(Press-News.org) Misokinesia, intolerance of others' fidgeting and repetitive body movements, can cause people to experience intense reactions, negative emotions and relationship strain, per qualitative study
###
Article URL: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0313169
Article Title: I struggle with your fidgeting: A qualitative study of the personal and social impacts of misokinesia
Author Countries: Canada, U.S.
Funding: We received funding from Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) for our study. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
END
Misokinesia, intolerance of others' fidgeting and repetitive body movements, can cause people to experience intense reactions, negative emotions and relationship strain, per qualitative study
2024-12-04
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Not red in tooth and claw: Teaching evolution with conflict reduction practices increases acceptance
2024-12-04
Students in biology classes accepted the theory of evolution more often when it was taught with conflict-reducing practices, including an emphasis on religious compatibility and autonomy, according to a study published December 4, 2024 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Rahmi Ourota Aini and Elizabeth Barnes from Middle Tennessee State University, U.S., and colleagues.
Evolution is of the foundation of biology, but currently half of the United States population rejects the idea of human evolution. One of the most important factors in the acceptance of evolution ...
Emoji use may depend on emotional intelligence and attachment style
2024-12-04
Higher emotional intelligence is linked to more emoji use with friends, while avoidant attachment is associated with less emoji use with friends and dating or romantic partners, according to a study published December 4, 2024, in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Dr. Simon Dubé, Research Fellow at The Kinsey Institute, Indiana University, U.S., and colleagues. This pattern of results varies across genders and relationship types, with women using emojis with friends and family more frequently than men.
Emojis are characters depicting emotions, objects, animals, and more. They can be sent ...
Study reveals mammoth as key food source for ancient Americans
2024-12-04
Scientists have uncovered the first direct evidence that ancient Americans relied primarily on mammoth and other large animals for food. Their research sheds new light on both the rapid expansion of humans throughout the Americas and the extinction of large ice age mammals.
The study, featured on the Dec. 4 cover of the journal Science Advances, used stable isotope analysis to model the diet of the mother of an infant discovered at a 13,000-year-old Clovis burial site in Montana. Before this study, prehistoric diet was inferred by ...
Male African elephants develop distinct personality traits as they age
2024-12-04
Male African elephants have distinct personality traits, but also adapt their behavior to suit the social context, according to a study publishing December 4, 2024, in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Caitlin O’Connell-Rodwell at Stanford University and Harvard University Center for the Environment, Jodie L. Berezin of Utopia Scientific, U.S., and colleagues.
Many animals show consistent individual differences in behavior, sometimes described as ‘personality’ or ‘temperament’. Elephants are highly intelligent and have rich social lives, and previous research has shown that captive ...
Mass General Brigham research leads to new insights on preventing brain injury after cardiac arrest
2024-12-04
KEY TAKEAWAYS
A team led by researchers at Mass General Brigham built the first immunology-focused biobank with samples from patients who experienced out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
Samples from the biobank provided a unique window into the immunological changes that take place after cardiac arrest.
Researchers uncovered a population of cells that may provide protection from brain injury following cardiac arrest, leading them to examine a drug that can activate these cells to improve neurological outcomes.
Despite ...
Study exposes link between genetic risk of depression and heart disease in women
2024-12-04
Women who have a high genetic risk of depression are more likely to develop heart disease, University of Queensland researchers have found.
During a study that analysed genetic and health data from more than 300,000 people, Dr Sonia Shah and Dr Clara Jiang from UQ’s Institute for Molecular Bioscience found women who had a high genetic risk of developing depression also had a high risk of developing heart disease, even in the absence of a depression diagnosis.
Dr Shah said these results exposed a difference in the risk for women compared ...
How breast cancer cells survive in bone marrow after remission
2024-12-04
A study from researchers at the University of Michigan and the University of California San Diego has shed light on a previously poorly understood aspect of breast cancer recurrence: how cancer cells survive in bone marrow despite targeted therapies.
The paper, “Breast cancers that disseminate to bone marrow acquire aggressive phenotypes through CX43-related tumor-stroma tunnels,” appears in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.
Estrogen receptor positive breast cancer is the most ...
Closing underperforming hospitals could worsen health inequality in rural areas, finds new study
2024-12-04
Closing underperforming hospitals could worsen health inequality in rural areas, finds new study
Closing underperforming hospitals may do more harm than good, particularly in rural areas -regardless of their performance status, according to new research from the University of Surrey. The study shows that while the promise of improved care quality often justifies hospital closures, they risk exacerbating health inequalities, particularly for patients who already face longer travel distances for treatment.
The study, published in Regional Science and Urban Economics, which focused on elective hip replacement ...
New tool enhances control of cellular activity
2024-12-04
A basic function of cells is that they act in response to their environments. It makes sense, then, that a goal of scientists is to control that process, making cells respond how they want to what they want.
One avenue for this ambition is cell receptors, which function like ignition slots on a cell, requiring keys – such as specific hormones, drugs, or antigens – to start up specific cellular activities. There are already synthetic receptors that give us some control over this sequence of events, most famously the chimeric antigen receptors used in CAR-T cell cancer therapy. But existing synthetic receptors are limited in the variety of keys ...
Genetic data from ‘biobanks’ may help improve prediction of effectiveness, side effects of common medications, study finds
2024-12-04
A UCLA study has outlined a new framework that researchers say would improve predictive power of genetics to determine how well a patient would respond to commonly prescribed medications as well as the severity of any side effects.
Published in the journal Cell Genomics, the study found that data from large libraries of sequenced human genomes and other biological data, known as biobanks, can provide new insights into genetic architecture of response to widely prescribed drugs.
Study first author and UCLA Bioinformatics Ph.D. candidate Michal Sadowski said the most ...