective generation and control of these motivational biases. However, while dopaminergic interventions have indeed been found to modulate motivational biases, these previous pharmacological studies used regionally non-selective pharmacological agents. Here, we tested the hypothesis that frontal dopamine controls the balance between Pavlovian, bias-driven automated responding and instrumentally learned action values. Specifically, we examined whether selective enhancement of cortical dopamine either (i) enables adaptive suppression of Pavlovian control when biases are maladaptive; or (ii) non-specifically modulates the degree of bias-driven automated responding. Healthy individuals (n = 35) received the catechol-o-methyltransferase (COMT) inhibitor tolcapone in a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled cross-over design, and completed a motivational Go NoGo task known to elicit motivational biases. In support of hypothesis (ii), tolcapone globally decreased motivational bias. Specifically, tolcapone improved performance on trials where the bias was unhelpful, but impaired performance in bias-congruent conditions. These results indicate a non-selective role for cortical dopamine in the regulation of motivational processes underpinning top-down control over automated behaviour. The findings have direct relevance to understanding neurobiological mechanisms underpinning addiction and obsessive-compulsive disorders, as well as highlighting a potential trans-diagnostic novel mechanism to address such symptoms.
- Published
- 2022
21. Gambling disorder in the UK: key research priorities and the urgent need for independent research funding
- Author
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Bowden-Jones, H, Hook, RW, Grant, JE, Ioannidis, K, Corazza, O, Fineberg, NA, Singer, BF, Roberts, A, Bethlehem, R, Dymond, S, Romero-Garcia, R, Robbins, TW, Cortese, S, Thomas, SA, Sahakian, BJ, Dowling, NA, Chamberlain, SR, Bowden-Jones, H, Hook, RW, Grant, JE, Ioannidis, K, Corazza, O, Fineberg, NA, Singer, BF, Roberts, A, Bethlehem, R, Dymond, S, Romero-Garcia, R, Robbins, TW, Cortese, S, Thomas, SA, Sahakian, BJ, Dowling, NA, and Chamberlain, SR
- Abstract
Gambling in the modern era is pervasive owing to the variety of gambling opportunities available, including those that use technology (eg, online applications on smartphones). Although many people gamble recreationally without undue negative effects, a sizeable subset of individuals develop disordered gambling, which is associated with marked functional impairment including other mental health problems, relationship problems, bankruptcy, suicidality, and criminality. The National UK Research Network for Behavioural Addictions (NUK-BA) was established to promote understanding of, research into, and treatments for behavioural addictions including gambling disorder, which is the only formally recognised behavioural addiction. In this Health Policy paper, we outline the status of research and treatment for disordered gambling in the UK (including funding issues) and key research that should be conducted to establish the magnitude of the problem, vulnerability and resilience factors, the underlying neurobiology, long-term consequences, and treatment opportunities. In particular, we emphasise the need to: (1) conduct independent longitudinal research into the prevalence of disordered gambling (including gambling disorder and at-risk gambling), and gambling harms, including in vulnerable and minoritised groups; (2) select and refine the most suitable pragmatic measurement tools; (3) identify predictors (eg, vulnerability and resilience markers) of disordered gambling in people who gamble recreationally, including in vulnerable and minoritised groups; (4) conduct randomised controlled trials on psychological interventions and pharmacotherapy for gambling disorder; (5) improve understanding of the neurobiological basis of gambling disorder, including impulsivity and compulsivity, genetics, and biomarkers; and (6) develop clinical guidelines based on the best contemporary research evidence to guide effective clinical interventions. We also highlight the need to consider what
- Published
- 2022
22. A cross-national validation of the internet severity and activities addiction questionnaire
- Author
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Omrawo, C., Ioannidis, K., Grant, J., Lutz, N., Tiego, J., Chamberlain, S.R., Stein, D., and Lochner, C.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Cellular ants: A method to create collision free trajectories for a cooperative robot team
- Author
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Ioannidis, K., Sirakoulis, G.Ch., and Andreadis, I.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Schwangerschaft / Sektio
- Author
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Wyss, P., Biedermann, K., Häberlein, F., Besek, S., Eberhard, J., Litschgi, M., Eberhard, M., Carosso, C., Braschler, C., Koller, A., Pavic, N., Redlich, M., Ohnacker, H., Zimmermann, R., Huch, A., Ioannidis, K., Steiner, R. A., Wight, E., Haller, U., Dietz, Th. U., Hänggi, W., Birkhäuser, M., Gyr, Th., Dreher, E., Steiner, A., Spichtig, S., Huber, S., Schumacher, A., Locher, S., Lüscher, K. P., Hebisch, G., Kirkinen, P., Haldenmann, R., Huch, R., Breymann, Ch., Richter, Ch., Suter, T., Lauper, U., Probst, W., Hess, Th., Benz, J., Saurenmann, E., Rageth, J. C., Riedler, G. F., and Boöni, R.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Endoskopie/ Gynäkologie
- Author
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Spörri, St., Frenz, M., Altermatt, H. J., Bratschi, H. U., Romano, V., Forrer, M., Weber, H. P., Hagmann, P. D., Jung, J., Lang, P. F., Spira, J.-C., Spira, J. C., Lang, P., Gyr, Th., Dreher, E., Mathez-Loic, F., Steiner, R. A., Jemec, M., Haller, U., Fehr, M., Fink, D., Ioannidis, K., Wight, E., Schär, G., Sievi, J., Müller, R., Menell, P., Braschler, C., Carosso, C., Eberhard, M., and Litschgi, M.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. A new definition of the term 'high-phenolic olive oil' based on large scale statistical data of greek olive oils analyzed by qnmr
- Author
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Diamantakos, P. Ioannidis, K. Papanikolaou, C. Tsolakou, A. Rigakou, A. Melliou, E. Magiatis, P.
- Abstract
In the last few years, a new term, “High-phenolic olive oil”, has appeared in scientific literature and in the market. However, there is no available definition of that term regarding the concentration limits of the phenolic ingredients of olive oil. For this purpose, we performed a large-scale screening and statistical evaluation of 5764 olive oil samples from Greece coming from >30 varieties for an eleven-year period with precisely measured phenolic content by qNMR. Although there is a large variation among the different cultivars, the mean concentration of total phenolic content was 483 mg/kg. The maximum concentration recorded in Greece reached 4003 mg/kg. We also observed a statistically significant correlation of the phenolic content with the harvest period and we also identified varieties affording olive oils with higher phenolic content. In addition, we performed a study of phenolic content loss during usual storage and we found an average loss of 46% in 12 months. We propose that the term high-phenolic should be used for olive oils with phenolic content > 500 mg/kg that will be able to retain the health claim limit (250 mg/kg) for at least 12 months after bottling. The term exceptionally high phenolic olive oil should be used for olive oil with phenolic content > 1200 mg/kg (top 5%). © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
- Published
- 2021
27. Correction to: The complex neurobiology of resilient functioning after childhood maltreatment (vol 18, 32, 2020)
- Author
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Ioannidis, K., Askelund, A.D., Kievit, R.A., and Harmelen, A. van
- Published
- 2020
28. ITI-CERTH participation in TRECVID 2019
- Author
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Gkountakos, K., Ioannidis, K., Stefanos Vrochidis, and Kompatsiaris, I.
- Abstract
In this work, an overview of the submitted run to TRECVID 2019 by ITI-CERTH is presented and more specifically, for the task of Activities in Extended Video (ActEV). Towards this objective, we deployed a state-of-the-art architecture for the human action recognition problem and with the application of an encoder-decoder model, we extract a threshold for every activity in order for the framework not only to recognize activities but also to identify them in extended videos.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Body dysmorphic disorder: a treatment synthesis and consensus on behalf of the International College of Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders and the Obsessive Compulsive and Related Disorders Network of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology
- Author
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Castle, D, Beilharz, F, Phillips, KA, Brakoulias, V, Drummond, LM, Hollander, E, Ioannidis, K, Pallanti, S, Chamberlain, SR, Rossell, SL, Veale, D, Wilhelm, S, Van Ameringen, M, Dell'Osso, B, Menchon, JM, Fineberg, NA, Castle, D, Beilharz, F, Phillips, KA, Brakoulias, V, Drummond, LM, Hollander, E, Ioannidis, K, Pallanti, S, Chamberlain, SR, Rossell, SL, Veale, D, Wilhelm, S, Van Ameringen, M, Dell'Osso, B, Menchon, JM, and Fineberg, NA
- Abstract
Body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) is characterized by a preoccupation with a perceived appearance flaw or flaws that are not observable to others. BDD is associated with distress and impairment of functioning. Psychiatric comorbidities, including depression, social anxiety, and obsessive-compulsive disorder are common and impact treatment. Treatment should encompass psychoeducation, particularly addressing the dangers associated with cosmetic procedures, and may require high doses of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors* (SSRI*) and protracted periods to establish full benefit. If there is an inadequate response to SSRIs, various adjunctive medications can be employed including atypical antipsychotics*, anxiolytics*, and the anticonvulsant levetiracetam*. However, large-scale randomized controlled trials are lacking and BDD is not an approved indication for these medications. Oxytocin* may have a potential role in treating BDD, but this requires further exploration. Cognitive-behavioural therapy has good evidence for efficacy for BDD, and on-line and telephone-assisted forms of therapy are showing promise. CBT for BDD should be customized to address such issues as mirror use, perturbations of gaze, and misinterpretation of others' emotions, as well as overvalued ideas about how others view the individual.
- Published
- 2021
30. Exercise addiction, body dysmorphic disorder, and use of enhancement drugs during the COVID-19 pandemic confinement period: A transcultural study
- Author
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Dores, A.R., primary, Carvalho, I., additional, Burkauskas, J., additional, Beretta, V., additional, Ioannidis, K., additional, Simonato, P., additional, Gomez, A., additional, Demetrovics, Z., additional, Fujiwara, H., additional, Chamberlain, S., additional, Fineberg, N., additional, Barbosa, F., additional, and Corazza, O., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Characterization of a lef8 knock-out BmNPV: new data for an old gene: SW06.W33–25
- Author
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Ioannidis, K., Swevers, L., and Iatrou, K.
- Published
- 2013
32. Characterization of a lef8 knock-out BmNPV: new data for an old gene: SW06.W32–10
- Author
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Ioannidis, K., Swevers, L., and Iatrou, K.
- Published
- 2013
33. Spectrophotometric analysis of coronal discolouration induced by grey and white MTA
- Author
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Ioannidis, K., Mistakidis, I., Beltes, P., and Karagiannis, V.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. ELASTIC EXSANGUINATION RING AS AN ALTERNATIVE TO THE PNEUMATIC CUFF IN ORTHOPAEDIC ONCOLOGY: 081
- Author
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Mourikis, A., Ioannidis, K., Vatikiotis, G., Flevarakis, G. A., Economopoulos, D., and Kormas, T. P.
- Published
- 2011
35. A laboratory study to assess the formation of effluent volatile compounds and disinfection by‐products during chemomechanical preparation of infected root canals and application of activated carbon for their removal
- Author
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Ioannidis, K., primary, Batty, C., additional, Turner, C., additional, Smith, D., additional, Mannocci, F., additional, and Deb, S., additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Biotechnological Approaches on Two High CBD and CBG Cannabis sativa L. (Cannabaceae) Varieties: In Vitro Regeneration and Phytochemical Consistency Evaluation of Micropropagated Plants Using Quantitative 1H-NMR
- Author
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Ioannidis, K. Dadiotis, E. Mitsis, V. Melliou, E. Magiatis, P.
- Abstract
High cannabidiol (CBD) and cannabigerol (CBG) varieties of Cannabis sativa L., a species with medicinal properties, were regenerated in vitro. Explants of nodal segments including healthy axillary bud, after sterilization, were placed in Murashige-Skoog (MS) culture medium. The shoots formed after 30 days were subcultured in full- or half-strength MS medium supplemented with several concentrations of 6-benzyl-amino-purine (BA) or thidiazuron (TDZ). The highest average number and length of shoots was achieved when both full and half-strength MS media were supplemented with 4.0 μM BA. The presence of 4.0 μM TDZ showed also comparable results. BA and TDZ at concentrations of 4.0, 8.0 μM and 2.0, 4.0 μM respectively, displayed the maximum shooting frequency. The new shoots were transferred on the same media and were either self-rooted or after being enhanced with different concentrations of indole-3-butyric acid (IBA) or α-naphthalene acetic acid (NAA). Presence of 2.0 or 4.0 μM IBA or 4.0 μM NAA resulted to the optimum rooting rates. The maximum average number and length of roots per shoot was observed when the culture media was supplemented with 4.0 μM IBA or NAA. Approximately 92% of the plantlets were successfully established and acclimatized in field. The consistency of the chemical profile of the acclimatized in vitro propagated clones was assessed using quantitative 1H-NMR high throughput screening. In each variety, analysis of the micropropagated plant in comparison with the mother plant showed no statistically significant differences (p ≤ 0.05) in CBD+ cannabidiolic acid (CBDA) and CBG+ cannabigerolic acid (CBGA) content respectively, thus indicating stability of their chemical profile.
- Published
- 2020
37. Do we need to adopt antifungal stewardship programmes?
- Author
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Ioannidis, K. Papachristos, A. Skarlatinis, I. Kiospe, F. Sotiriou, S. Papadogeorgaki, E. Plakias, G. Karalis, V.D. Markantonis, S.L.
- Abstract
Background Although antimicrobial stewardship programmes are one of the highest priorities in healthcare systems and many articles have been published, few refer to the implementation of antifungal stewardship and highlight specific points on which efforts should be focused. Objective To assess the percentage of patients with confirmed candidaemia in whom de-escalation was conducted, and the economic impact of step-down or step-up antifungal therapy. Additionally, we attempted to estimate the potential increase in drug minimum inhibitory concentrations or to detect resistant strains of Candida species. Methods We selected, retrospectively, patients who had received systemic antifungal therapy between 2011 and 2016 for documented candidaemia. Statistical analysis and diagrams were used to assess the results. Results Of 157 patients with confirmed candidaemia, 58 received azoles, 74 echinocandinsand 18 liposomal amphotericin B for empirical therapy. 51 patients were eligible to step-down to fluconazole but only 23 patients did so. Furthermore, in nine patients unjustified step-up from fluconazole to echinocandins or liposomal amphotericin B was carried out. The additional cost incurred bythe healthcare system due to high prices of echinocandins and liposomal amphotericin B in comparison with fluconazole was€211 837. Interestingly, it was found that one strain of C. albicans and two strains of C. glabrata were resistant to echinocandins. Conclusion The presence of a multidisciplinary team, including an infection control specialist and a clinical pharmacist, would limit the prescription of advanced antifungal agents as empirical therapy. Moreover, this team would control the de-escalation process-where applicable-leading to a reduction in costs and, probably, a decrease in the emergence of resistant Candida species. These facts contribute to the broader discussion on the adoption of antifungal stewardship programmes. © European Association of Hospital Pharmacists (unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2020. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.
- Published
- 2020
38. The complex neurobiology of resilient functioning after childhood maltreatment
- Author
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Ioannidis, K., Askelund, A.D., Kievit, R., Harmelen, A.L. van, Ioannidis, K., Askelund, A.D., Kievit, R., and Harmelen, A.L. van
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 229213.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access), BACKGROUND: Childhood maltreatment has been associated with significant impairment in social, emotional and behavioural functioning later in life. Nevertheless, some individuals who have experienced childhood maltreatment function better than expected given their circumstances. MAIN BODY: Here, we provide an integrated understanding of the complex, interrelated mechanisms that facilitate such individual resilient functioning after childhood maltreatment. We aim to show that resilient functioning is not facilitated by any single 'resilience biomarker'. Rather, resilient functioning after childhood maltreatment is a product of complex processes and influences across multiple levels, ranging from 'bottom-up' polygenetic influences, to 'top-down' supportive social influences. We highlight the complex nature of resilient functioning and suggest how future studies could embrace a complexity theory approach and investigate multiple levels of biological organisation and their temporal dynamics in a longitudinal or prospective manner. This would involve using methods and tools that allow the characterisation of resilient functioning trajectories, attractor states and multidimensional/multilevel assessments of functioning. Such an approach necessitates large, longitudinal studies on the neurobiological mechanisms of resilient functioning after childhood maltreatment that cut across and integrate multiple levels of explanation (i.e. genetics, endocrine and immune systems, brain structure and function, cognition and environmental factors) and their temporal interconnections. CONCLUSION: We conclude that a turn towards complexity is likely to foster collaboration and integration across fields. It is a promising avenue which may guide future studies aimed to promote resilience in those who have experienced childhood maltreatment.
- Published
- 2020
39. Clinical advances in obsessive-compulsive disorder: a position statement by the International College of Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders
- Author
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Fineberg, NA, Hollander, E, Pallanti, S, Walitza, S, Grunblatt, E, Dell'Osso, BM, Albert, U, Geller, DA, Brakoulias, V, Janardhan Reddy, YC, Arumugham, SS, Shavitt, RG, Drummond, L, Grancini, B, De Carlo, V, Cinosi, E, Chamberlain, SR, Ioannidis, K, Rodriguez, CI, Garg, K, Castle, D, Van Ameringen, M, Stein, DJ, Carmi, L, Zohar, J, Menchon, JM, Fineberg, NA, Hollander, E, Pallanti, S, Walitza, S, Grunblatt, E, Dell'Osso, BM, Albert, U, Geller, DA, Brakoulias, V, Janardhan Reddy, YC, Arumugham, SS, Shavitt, RG, Drummond, L, Grancini, B, De Carlo, V, Cinosi, E, Chamberlain, SR, Ioannidis, K, Rodriguez, CI, Garg, K, Castle, D, Van Ameringen, M, Stein, DJ, Carmi, L, Zohar, J, and Menchon, JM
- Abstract
In this position statement, developed by The International College of Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders, a group of international experts responds to recent developments in the evidence-based management of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). The article presents those selected therapeutic advances judged to be of utmost relevance to the treatment of OCD, based on new and emerging evidence from clinical and translational science. Areas covered include refinement in the methods of clinical assessment, the importance of early intervention based on new staging models and the need to provide sustained well-being involving effective relapse prevention. The relative benefits of psychological, pharmacological and somatic treatments are reviewed and novel treatment strategies for difficult to treat OCD, including neurostimulation, as well as new areas for research such as problematic internet use, novel digital interventions, immunological therapies, pharmacogenetics and novel forms of psychotherapy are discussed.
- Published
- 2020
40. Population characteristics of Juniperus drupacea (Cupressaceae) at the westernmost marginal area of its world distribution (Mt. Parnon, Greece).
- Author
-
Daskalakou, E. N., Oikonomidis, S., Boutsios, S., Ioannidis, K., and Thanos, C. A.
- Subjects
CUPRESSACEAE ,JUNIPERS ,FOREST density ,CLIMATE change ,SPECIES ,HABITATS - Abstract
Juniperus drupacea Labill. is a relict, dioecious tree/shrub found in Turkey, Syria, Lebanon and Israel, while in Europe it is native only in Greece (on Mt. Parnon and in a restricted area of Mt. Taygetos). According to the IUCN Red List criteria, J. drupacea has been assessed as endangered (EN) for Europe, with major threats being grazing of saplings, overexploitation of its wood and climate change. For the first time to our knowledge, the structure of the diverse stands of J. drupacea across its entire population range on Mt. Parnon is being studied. Thirteen monitoring plots (20 × 25 m) have been selected and established to cover fully both the species' geographic distribution on Mt. Parnon as well as the heterogeneity of its habitats. The morphometric traits (gender, canopy height, canopy base height, diameter at breast height and number of trunks) for each individual within the plots were recorded during the monitoring periods of 2020 and 2021. The Female / Male individual ratios, in both the northern and the southern area of the species' range deviate significantly from the expected ratio 1:1 of the evolutionary stable strategy, it should be noted that from the 729 individuals recorded 254 were juveniles. Canopy height may reach 11.5 m with a DBH up to 132 cm whereas individuals are usually multi-trunked (1-9 trunks were recorded). The average tree density was 1121.5 ± 139.8 individuals per hectare for the entire mountainous population range. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The impact of selected climatic factors on the growth of Greek fir on Mount Giona in mainland Greece based on tree ring analysis.
- Author
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Koulelis, P. P., Fassouli, V. P., Petrakis, P. V., Ioannidis, K. D., and Alexandris, S.
- Subjects
DENDROCHRONOLOGY ,TREE-rings ,DROUGHTS ,TREE growth ,ATMOSPHERIC temperature ,CLIMATE extremes ,FIR - Abstract
Copyright of Austrian Journal of Forest Science / Centralblatt für das Gesamte Forstwesen is the property of Osterreichischer Agrarverlag Druck und Verlags Gesellschaft m.b.H. Nfg. KG and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
42. High-Throughput 1H-Nuclear Magnetic Resonance-Based Screening for the Identification and Quantification of Heartwood Diterpenic Acids in Four Black Pine (Pinus nigra Arn.) Marginal Provenances in Greece
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Ioannidis, K. Melliou, E. Magiatis, P.
- Abstract
A high-throughput quantitative Nuclear Magnetic Resonance 1H-NMR method was developed and applied to screen the quantity of the diterpenic resin acids in the heartwood of black pine, due to the renewed scientific interest in their medicinal properties and use in various diseases treatment. The 260 samples were taken from Pinus nigra clones, selected from four provenances of the Peloponnese (Greece), participating in a 35-year-old clonal seed orchard. Total resin acids per dry heartwood weight (dhw) varied greatly, ranging from 30.05 to 424.70 mg/gdhw (average 219.98 mg/gdhw). Abietic was the predominant acid (76.77 mg/gdhw), followed by palustric acid (47.94 mg/gdhw), neoabietic acid (39.34 mg/gdhw), and pimaric acid (22.54 mg/gdhw). Dehydroabietic acid was at moderate levels (11.69 mg/gdhw), while levopimaric, isopimaric, and sandaracopimaric acids were in lower concentrations. The resin acid fraction accounted for 72.33% of the total acetone extractives. Stilbenes were presented in significant quantities (19.70%). The resin acid content was composed mainly of the abietane type resin acids (83.56%). Peloponnesian Pinus nigra heartwood was found to be the richest source of resin acids identified to date and is considered the best natural source for the production of such bioactive extracts. The results indicate a high potential for effective selection and advanced breeding of pharmaceutical and high economic value bioactive substances from Pinus nigra clones. © 2019 by the authors.
- Published
- 2019
43. Masting and regeneration dynamics of Abies cephalonica, the Greek endemic silver fir
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Daskalakou, E.N. Koutsovoulou, K. Ioannidis, K. Koulelis, P.P. Ganatsas, P. Thanos, C.A.
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Masting and regeneration dynamics were investigated in a long-term perspective using Abies cephalonica as a study tree species. Extensive fieldwork was implemented in Parnitha National Park, Greece, following a large-scale wildfire. Annual cone production was monitored for a 5-year period in 130 tagged trees, in 13 plots with 10 individuals each, established both within the unburned part of the forest and in surviving fragments of the burned area. In the most recent masting year, a high percentage (88%) of cone-bearing trees was recorded, along with a sizeable, average cone production (40.8 cones per tree). In the intermediate, non-masting years, the corresponding values ranged from 2% to 55% and 0.08 to 5.9 cones per tree, respectively. The reproduction process is affected by both tree density and regional climatic conditions, in particular temperature during spring of the maturation year and precipitation during spring and summer of the previous year. For the first time according to our knowledge, natural regeneration was recorded for a 4-year period, in 13 permanent transects within the monitoring plots, in relation with a masting event and the additional implications of a preceding wildfire. Highest mean density of seedlings and saplings (11.4 per m2) was observed during the first spring after masting. In the non-masting years, the corresponding value ranged from 2.1 to 2.9 per m2. Seedling survival during their first summer was considerable (30-76%) but stabilized afterwards (1-3 years) at a lower level (10-20%). The particular post-masting seedling flush was followed by an extremely high mortality rate (88.6%) and cannot represent a major recruitment event. © 2019 Cambridge University Press.
- Published
- 2019
44. The association between pubertal status and depressive symptoms and diagnoses in adolescent females: a population-based cohort study
- Author
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Lewis, G., Ioannidis, K., Harmelen, A. van, Neufeld, S., Stochl, J., Jones, P.B., and Goodyer, I.
- Abstract
BackgroundThere is an association between puberty and depression, but many things remain poorly understood. When assessing puberty in females, most studies combine indicators of breast and pubic hair development which are controlled by different hormonal pathways. The contributions of pubertal timing (age at onset) and pubertal status (stage of development, irrespective of timing) are also poorly understood. We tested the hypothesis that stage of breast development in female adolescents, controlled largely by increased estradiol, would be more strongly associated with depression than pubic hair development which occurs in both males and females, and is controlled by adrenal androgens. We investigated whether this association was independent of pubertal timing.MethodsROOTS is an ongoing cohort of 1,238 adolescents (54% female) recruited in Cambridgeshire (UK) at age 14.5, and followed-up at ages 16 and 17.5. Depression was assessed using the Mood and Feelings Questionnaire (MFQ) and clinical interview. Breast and pubic hair development were assessed at 14.5, using Tanner rating scales.ResultsFor each increase in Tanner breast stage at 14.5, depressive symptoms increased by 1.4 MFQ points (95% CI 0.6 to 2.3), irrespective of age at onset. Pubic hair status was only associated with depressive symptoms before adjustment for breast status, and was not associated with depression in males. The same pattern was observed longitudinally, and for depression diagnoses.LimitationsWe did not directly measure hormone levels, our findings are observational, and the study had a relatively low response rate.ConclusionsFemales at more advanced stages of breast development are at increased risk of depression, even if their age at pubertal onset is not early. Alongside social and psychological factors, hormones controlling breast but not pubic hair development may contribute to increased incidence of female depression during puberty.
- Published
- 2018
45. The impact of comorbid impulsive/compulsive disorders on problematic internet use
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Chamberlain, S, Ioannidis, K, Grant, Jon, Chamberlain, Samuel [0000-0001-7014-8121], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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cognition ,Adult ,Internet ,Adolescent ,Decision Making ,Age Factors ,impulsivity ,Comorbidity ,Tobacco Use Disorder ,Behavior, Addictive ,Young Adult ,Sex Factors ,compulsivity ,Impulsive Behavior ,Compulsive Behavior ,Quality of Life ,Educational Status ,Humans ,Alcohol-Related Disorders - Abstract
Background and Aims: Problematic Internet Use (PIU) is commonplace but is not yet recognized as a formal mental disorder. Excessive Internet use could result from other conditions such as gambling disorder. The aim of the study was to assess the impact of impulsive-compulsive comorbidities on the presentation of PIU, defined using Young’s Diagnostic Questionnaire. Methods: 123 adults aged 18-29 years were recruited using media advertisements, and attended the research center for a detailed psychiatric assessment, including interviews, completion of questionnaires and neuropsychological testing. Participants were classified into three groups: PIU with no comorbid impulsive/compulsive disorders (n=18), PIU with one or more comorbid impulsive/compulsive disorders (n=37), and healthy controls (n=67). Differences between the three groups were characterized in terms of demographic, clinical, and cognitive variables. Effect sizes for overall effects of group were also reported. Results: The three groups did not differ significantly on age, gender, levels of education, nicotine consumption, or alcohol use (small effect sizes). Quality of life was significantly impaired in PIU irrespective of whether or not individuals had comorbid impulsive/compulsive disorders (large effect size). However, impaired response inhibition and decision-making were only identified in PIU with impulsive/compulsive comorbidities (medium effect sizes).
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- 2018
46. Real-Time Active SLAM and Obstacle Avoidance for an Autonomous Robot Based on Stereo Vision
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Kalogeiton, V. S., primary, Ioannidis, K., additional, Sirakoulis, G. Ch., additional, and Kosmatopoulos, E. B., additional
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- 2019
- Full Text
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47. A laboratory study to assess the formation of effluent volatile compounds and disinfection by‐products during chemomechanical preparation of infected root canals and application of activated carbon for their removal.
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Ioannidis, K., Batty, C., Turner, C., Smith, D., Mannocci, F., and Deb, S.
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VOLATILE organic compounds , *WASTE products , *DISINFECTION & disinfectants , *ROOT canal treatment , *ACTIVATED carbon , *ORAL irrigators - Abstract
Aim: To assess in a laboratory setting using extracted teeth the formation of volatile compounds (VOCs) and disinfection by‐products (DBPs) in effluent aliquots, during chemomechanical preparation of artificially infected root canal specimens, and determine the role of silver‐impregnated activated carbon (Ag‐AC) in their removal. Methodology: Single‐rooted human teeth were decoronated to obtain 15 mm‐long root specimens and a nutrient‐stressed multispecies biofilm was grown in the root canals. Specimens were randomly assigned into three groups [Group 1; instrumentation with rotary files and irrigation with sterile saline, Groups 2 and 3; instrumentation with rotary files and irrigation with 2.5% NaOCl and 17% EDTA]. A portable medical suction device was used to collect the effluent aliquots during root canal irrigation. In Groups 1 and 2, the reaction products of the collected effluents were analysed by selected ion flow tube mass spectrometry (SIFT‐MS). The effluents from Group 3 were treated with Ag‐AC prior to SIFT‐MS analysis, to assess the removal capacity of Ag‐AC against the reaction products. The synthesis of Ag‐AC was characterized with scanning electron microscopy/energy‐dispersive X‐ray spectroscopy (SEM/EDS). Two‐way analysis of variance (anova) with post hoc Tukey tests was used for data analysis and determination of a significant difference (P < 0.05). Results: In Group 1, effluent VOCs and DBPs were detectable at very low levels. In Group 2, the collected effluent aliquots released high concentrations of methanol, propanol, ammonia, chloroform and formaldehyde, which were significantly greater compared to Group 1 (P < 0.001). SEM/EDS analysis confirmed impregnation of Ag within the AC matrix. The treatment of effluent aliquots with Ag‐AC (Group 3) resulted in a significant reduction in concentrations of acetone, acetic acid, propanol, acetaldehyde, acetonitrile and chloroform, compared to Group 2 (P < 0.001). The concentration levels of ethanol, methanol, ammonia and formaldehyde remained unaffected (P > 0.05). Conclusions: In this laboratory setting using extracted human teeth, the chemomechanical preparation of artificially infected root canals resulted in the formation of toxic VOCs and DBPs as effluent suspensions. Their release during aspiration with dental suction indicates that potential environmental hazards should be investigated. The use of silver‐impregnated activated carbon had potential for the point‐of‐use treatment of post‐irrigation effluent aliquots. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Ethnic Minority Status, Age-at-Immigration and Psychosis Risk in Rural Environments: Evidence From the SEPEA Study
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Kirkbride, JB, Hameed, Y, Ioannidis, K, Ankireddypalli, G, Crane, CM, Nasir, M, Kabacs, N, Metastasio, A, Jenkins, O, Espandian, A, Spyridi, S, Ralevic, D, Siddabattuni, S, Walden, B, Adeoye, A, Perez, J, Jones, PB, Jones, Peter [0000-0002-0387-880X], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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early intervention ,incidence ,ethnicity ,social determinants ,epidemiology ,urbanicity ,migration - Abstract
$\textbf{Objective}$: Several ethnic minority groups experience elevated rates of first-episode psychosis (FEP), but most studies have been conducted in urban settings. We investigated whether incidence varied by ethnicity, generation status, and age-at-immigration in a diverse, mixed rural, and urban setting. $\textbf{Method}$: We identified 687 people, 16-35 years, with an ICD-10 diagnosis of FEP, presenting to Early Intervention Psychosis services in the East of England over 2 million person-years. We used multilevel Poisson regression to examine incidence variation by ethnicity, rural-urban setting, generation status, and age-at-immigration, adjusting for several confounders including age, sex, socioeconomic status, population density, and deprivation. $\textbf{Results}$: People of black African (incidence rate ratio: 4.06; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 2.63-6.25), black Caribbean (4.63; 95% CI: 2.38-8.98) and Pakistani (2.31; 95% CI: 1.35-3.94) origins were at greatest FEP risk relative to the white British population, after multivariable adjustment. Non-British white migrants were not at increased FEP risk (1.00; 95% CI: 0.77-1.32). These patterns were independently present in rural and urban settings. For first-generation migrants, migration during childhood conferred greatest risk of psychotic disorders (2.20; 95% CI: 1.33-3.62). $\textbf{Conclusions}$: Elevated psychosis risk in several visible minority groups could not be explained by differences in postmigratory socioeconomic disadvantage. These patterns were observed across rural and urban areas of our catchment, suggesting that elevated psychosis risk for some ethnic minority groups is not a result of selection processes influencing rural-urban living. Timing of exposure to migration during childhood, an important social and neurodevelopmental window, may also elevate risk.
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- 2017
49. Adolescent friendships predict later resilient functioning across psychosocial domains in a healthy community cohort
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van Harmelen, A-L, Kievit, RA, Ioannidis, K, Neufeld, S, Jones, PB, Bullmore, E, Dolan, R, The NSPN Consortium, Fonagy, P, Goodyer, I, van Harmelen, Anne-Laura [0000-0003-1108-2921], Kievit, Rogier [0000-0003-0700-4568], Neufeld, Sharon [0000-0001-5470-3770], Jones, Peter [0000-0002-0387-880X], Bullmore, Edward [0000-0002-8955-8283], Goodyer, Ian [0000-0001-9183-0373], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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adolescence ,friendships ,resilience ,humanities ,child adversity ,mental health - Abstract
$\textbf{BACKGROUND}$: Adolescence is a key time period for the emergence of psychosocial and mental health difficulties. To promote adolescent adaptive ('resilient') psychosocial functioning (PSF), appropriate conceptualisation and quantification of such functioning and its predictors is a crucial first step. Here, we quantify resilient functioning as the degree to which an individual functions better or worse than expected given their self-reported childhood family experiences, and relate this to adolescent family and friendship support. $\textbf{METHOD}$: We used Principal Component and regression analyses to investigate the relationship between childhood family experiences and PSF (psychiatric symptomatology, personality traits and mental wellbeing) in healthy adolescents (the Neuroscience in Psychiatry Network; $\textit{N}$ = 2389; ages 14-24). Residuals from the relation between childhood family experiences and PSF reflect resilient functioning; the degree to which an individual is functioning better, or worse, than expected given their childhood family experiences. Next, we relate family and friendship support with resilient functioning both cross-sectionally and 1 year later. $\textbf{RESULTS}$: Friendship and family support were positive predictors of immediate resilient PSF, with friendship support being the strongest predictor. However, whereas friendship support was a significant positive predictor of $\textit{later}$ resilient functioning, $\textit{family}$ support had a $\textit{negative}$ relationship with later resilient PSF. $\textbf{CONCLUSIONS}$: We show that friendship support, but not family support, is an important positive predictor of both immediate and later resilient PSF in adolescence and early adulthood. Interventions that promote the skills needed to acquire and sustain adolescent friendships may be crucial in increasing adolescent resilient PSF.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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50. 4CPS-017 Misuse of novel oral anticoagulants in hospital settings
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Ioannidis, K, primary, Scarlatinis, I, additional, Papachristos, A, additional, and Madia, X, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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