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Search: WFRF:(Kumlien Mats)

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1.
  • Juran, Stephanie A, et al. (author)
  • Unilateral Resection of the Anterior Medial Temporal Lobe Impairs Odor Identification and Valence Perception
  • 2015
  • In: Frontiers in Psychology. - : Frontiers Media S.A.. - 1664-1078. ; 6
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The anterior medial temporal lobe (TL), including the amygdala, has been implicated in olfactory processing, e.g., coding for intensity and valence, and seems also involved in memory. With this background, the present study evaluated whether anterior medial TL-resections in TL epilepsy affected intensity and valence ratings, as well as free and cued identification of odors. These aspects of odor perception were assessed in 31 patients with unilateral anterior medial TL-resections (17 left, 14 right) and 16 healthy controls. Results suggest that the anterior medial TL is in particular necessary for free, but also cued, odor identification. TL resection was also found to impair odor valence, but not intensity ratings. Left resected patients rated nominally pleasant and unpleasant odors as more neutral suggesting a special role for the left anterior TL in coding for emotional saliency in response to odors.
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  • Dahlén, Marianne, 1957- (author)
  • The Negotiable Child : The ILO Child Labour Campaign 1919-1973
  • 2007
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • This dissertation examines the Conventions and Recommendations to regulate the minimum age for admission to employment between the years 1919 and 1973 – the ILO minimum age campaign. The adoption process has been studied in its chronological and historical context. The dissertation has three points of departure: that childhood is a historical construction and that the legal material is part of that construction; that the minimum age campaign suffered from a ‘hang-over-from-history’, namely, the history of Western industrialisation during the 19th and early 20th centuries; and, finally, that children had a subordinate and weak position in the minimum age campaign.The study was organised around five central themes: (1) the over-all theme of predominant conceptions of children and work; (2) the relationship between industrialised and colonised and developing nations; (3) the relationship between the child, the family and the state; (4) minimum age; and (5) the importance of school.The most important results of the study are that: (1) In view of the revolutionary changes during the 20th century the continuity in the minimum age campaign was remarkable. In 1919, the ‘child labour problem’ was an issue mainly for the Western industrialised word. By the end of the campaign, in 1973, the transformations in societies during the century had made ‘the child labour problem’ an issue mainly for the developing world and with different conditions and implications in many respects. The content and ‘grammar’ of the minimum age campaign was however never really challenged.(2) The study has verified that the minimum age campaign suffered from a ‘hang-over-from history’. The campaign built directly on the Western industrial experience during the 19th and early 20th centuries. The Western dominance in the ILO, the legal transplants, and the roots in the labour movement all contributed to the ‘hang-over’. (3) The minimum age campaign was modelled on the ‘norm of the Western industrialised childhood’. The norms and realities of childhood in other parts of the world were neglected of considered as provisional and inferior phases in relation to the Western ‘norm’. In this way, there were two separate childhoods in the minimum age campaign: ‘the normal’ childhood conceived for Western conditions and ‘the other’ childhood conceived for the ‘imperfect’ conditions of poor children in the colonised and developing nations.(4) In the minimum age campaign the ‘best interests of the child’ was negotiable and was subordinated in case of conflict with other interests.
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  • Danfors, Torsten, et al. (author)
  • Increased neurokinin-1 receptor availability in temporal lobe epilepsy : A positron emission tomography study using [(11)C]GR205171
  • 2011
  • In: Epilepsy Research. - : Elsevier BV. - 0920-1211 .- 1872-6844. ; 97:1-2, s. 183-189
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • PURPOSE: Activation of the neurokinin-1 (NK1) receptor by neuropeptide substance P (SP) induces and maintains epileptic activity in various experimental models of epilepsy. The primary objective of this study was to investigate whether neurobiological changes linked to NK1-SP receptor system are associated with hyperexcitability in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). A secondary objective was to investigate the relationship between seizure frequency and NK1 receptor availability. METHODS: A positron emission tomography study was conducted with the selective NK1 receptor antagonist [(11)C]GR205171 in nine patients with TLE and 18 healthy control participants. Parametric PET images were generated using the Patlak graphical method, with cerebellum as reference region. Data analyses including group comparisons were performed using statistical parametric mapping. RESULTS: Patients with TLE showed increased NK1 receptor availability in both hemispheres with the most pronounced increase in anterior cingulate gyrus ipsilateral to seizure onset. A positive correlation between NK1 receptor availability and seizure frequency was observed in the medial temporal lobe and in the lentiform nucleus ipsilateral to the seizure onset. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that there is an intrinsic network using the NK1-SP receptor system for synaptic transmission and epileptiform activity in TLE.
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  • Kumlien, Christine, et al. (author)
  • Validity and test retest reliability of the vascular quality of life Questionnaire-6: a short form of a disease-specific health-related quality of life instrument for patients with peripheral arterial disease
  • 2017
  • In: Health and Quality of Life Outcomes. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 1477-7525. ; 15
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Background: Many existing patient-reported outcome measures are extensive regarding both patient burden and administration, and in terms of analysing and reporting results. The VascuQoL-6 (VQ6) - a short version of the original Vascular Quality of Life Questionnaire (VascuQoL), a disease-specific instrument for peripheral arterial disease - was recently developed. However, the VQ6 has not yet been empirical tested with regard to content validity, construct validity and test retest reliability. Our aim was, therefore, to explore both the validity and the reliability of the VQ-6 in a target population with established peripheral arterial disease. Methods: Two hundred patients treated at two vascular centres were consecutively recruited for the survey. Administered questionnaires included VQ6 and the Short Form Health Survey-36 (SF-36). Out of the 200 patients, 150 also received a second VQ6 questionnaire for a test-retest assessment. Further, a purposive sample of 22 patients consented to participate in cognitive interviews. All included patients suffer from peripheral arterial disease. The questionnaire data was tested by both Rasch analysis and traditional psychometric methods, while the cognitive interviews were analysed descriptively. Results: The validity and reliability of the VQ6, as tested in a target population without the surrounding 19 items from the original VascuQoL, was high, in general, and a good fit to the Rasch model was observed. Further, an excellent internal consistency and significant correlations between comparable dimensions in SF-36 were demonstrated. In the test-retest analysis, the percentage agreement was somewhat poor (<70%) in the six items. However, no systematic disagreements between the two assessments were seen in any of the six items, and the test-retest assessment for the VQ6 sum score showed an acceptable intraclass correlation coefficient (0.86). Finally, all items in the VQ6 were considered as both understandable and relevant by the interviewed patients. Conclusions: The VQ6 has acceptable to good psychometric properties with regard to data quality, scale assumptions, targeting, validity and reliability. Further, VQ6 seems to be easy to use and comprehend within the target population of patients with PAD.
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  • Kumlien, Mats (author)
  • Arbetslinjer i rättshistorien
  • 2008
  • In: Festskrift till Johan Hirschfeldt. - : Iustus, Uppsala. - 9789176786826 ; , s. 189-201
  • Book chapter (peer-reviewed)
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  • Result 1-10 of 49
Type of publication
book chapter (19)
journal article (18)
editorial collection (4)
book (3)
conference paper (2)
reports (1)
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other publication (1)
doctoral thesis (1)
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Type of content
peer-reviewed (32)
other academic/artistic (15)
pop. science, debate, etc. (2)
Author/Editor
Kumlien, Eva (12)
Fredrikson, Mats (5)
Ericson, Mats (3)
Modéer, Kjell Å (2)
Ronne-Engström, Elis ... (2)
Persson, H (2)
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Sunnqvist, Martin (1)
Magnusson, Lars (1)
Appel, Lieuwe (1)
Linnman, Clas (1)
Virhammar, Johan (1)
Fällmar, David (1)
Rostami, Elham, 1979 ... (1)
Wikström, Johan, 196 ... (1)
Andersson, J (1)
Bergquist, Jonas (1)
Marklund, Niklas (1)
Enblad, Per (1)
Wikström, Johan (1)
Ackefors, Malin (1)
Kumlien, Christine (1)
Larsson, Elna-Marie (1)
Tomson, T (1)
Watz, Emma (1)
Remberger, Mats (1)
Hägglund, Hans (1)
Mattsson, Jonas (1)
Uhlin, Michael (1)
Ringden, Olle (1)
Ljungman, Per (1)
Sköld, Mattias K. (1)
Berglund, Sofia (1)
Winiarski, Jacek (1)
Hesselager, Göran (1)
Nilsson, Pelle (1)
Bergstrom, Mats (1)
Langstrom, B (1)
Frithiof, Robert (1)
Hillered, Lars (1)
Olsson, Richard (1)
Furmark, Tomas (1)
Persson, Håkan (1)
Nordanstig, Joakim (1)
Persson, Jonas (1)
Engman, Jonas (1)
Karlsson, Helen (1)
Lindeberg, Jonas (1)
Wernerson, Annika (1)
Hassan, Moustapha (1)
Dahllöf, Göran (1)
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University
Uppsala University (43)
Karolinska Institutet (7)
Lund University (6)
Mid Sweden University (5)
Royal Institute of Technology (3)
University of Gothenburg (1)
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Malmö University (1)
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Language
Swedish (25)
English (22)
German (1)
Italian (1)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Social Sciences (25)
Medical and Health Sciences (9)
Humanities (7)

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