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1.
  • Armstrong, Gabrielle, et al. (author)
  • Factors associated with internalizing and externalizing symptoms in a clinical sample of youth with misophonia
  • 2023
  • In: Journal of Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders. - 2211-3649. ; 39
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Misophonia is an often chronic condition characterized by strong, unpleasant emotional reactions when exposed to specific auditory or visual triggers. While not currently defined within existing classification systems, and not clearly fitting within the framework of extant psychiatric conditions, misophonia has historically been studied most frequently within the context of obsessive-compulsive and related disorders. Internalizing and externalizing psychiatric symptoms are common in misophonia, but specific factors that confer risk for these symptoms remain unknown. The present cross-sectional study examined whether sensory sensitivity and cognitive emotion regulation facets are associated with co-occurring internalizing and externalizing symptoms in 102 youth with misophonia aged 8–17 years (Nfemales = 69). Participants completed self-report assessments of misophonia severity, sensory sensitivity, cognitive emotion regulation, and emotional-behavioral functioning. In the final model, controlling for all variables, multiple linear regression analyses revealed that sensory sensitivity and age were significant predictors of internalizing symptoms, while sensory sensitivity and the other-blame cognitive emotion regulation facet were significant predictors of externalizing symptoms. Further, findings demonstrated that the positive reappraisal cognitive emotion regulation facet moderated the effect of misophonia severity on internalizing symptoms. Results highlight a strong, consistent relation between sensory sensitivities (beyond sound sensitivity) and psychiatric symptoms in misophonic youth. Further research is necessary to determine mechanisms and clinical variables impacting internalizing and externalizing symptoms within youth with misophonia.
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2.
  • Cervin, Matti, et al. (author)
  • Efficacy and acceptability of cognitive-behavioral therapy and serotonin reuptake inhibitors for pediatric obsessive-compulsive disorder: a network meta-analysis
  • 2024
  • In: Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. - 0021-9630.
  • Research review (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • BackgroundCognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SRIs) are recommended treatments for pediatric obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), but their relative efficacy and acceptability have not been comprehensively examined. Further, it remains unclear whether the efficacy of in-person CBT is conserved when delivered in other formats, such as over telephone/webcam or as Internet-delivered CBT (ICBT).MethodsPubMed, PsycINFO, trial registries, and previous systematic reviews were searched for randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing CBT (in-person, webcam/telephone-delivered, or ICBT) or SRIs with control conditions or each other. Network meta-analyses were conducted to examine efficacy (post-treatment Children's Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale) and acceptability (treatment discontinuation). Confidence in effect estimates was evaluated with CINeMA (Confidence in Network Meta-Analysis).ResultsThirty eligible RCTs and 35 contrasts comprising 2,057 youth with OCD were identified. In-person CBT was significantly more efficacious than ICBT, waitlist, relaxation training, and pill placebo (MD range: 3.95–11.10; CINeMA estimate of confidence: moderate) but did not differ significantly from CBT delivered via webcam/telephone (MD: 0.85 [−2.51, 4.21]; moderate), SRIs (MD: 3.07 [−0.07, 6.20]; low), or the combination of in-person CBT and SRIs (MD: −1.20 [−5.29, 2.91]; low). SRIs were significantly more efficacious than pill placebo (MD: 4.59 [2.70, 6.48]; low) and waitlist (MD: 8.03 [4.24, 11.82]; moderate). No significant differences for acceptability emerged, but confidence in estimates was low.ConclusionsIn-person CBT and SRIs produce clear benefits compared to waitlist and pill placebo and should be integral parts of the clinical management of pediatric OCD, with in-person CBT overall having a stronger evidence base. The combination of in-person CBT and SRIs may be most efficacious, but few studies hinder firm conclusions. The efficacy of CBT appears conserved when delivered via webcam/telephone, while more trials evaluating ICBT are needed.
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3.
  • Cervin, Matti, et al. (author)
  • Measuring misophonia in youth: A psychometric evaluation of child and parent measures
  • 2023
  • In: Journal of Affective Disorders. - 0165-0327. ; 338, s. 180-186
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • BackgroundMisophonia is characterized by intense emotional reactions to specific sounds or visual stimuli and typically onsets during childhood. An obstacle for research and clinical practice is that no comprehensively evaluated measures for pediatric misophonia exist.MethodsIn a sample of 102 youth meeting the proposed diagnostic criteria of misophonia, we evaluated the child and parent-proxy versions of the self-reported Misophonia Assessment Questionnaire (MAQ; assessing broad aspects of misophonia) and the child version of the Amsterdam Misophonia Scale (A-MISO-S; assessing misophonia severity). Confirmatory and exploratory factor analysis were used to examine factor structures of the measures. Further, child-parent agreement on the MAQ and associations between MAQ/A-MISO-S and impairment, quality of life, and misophonia-related school interference were examined to evaluate aspects of convergent validity.ResultsFor both youth- and parent-ratings, four MAQ factors emerged: pessimism, distress, interference, and non-recognition. A-MISO-S showed a unidimensional structure, but the item ‘effort to resist’ did not load significantly onto the unidimensional factor. Good child-parent agreement on the MAQ scales were found and both MAQ and A-MISO-S were moderately to strongly associated with misophonia-related impairment and school interference, and inversely associated with quality of life.LimitationsMAQ and A-MISO-S assess sensitivity to auditory but not visual stimuli, the sample size was modest, and repeated assessments were not conducted.ConclusionsThe combination of MAQ and A-MISO-S shows promise as a multidimensional assessment approach for pediatric misophonia. Future evaluations should include known-groups validity, screening performance, and sensitivity to change in symptom severity.
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4.
  • Guzick, Andrew, et al. (author)
  • Clinical characteristics, impairment, and psychiatric morbidity in 102 youth with misophonia
  • 2022
  • In: Journal of Affective Disorders. - : Elsevier BV. - 0165-0327. ; 324, s. 395-402
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • BackgroundThere is little information on the clinical presentation, functional impact, and psychiatric characteristics of misophonia in youth, an increasingly recognized syndrome characterized by high emotional reactivity to certain sounds and associated visual stimuli.MethodOne-hundred-two youth (8–17 years-old) with misophonia and their parents were recruited and compared with 94 youth with anxiety disorders. Participants completed validated assessments of misophonia severity, quality of life, as well as psychiatric symptoms and diagnoses.ResultsThe most common misophonia triggers included eating (96 %), breathing (84 %), throat sounds (66 %), and tapping (54 %). Annoyance/irritation, verbal aggression, avoidance behavior, and family impact were nearly universal. Misophonia severity was associated with internalizing symptoms, child-reported externalizing behaviors, and poorer quality of life. High rates of comorbidity with internalizing and neurodevelopmental disorders were found. Quality of life and externalizing behaviors were not significantly different between misophonia and anxiety samples; internalizing symptoms and autism characteristics were significantly higher among youth with anxiety disorders.LimitationsThis self-selected sample was characterized by limited multicultural diversity.ConclusionsThis study presents misophonia as a highly impairing psychiatric syndrome. Future interdisciplinary work should clarify the mechanisms of misophonia, establish evidence-based treatments, and extend these findings to randomly sampled and more culturally diverse populations.
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5.
  • Murphy, Nicholas, et al. (author)
  • Alterations in attentional processing in youth with misophonia: A phenotypical cross-comparison with anxiety patients
  • 2024
  • In: Journal of Affective Disorders. - 0165-0327. ; 347, s. 429-436
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • BackgroundMisophonia is a complex condition characterized by extreme emotional distress in response to specific sounds or specific visual stimuli. Despite a growing body of clinical and neuroscientific literature, the etiology of this condition remains unclear. Hyperarousal, that is, a state of heightened alertness and disinhibition, as a core feature of misophonia is supported by behavioral and neuroimaging literature and might represent a viable clinical target for the development of both behavioral and pharmacological interventions. The aim of this study was to investigate how hyperarousal might be linked to neurocognitive processes associated with vigilance and stimulus discrimination in youth with misophonia.MethodsWe compared 72 children and adolescents with misophonia (13.74 ± 2.44 years) (64 % female) and 89 children and adolescents with anxiety (12.35 ± 2.57 years) (58.4 % female) on behavioral and signal detection performance of the immediate memory task (IMT). Anxiety patients were used as a clinical control group to distinguish attentional processes specific for misophonia.ResultsBoth groups demonstrated similar behavioral performance, including response rate and reaction time. However, misophonia was associated with elevated stimulus discrimination (d prime), which in turn was positively correlated with the severity of misophonia trigger reports.ConclusionsOur findings are in line with previous cognitive and neuroimaging studies, and support an arousal-based model of misophonia, where individuals with misophonia experience a state of heightened vigilance, being more aware of stimuli in the environment. Our findings provide a neurocognitive basis for future study of neurochemical imaging that might further progress towards clinical targets.
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6.
  • Olsson Hau, Sofie, et al. (author)
  • PRR11 unveiled as a top candidate biomarker within the RBM3-regulated transcriptome in pancreatic cancer
  • 2022
  • In: Journal of Pathology: Clinical Research. - : Wiley. - 2056-4538. ; 8:1, s. 65-77
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The outlook for patients with pancreatic cancer remains dismal. Treatment options are limited and chemotherapy remains standard of care, leading to only modest survival benefits. Hence, there is a great need to further explore the mechanistic basis for the intrinsic therapeutic resistance of this disease, and to identify novel predictive biomarkers. RNA-binding motif protein 3 (RBM3) has emerged as a promising biomarker of disease severity and chemotherapy response in several types of cancer, including pancreatic cancer. The aim of this study was to unearth RBM3-regulated genes and proteins in pancreatic cancer cells in vitro, and to examine their expression and prognostic significance in human tumours. Next-generation RNA sequencing was applied to compare transcriptomes of MIAPaCa-2 cells with and without RBM3 knockdown. The prognostic value of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) was examined in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). Top deregulated genes were selected for further studies in vitro and for immunohistochemical analysis of corresponding protein expression in tumours from a clinically well-annotated consecutive cohort of 46 patients with resected pancreatic cancer. In total, 19 DEGs (p < 0.01) were revealed, among which some with functions in cell cycle and cell division stood out; PDS5A (PDS cohesin associated factor A) as the top downregulated gene, CCND3 (cyclin D3) as the top upregulated gene, and PRR11 (proline rich 11) as being highly prognostic in TCGA. Silencing of RBM3 in MiaPaCa-2 cells led to congruent alterations of PDS5A, cyclin D3, and PRR11 levels. High protein expression of PRR11 was associated with adverse clinicopathological features and shorter overall survival. Neither PDS5A nor cyclin D3 protein expression was prognostic. This study unveils several RBM3-regulated genes with potential clinical relevance in pancreatic cancer, among which PRR11 shows the most consistent association with disease severity, at both transcriptome and protein levels.
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7.
  • Pazzaglia, Paolo, et al. (author)
  • DMAC: Deadline-Miss-Aware Control
  • 2019
  • In: 31st Euromicro Conference on Real-Time Systems : ECRTS 2019 - ECRTS 2019. - 1868-8969. - 9783959771108 ; 133, s. 1-24
  • Conference paper (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The real-time implementation of periodic controllers requires solving a co-design problem, in which the choice of the controller sampling period is a crucial element. Classic design techniques limit the period exploration to safe values, that guarantee the correct execution of the controller alongside the remaining real-time load, i.e., ensuring that the controller worst-case response time does not exceed its deadline. This paper presents DMAC: the first formally-grounded controller design strategy that explores shorter periods, thus explicitly taking into account the possibility of missing deadlines. The design leverages information about the probability that specific sub-sequences of deadline misses are experienced. The result is a fixed controller, that on average works as the ideal clairvoyant time-varying controller that possesses knowledge of deadline hits and misses. We obtain a safe estimate of the hit and miss events using the scenario theory, that allows us to provide probabilistic guarantees. The paper analyzes controllers implemented using the Logical Execution Time paradigm and three different strategies to handle deadline miss events: killing the job, letting the job continue but skipping the next activation, and letting the job continue using a limited queue of jobs. Our experimental results show that our design proposal – i.e., that exploring the space where deadline can be missed and handled with different strategies – greatly outperforms classical control design techniques.
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8.
  • Steinhagen, Sophie, et al. (author)
  • Harvest time can affect the optimal yield and quality of sea lettuce (Ulva fenestrata) in a sustainable sea-based cultivation : Seasonal Cultivation of Ulva fenestrata
  • 2022
  • In: Frontiers in Marine Science. - : Frontiers Media SA. - 2296-7745. ; 9
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Seaweed biomass is a renewable resource with multiple applications. Sea-based cultivation of seaweeds can provide high biomass yields, low construction, operation, and maintenance costs and could offer an environmentally and economically sustainable alternative to land-based cultivations. The biochemical profile of sea-grown biomass depends on seasonal variation in environmental factors, and the optimization of harvest time is important for the quality of the produced biomass. To identify optimal harvest times of Swedish sea-based cultivated sea lettuce (Ulva fenestrata), this study monitored biomass yield, morphology, chemical composition, fertility, and biofouling at five different harvesting times in April - June 2020. The highest biomass yields (approx. 1.2 kg fw [m rope]-1) were observed in late spring (May). The number and size of holes in the thalli and the amount of fertile and fouled tissue increased with prolonged growth season, which together led to a significant decline in both biomass yield and quality during summer (June). Early spring (April) conditions were optimal for obtaining high fatty acid, protein, biochar, phenolic, and pigment contents in the biomass, whereas carbohydrate and ash content, as well as essential and non-essential elements, increased later in the growth season. Our study results show that the optimal harvest time of sea-based cultivated U. fenestrata depends on the downstream application of the biomass and must be carefully selected to balance yield, quality, and desired biochemical contents to maximize the output of future sea-based algal cultivations in the European Northern Hemisphere.
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  • Result 1-10 of 11
Type of publication
journal article (8)
conference paper (2)
research review (1)
Type of content
peer-reviewed (9)
other academic/artistic (2)
Author/Editor
Cervin, Matti (6)
Schneider, Sophie C. (6)
Guzick, Andrew (4)
Storch, Eric (4)
Goodman, Wayne K. (4)
Steinhagen, Sophie (3)
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Clinger, Jane (3)
Smith, Eleanor (3)
Lijffijt, Marijn (3)
Murphy, Nicholas (3)
Edlund, Ulrica, 1972 ... (2)
Undeland, Ingrid, 19 ... (2)
Pavia, Henrik (2)
Wahlström, Niklas (2)
Draper, Isabel (2)
McGuire, Joseph (2)
Storch, Eric A. (2)
De Nadai, Alessandro (2)
Rast, Catherine (2)
Cervin, Anton (1)
Pavia, Henrik, 1964 (1)
Albers, Eva, 1966 (1)
Maggio, Martina (1)
Jirström, Karin (1)
Olsson, Joakim, 1988 (1)
Edlund, Ulrica (1)
Andrén, Per (1)
Eberhard, Jakob (1)
Mataix-Cols, David (1)
Nodin, Björn (1)
Elebro, Jacob (1)
Wahlin, Sara (1)
Aspvall, Kristina (1)
Armstrong, Gabrielle (1)
Greenberg, Rebecca (1)
Smárason, Orri (1)
Frederick, Renee (1)
Spencer, Samuel (1)
Larsson, Karin, 1979 (1)
Abramowitz, Jonathan ... (1)
Cervin, Gunnar, 1967 (1)
Enge, Swantje, 1981 (1)
Undeland, Ingrid (1)
Olsson, Joakim (1)
Pazzaglia, Paolo (1)
Gallagher, William M ... (1)
Geller, Daniel (1)
D'Souza, Johann (1)
Piacentini, John (1)
Walkup, John T. (1)
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University
Lund University (8)
Royal Institute of Technology (2)
Chalmers University of Technology (2)
University of Gothenburg (1)
Karolinska Institutet (1)
Language
English (11)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Medical and Health Sciences (7)
Natural sciences (3)
Engineering and Technology (3)
Agricultural Sciences (1)
Social Sciences (1)

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