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1 curacy or the need for affiliation stimulate behavior change.
2 nvironmental exposures through regulation or behavior change.
3 udies are needed to determine maintenance of behavior change.
4 nd active problem solving around barriers to behavior change.
5 quality, rigorous interventions that promote behavior change.
6 od experiences (ACEs) and texting to promote behavior change.
7  distinction between one- and two-sided risk behavior change.
8 ived brief training about these diseases and behavior change.
9 sion-relevant issues, and if needed, promote behavior change.
10  study and with steps on the causal chain to behavior change.
11  be particularly well-prepared for promoting behavior change.
12  treatments, improves transfer to real-world behavior change.
13 atterns of search activity for four areas of behavior change.
14 hese self-reports do not necessarily predict behavior change.
15 ce CVD risk should primarily focus on health behavior change.
16 ing evidence for a decline founded on sexual behavior change.
17  sufficient to promote subsequent recall and behavior change.
18 test results must be followed by appropriate behavior change.
19  time-intensive elements designed to promote behavior change.
20  varying the level and intensity of fear and behavior change.
21 ot be necessary or appropriate for achieving behavior change.
22 ucing climate change requires marked, global behavior change.
23 window for climate mitigation demands urgent behavior change.
24 reat water and reduce reliance on individual behavior change.
25 terventions were needed to support long-term behavior change.
26 uccessfully produced attitude change but not behavior change.
27  effectively motivates and initiates patient behavior change.
28 and maladaptive rigidity in the capacity for behavior change.
29 lds promise for achieving socially desirable behavior change.
30 re to persuasive messages can predict health behavior change.
31 , and health workers are important agents of behavior change.
32 ttention to the dynamics of human and social behavior change.
33 ies received an intervention for self-guided behavior change.
34 erse effects of counseling or sun-protective behavior changes.
35 t of weight, central adiposity, and selected behavior changes.
36 ctivation of this signaling cascade triggers behavior changes.
37 g markers of illness before the emergence of behavior changes.
38 tcomes following pandemic-related population behavior changes.
39 ting infectious diseases in children through behavior changes.
40 l to modify this risk with lifestyle-related behavior changes.
41  at midcorticogenesis leads to congruent INM behavior changes.
42       Are attitudes or intentions related to behavior change?
43  using EHRs as well as related documentation behaviors changed 1 decade after EHR adoption.
44 rvention modalities most often used included behavior change (12 studies), vaccination (7 studies), u
45  show that the contribution of BLA to choice behavior changes across the lifespan.
46 nvolving multiple community organizations in behavior-changing activities.
47 ents, respectively, reported making a health behavior change after 6 months.
48 ive research on racial disparities in health behavior changes after diagnosis is desperately needed.
49 onths and testing is performed monthly, then behavior changes after diagnosis would have reduced esti
50 versity training successfully generated some behavior change among groups whose average untreated att
51 er scenarios of DAA scale-up with or without behavior change (among HIV-diagnosed MSM and/or all MSM)
52 comes; and use of existing data sets to link behavior change and clinical outcomes.
53 in an understandable way so that it triggers behavior change and effectively informs health care deci
54 an be grouped into the general categories of behavior change and illness related factors.
55 seling and behavior change, the link between behavior change and incidence of skin cancer, and the ad
56 video contacts every other month) to support behavior change and linkage of families to neighborhood
57 e to help address disparities through health behavior change and maintenance, the latter of which is
58 reasingly studied as a tool for facilitating behavior change and may represent a novel way to modify
59 condary CVD prevention focusing on lifestyle behavior change and medication adherence in cohorts with
60 particular parenting strategies can leverage behavior change and reduce positive energy balance in ob
61 verse healthcare providers to promote health behavior change and successful diabetes self-care have r
62 anding the mechanisms underlying oral health behavior change and variables that may mediate or modera
63 ledge and lower probabilities of no positive behavior changes and estimated risk of coronary heart di
64 luenced the decline in infections, including behavior changes and other community interventions.
65 xist regarding the potential for unwarranted behavior changes and the overuse of health care resource
66 ittle is known about the mechanisms by which behaviors change and evolve between groups.
67 s well as empathy, risk taking, impulsivity, behavior change, and attentional focus.
68 tentially relate to ageing-related outcomes, behavior change, and healthcare needs in the LGBT commun
69 ible, lacks drama, often requires persistent behavior change, and may be long delayed; statistical li
70 innovative solutions to increase and sustain behavior change, and use of mixed methods for capturing
71 es, inclusion of multimodal imaging of brain-behavior changes, and finally the design of multimodal i
72 ied that relate to enhanced public outreach, behavior change approaches, optimization of static publi
73 oth increased exercise capacity and adaptive behavior change are necessary to achieve significant and
74                                   When these behavior changes are taken into account, each percentage
75  risk for psychosis, and to other aspects of behavior change, are discussed.
76 om which both addiction and the capacity for behavior change arise, arguing for an intensified neuros
77          During the COVID-19 pandemic, human behavior change as a result of nonpharmaceutical interve
78 hed, but it is unclear whether making health behavior changes as an adult can still alter coronary ar
79 toperiods, the types and intensity of social behaviors change as a function of the estrous cycle.
80 olystyrene NPs, we examined how NP diffusive behaviors change as a result of calcium-induced cross-li
81 ascular disease-related health knowledge and behavior changes, as well as the estimated 12-year proba
82 , including ways to maximize parental health behavior change, assess mediators that account for inter
83 luded and the framework integrates household behavior change assessment to explore the environmental
84                     In particular, brain and behavior changes associated with different stages of the
85 l studies have not confirmed case reports of behavior changes associated with varenicline and bupropi
86            SNP risk scores were unrelated to behavior change at 3-months.
87 onmental interventions are needed to support behavior change at the individual level, and the signifi
88 onmental interventions are needed to support behavior change at the individual level; and the signifi
89  months and test-related distress and health behavior changes at 12 months.
90                                    Defensive behavior changes based on threat intensity, proximity, a
91       How can progress in research on health behavior change be accelerated?
92               How might attitudinally driven behavior change be consolidated into lasting habits?
93  predicted an average 23% of the variance in behavior change beyond the variance predicted by self-re
94  for providing opportunities for negotiating behavior change, beyond the direct benefits of testing.
95                                              Behavior change bias can be minimized by assessing the c
96 combination prevention packages that include behavior change, biomedical, and structural intervention
97 gists already contribute to individual-level behavior-change campaigns in the service of sustainabili
98 ould be developed, and methods by which such behavior change can be achieved and maintained investiga
99 how that incorporating fatigue and long-term behavior change can reconcile the apparent premature rel
100 y but short duration of PHI, even short-term behavior change can significantly reduce transmission.
101  memory, bearing implications for education, behavior change, clinical interventions, and communicati
102  active walls for all values of Pr, but this behavior changes close to the heated and cooled walls fo
103 child groups led by staff and nine 20-minute behavior change coaching sessions.
104 tional Institutes of Health (NIH) Science of Behavior Change Common Fund Program through an award adm
105 the National Institutes of Health Science of Behavior Change Common Fund Program; the full text shoul
106                                              Behavior change communication (BCC) interventions, while
107 preventive package including age-appropriate behavior change communication (BCC) on nutrition, health
108                  Screening sessions included behavior change communication (BCC) on nutrition, health
109 a package of community activities (including behavior change communication [BCC] sessions, home visit
110 or FCR throughout distribution, and complete behavior change communication activities about the progr
111 H intervention comprises material inputs and behavior change communication to promote stool disposal,
112                                              Behavior changes compound this, altering both true dynam
113 vention and management strategies, including behavior change, condom promotion, and therapy have not
114 thiol-containing compounds, the fluorescence behavior changes considerably.
115      The analysis demonstrates that consumer behavior changes could rival housing/locational choices
116 pecific considerations for lifestyle-related behavior change counseling in life stages in which lifes
117 nals can use for efficient lifestyle-related behavior change counseling in patients at all levels of
118 pecific considerations for lifestyle-related behavior change counseling using the 5A Model for patien
119 l health and well-being in lifestyle-related behavior change counseling, and how clinicians can lever
120 iral treatment, the benefits of education or behavior change counseling, and the association between
121                        However, how flexible behavior changes developmentally in ASD remains largely
122      Upon optogenetic stimulation, the fly's behavior changes dramatically in two respects.
123    One of the most salient ways in which our behavior changes during childhood and adolescence is tha
124                   This analysis of transient behavior changes during intraoperative deep brain stimul
125 uestion in hematopoiesis is how cell-cycling behavior changes during the emergence of the differentia
126 that control the mechanical adaption to cell behavior changes during the transition from quiescence t
127 y can be relaxed, but are moderated by other behavior changes (e.g., increased condom use) in HIV sta
128  (GHSRs) exhibit exaggerated depressive-like behaviors, changed eating behaviors, and altered metabol
129  approach to these questions might help move behavior change efforts from attitude change strategies
130           There is a suggestion that focused behavior change efforts on one target such as reducing t
131 oices must be strongly supported by clinical behavior change efforts, health systems reforms, novel t
132 althcare systems and surveillance systems to behavior change efforts.
133 agement with smartwatch data leads to actual behavior change (eg, adaptive coping or reflective habit
134 nique opportunity to motivate patient health behavior changes, fear of emergent presentation and fina
135 en contribute to difficulties in maintaining behavior change following a period of abstinence, and ma
136 atric clinicians and support for self-guided behavior change for families resulted in improved childh
137 esting, such as HIV treatment as prevention, behavior change for transmission reduction, and pre-expo
138 dividuals in the interaction to exhibit risk behavior change, for a potential transmission of the dis
139  the role of psychological interventions for behavior change, for example, uptake of exercise regimen
140 : What strategies are effective in promoting behavior change, for whom, and under what circumstances?
141 erviews were analyzed deductively, guided by behavior change frameworks.
142 s signal conditions under which the system's behavior changes from a damped oscillatory response to s
143 f agent-based models that produces a similar behavior changing from hexagonal to tetragonal steady co
144                    Only Htt-103Q aggregation behavior changed, however, with time.
145 er SHS levels in main smoking areas or clear behavior change; however, family members expressed recep
146 ce that engaging particular targets promotes behavior change; however, systematic studies are needed
147 pportunities for dental nurses to facilitate behavior change improving the oral health of children at
148 lations that correlate with changes in overt behavior (changes in rejection rates).
149 red their value as tools to promote positive behavior change in American consumers.
150 a network-based model to understand how risk behavior change in conjunction with failure of prophylac
151 dings stock in cities, followed by voluntary behavior change in electricity use/purchases, technology
152 between 1998 and 2003 associated with sexual behavior change in four distinct socioeconomic strata.
153 ested a real-time intervention for promoting behavior change in homes that reduces second hand tobacc
154              In addition, the role of health behavior change in optimizing and maintaining benefits i
155 wing to aid their patients and families with behavior change in order to combat health problems relat
156 egration of research on memory, emotion, and behavior change in psychotherapy is needed, which Lane a
157 knowledge about the pathways to attitude and behavior change in the context of bias reduction.
158 amework for thinking about the psychology of behavior change in the context of market failures.
159 enges in causally influencing and sustaining behavior change in the context of ongoing relationships.
160 rsuasive messages can predict variability in behavior change in the subsequent week.
161  that focused on promoting health and safety behavior change in youth.
162                                     Although behavior changes in anopheline vectors have been reporte
163 Cross-sectional data indicate that migratory behavior changes in the sixth decade of life.
164 isease screening, and positive self-reported behavior changes in those with high-risk genotypes.
165         In this study, we examined brain and behavior changes in VNS and sham rats performing a multi
166 te the entire process of analyzing videos of behavior changes in zebrafish by using tools from comput
167 Magel2(Pmut) rats exhibited abnormal feeding behavior, changes in early social communication, alterat
168 teroids delivered via circulation can affect behavior, changes in local brain steroid synthesis also
169 a real existence and governs real functional behavior, changes in the state should be seen as coheren
170 ness was shown to alter many aspects of cell behavior, changes in vimentin organization were not repo
171   For individuals who modified their smoking behavior, changes in white blood cell counts occurred pr
172 -related behaviors, including autism-related behaviors, changes in cortical gene expression, and defi
173                              Determinants of behavior change, including the effects of socioeconomic
174                          Consistent with the behavior changes induced by VMH to AHN pathway activatio
175 fficacy, and evaluation of physical activity behavior change initiatives for clinicians and researche
176 cts of a telephone-delivered multiple health behavior change intervention (CanChange) on health and b
177 ustralia, were randomly assigned to either a behavior change intervention arm (n = 124) or a control
178                          Participants in the behavior change intervention arm reported consumption of
179                                          The behavior change intervention cost A$3.10 (in Australian
180 tudy investigated the effects and costs of a behavior change intervention for increasing fruit and ve
181 h interventions appear to be a viable health behavior change intervention modality for youth.
182 claudication, a home-based, walking exercise behavior change intervention, compared with usual care,
183 -based, multiple-component physical activity/behavior change intervention.
184 uction intervention, a tailored skills-based behavior-change intervention, and a combined interventio
185 st partially mediate intervention effects on behavior change (intervention stage).
186 w studies have developed translatable health behavior change interventions.
187 havior should lead to more effective dietary behavior change interventions.
188 ing the information to target populations in behavior change interventions.
189 ves suggests potential benefits of targeting behavior-change interventions based on patient character
190 nto why this is, and shows us cost-effective behavior-change interventions.
191 nmental factors that support positive health behavior change, interventions that include multiple lev
192 prove cardiovascular health through positive behavior change is critical for preventing cardiovascula
193 dence and mortality rates for men and women, behavior change is possible and effective in cancer prev
194 ainty (as opposed to strong safety beliefs), behavior change leads to generalized learning (i.e., "ov
195 ealth and substance abuse conditions, health behavior change, life stresses and crises, and stress-re
196 osure to fast food and/or promote individual behavior change may be helpful.
197                                          The behavior changes may be mediated by decreased amyloid pa
198 ationed entomologists, along with Social and Behavior Change mediated health education towards the lo
199 ere associated with household FCR, receiving behavior change messages, storage container type, and di
200            HWL was based on a revised health behavior change model emphasizing hunger management and
201 k3 gene dosage-dependent phenotype including behavior changes modeling bipolar disorder, epilepsy and
202 ith five studies adding psychological and/or behavior change motivation training to support change in
203     Our findings are relevant to theories of behavior change, motivation, and information sharing, wi
204 to serve as a frame to convey the urgency of behavior change needed to adapt to a changing climate an
205 sue morphogenesis, participating in cellular behavior changes, notably during the process of converge
206  balance alterations, evaluate the impact of behavior change on cancer outcomes, and determine the be
207 to guide technology selection and prioritize behavior change opportunities to maximize impact.
208           Whether such information motivates behavior change or has adverse effects is uncertain.
209 s of using social network data to accelerate behavior change or improve organizational performance.
210 nt policy tools that better motivate desired behavior change or that are more cost-effective than tra
211 s met the criteria and focused on at least 1 behavior change outcome.
212  least 1 statistically significant effect on behavior change outcomes, including an increase in fruit
213                                  Significant behavior change over time in serodiscordant couples was
214 tion of sedation adequacy and that patients' behavior change over time suggests that collaborative re
215 y of conditioning, we observed how defensive behavior changed over two extinction sessions.
216 tem: spontaneous movement on food, where the behavior changes over tens of minutes; chemotaxis, where
217 s were conducted to assess substance use and behavior changes over time and compare changes between H
218                                   How animal behavior changes over time has been explored through wel
219 ed characterizations of how population-level behaviors change over time during multiple disease outbr
220 ht therefore benefit from focusing on eating behavior change, particularly in genetically susceptible
221                      Evidence on clinicians' behavior change postmandate is limited.
222                                          The behavior change process is facilitated through the use o
223                                       Female behavior changes profoundly after mating.
224 ress has been made on the creation of health behavior change programs that effectively reduce smoking
225 l cortex (MPFC) was reliably associated with behavior change (r = 0.49, p < 0.05).
226                             Here, we measure behavior change reflected in mobile-phone call-detail re
227  the AD+CAD groups also reported more health behavior changes, regardless of APOE genotype.
228 ial 8, we focused on interventions targeting behavior change related to physical activity, sedentary
229 igh neighborhood deprivation and no positive behavior changes remained statistically significant afte
230 ation is transmuted into neural activity and behavior changes remains elusive.
231 ntly infected MSM with and those without the behavior changes reported after diagnosis.
232 nsideration of future directions, suggesting behavior change research as translational research on cu
233 llenges: the influence of habit formation on behavior change, resilience in the face of stressful lif
234 nts in self-management and promote long-term behavior change; standardized screening tools that impro
235 y (PA), little is known about which types of behavior change strategies (BCSs) effectively promote su
236                  The first is to review core behavior change strategies for PACs as used in family-ba
237 sults suggest the importance of attitude and behavior change strategies in reducing the gap between n
238 porate evidence-based risk communication and behavior change strategies may promote risk-appropriate
239 r hand, greater parental adherence with core behavior change strategies predicted better child weight
240 ing with periodic data collection; b) modify behavior change strategies to improve or sustain improve
241        In this systematic review of targeted behavior change strategies to increase professional inte
242 nable investigators to identify when and how behavior change strategies will be most effective.
243 o also provide suitable "software" programs (behavior change strategies) to support use.
244 ulness procedures, along with commitment and behavior change strategies, to increase psychological fl
245 tion focused on diet, physical activity, and behavior change strategies.
246 e and design of traditional policy tools for behavior change, such as financial incentives.
247  the potential attendant harm from resultant behavior changes, such as reduced docosahexaenoic acid e
248 rders, represent singularities, places where behavior changes suddenly.
249 rgoing a major surgical procedure and health behavior change, targeted smoking cessation intervention
250 oup received the same information as well as behavior change techniques that targeted all processes i
251 le, and equitable intervention functions and behavior change techniques to develop a multilevel imple
252 n mode and type of delivery; 3) quantify the behavior change techniques used to enhance self-care beh
253 sequences of chronic illness, technology and behavior change techniques were rarely used, few studies
254 e advice delivered by renal dietitians using behavior change techniques) versus passive intervention
255 orated evidence-based risk communication and behavior change techniques, or a mailed educational broc
256  and how goethite morphology and aggregation behavior changed temporally during Fe(2+)-catalyzed recr
257  can be more effective in eliciting positive behavior change than generic interventions, but the unde
258 990s, which is more likely to correlate with behavior change than with reduced infectiousness resulti
259 edge and a higher probability of no positive behavior changes than did adults in moderately deprived
260 ites into the spine head cytoplasm, yielding behavior changes that are specific to stimulus contingen
261 d premodern dogs can shed light on brain and behavior changes that have occurred recently in the dome
262 s speculate that small classes might produce behavior changes that increase mortality through young a
263 Here I describe the mechanisms through which behavior changes the brain in the service of reproductio
264                           In sum, when a new behavior changes the spinal cord, sensory feedback to th
265 ard (endo) CH surfaces determine the dynamic behavior, changing the central C-C bond rotation barrier
266                     The outcome was stage of behavior change, the behavior being use of the ADA.
267 ns addressed the link between counseling and behavior change, the link between behavior change and in
268 ical approach used by NDs is consistent with behavior change theory and clinical strategies found mos
269 d, and rarely did constructs of the proposed behavior change theory clearly and comprehensively drive
270 tting; however, contrary to models of health behavior change, they do not appear to alter intentions
271 use pulmonary rehabilitation also emphasizes behavior change through collaborative self-management, i
272           Better evidence on determinants of behavior change throughout the life course would contrib
273 ell as methods to quantify how much cellular behaviors change tissue shape.
274 stion that will enable the science of health behavior change to improve public health: What strategie
275 terventions were developed using theories of behavior change to target key factors that influence bro
276                     Moreover, although rats' behavior changed to reflect new protein status, patterns
277 otocols, assessment of outcomes, and linking behavior changes to health outcomes.
278 ms targeting cardiovascular risk factors and behavior changes to improve a Maine county's population
279 of real-world contexts; assess subtleties of behavior change tools used to improve high-value behavio
280 ne solution, as well as provision of monthly behavior change trainings.
281 acterizing the dynamic age-related brain and behavior changes underlying this neurodevelopmental diso
282 action (XRPD) shows that the CO(2)-breathing behavior changes upon gas loading.
283 baseline body mass index and demographic and behavior change variables).
284                                  The desired behavior change was reported in the intervention group i
285 goid appearance, hirsutism, weight gain, and behavior change were less for vamorolone than published
286 associated hardships, coping mechanisms, and behavior changes were associated with higher PTS, and th
287                     Aggressive and prosocial behavior changes were measured 2 weeks and 6 months afte
288                             Patients' health behavior changes were surveyed 6 months after receiving
289 tered care, self-management, coaching, and a behavior change wheel as lenses through which to conside
290                              Informed by the behavior change wheel framework and Expert Recommendatio
291 tional components were categorized using the Behavior Change Wheel.
292 individual in an interaction to exhibit risk behavior change whereas in two-sided situations (e.g. AI
293 e architecture interventions overall promote behavior change with a small to medium effect size of Co
294 ded to improve understanding of processes of behavior change with active games.
295              Daily rhythms in physiology and behavior change with age.
296 ctions in epilepsy, our understanding of how behavior changes with epilepsy has remained rudimentary.
297 information that necessarily changes as that behavior changes with learning.
298   We further demonstrate how this electronic behavior changes with several conditions to explore the
299                          Furthermore, eating behaviors changed with increasing time since surgery.
300 and increase life expectancy through smoking behavior changes, with modest but important public healt

 
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