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1 ment for International Development, Wellcome Trust).
2 isking people's health and undermining their trust.
3 it for Evaluation of Interventions, Wellcome Trust.
4 ment for International Development, Wellcome Trust.
5      Leona M and Harry B Helmsley Charitable Trust.
6 up biases, boost communication, and increase trust.
7  magnitudes (high vs. low) influences public trust.
8 rian cancer patients at Imperial College NHS Trust.
9 communicating uncertainty will reduce public trust.
10  for International Development, and Wellcome Trust.
11      Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance and Wellcome Trust.
12 nutrition science, including gaps that erode trust.
13 ealth and Medical Research Council, Wellcome Trust.
14 cil, European Research Council, and Wellcome Trust.
15 t, Global Challenges Research Fund, Wellcome Trust.
16           Medical Research Council, Wellcome Trust.
17 es a greater recovery from these breaches of trust.
18 search Centre, Wellcome Trust, and Rosetrees Trust.
19 ional Institute of Health Research; Wellcome Trust.
20 , UK Medical Research Council, and Rosetrees Trust.
21 nstitutes of Health, Royal Society, Wellcome Trust.
22 T of the Chilean government and the Wellcome Trust.
23 t of Health and Social Care and The Wellcome Trust.
24  Him donation, and Felicity Wilde Charitable Trust.
25 ation, SA Medical Research Council, Wellcome Trust.
26    The Leona M & Harry B Helmsley Charitable Trust.
27 ds within each site in negotiation with each Trust.
28     UK Department of Health and the Wellcome Trust.
29        British Heart Foundation and Wellcome Trust.
30 ldren and young people from maltreatment and trust.
31           British Heart Foundation, Wellcome Trust.
32 tter understanding of the neuropsychology of trust.
33     Morbid Obesity Centre, Vestfold Hospital Trust.
34 ffect on patient-physician communication and trust.
35 h and Care North Thames at Bart's Health NHS Trust.
36 line, Medical Research Council, and Wellcome Trust.
37 search, Wellcome Trust, and Genesis Research Trust.
38 R BRC at University College London, Wellcome Trust.
39 re punishment if they betray their partner's trust.
40  & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Wellcome Trust.
41  for International Development, and Wellcome Trust.
42 archetypal paradigm to model cooperation and trust.
43  International-Development, and the Wellcome Trust.
44  Wellcome Trust, Rosetrees Trust, Stoneygate Trust.
45  The Leona M and Harry B Helmsley Charitable Trust.
46  also, harshly punish those who betray their trust.
47 ivaccine attitudes or beliefs, and a lack of trust.
48 Hospitals National Health Service Foundation Trust.
49  for International Development, and Wellcome Trust.
50 rson prior to their decision to trust or not trust.
51  projected to significantly influence public trust: 1) conflict of interest and objectivity; 2) publi
52 f the surgery was "off-track" (withdrawal of trust); (6) re-evaluation of trust for future cases.
53 re staff; (5) build, strengthen and maintain trust; (6) enlist existing social norms and foster healt
54 available for crumpled materials; one cannot trust a crumple.
55 al partners.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Would you trust a robot to make decisions for you?
56  of report: confidence (explicit judgment of trust about their performance) and wagering (implicit re
57                                    Issues of trust, accountability and equity underpin Indigenous cri
58 minophen affects the basic social process of trust across a national survey and five lab experiments.
59 CUs from 17 National Health Service hospital trusts across England, Scotland, and Northern Ireland.
60 hile its adoption is limited by the level of trust afforded by given models.
61 entional boosting of perceived trust on high trust and ambiguous neutral faces, suggesting attention
62                                     Wellcome Trust and amfAR (American Foundation for AIDS Research).
63                            Low institutional trust and belief in misinformation were associated with
64 riables of interest, including institutional trust and belief in selected misinformation, with outcom
65                                              Trust and betrayal are central to our social world, and
66 t highlight the importance of accounting for trust and cognitive biases involved in the human judgmen
67           A majority felt that "establishing trust and comfort" was best accomplished in person, and
68  were not limited to individuals inclined to trust and cooperate with the police prior to the interve
69 hips, and other prosocial behaviors, such as trust and cooperation.
70  differ in their level of cooperation (i.e., trust and coordination).
71  continues to depend upon, a balance between trust and doubt in the stories we share.
72 ised mechanisms of effect based on increased trust and engagement, improved care coordination, and ea
73 th pain rating, discrimination, experimenter trust and extranociceptive aspects of pain elsewhere.
74  was negatively associated with neighborhood trust and feelings of social integration.
75                                     Wellcome Trust and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.
76  at South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and King's College London and the NIHR BRC at Univ
77 as' National Health Service (NHS) Foundation Trust and King's College London, NHS Hackney, Lee Him do
78          We aimed to investigate the role of trust and misinformation on individual preventive behavi
79                                     Wellcome Trust and MRC Tropical Epidemiology Group.
80 gs where they are most critical by improving trust and mutual accountability among stakeholders.
81                      Sharing requires mutual trust and open acknowledgement of strengths and weakness
82 s an effective strategy for enhancing public trust and police legitimacy.
83 ed and non-digitalized channels; it conducts trust and risk neuro-experiments to identify their impac
84 study analyzes neural responses connected to trust and risk to explain financial digitalization decis
85 oth protect human subjects and insure public trust and support.
86                                     Wellcome Trust and the DELTAS Africa Initiative.
87                                   The Rhodes Trust and the Howard Brain Sciences Foundation.
88                    According to the Wellcome Trust and UK research councils' Common Principles on Dat
89 iversity Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust and University of Birmingham, Institute of Inflamm
90 Board of Directors for BB Biotech Healthcare Trust and Xerion Healthcare.
91 mmendations adhered to, the source had to be trusted and perceived to be credible.
92 rmonization efforts will allow the (mutually trusted and understood) production and analysis of WGS d
93  as well as physician-nurse coordination and trust) and job satisfaction.
94 ality traits, one emphasizing valence (e.g., trust) and the other strength (e.g., dominance).
95 Australasian College of Physicians, Wellcome Trust, and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
96 mbridge Biomedical Research Centre, Wellcome Trust, and European Foundation for the Study of Diabetes
97 ional Institute of Health Research, Wellcome Trust, and Genesis Research Trust.
98    US Food and Drug Administration, Wellcome Trust, and German Research Council.
99 atural Science Foundation of China, Wellcome Trust, and Kadoorie Charitable Foundation.
100 College Biomedical Research Centre, Wellcome Trust, and Rosetrees Trust.
101 pital Foundation, the Stan Perron Charitable Trust, and the Callahan Estate.
102  for International Development, the Wellcome Trust, and the Children's Investment Fund Foundation.
103 Children's Hospital Foundation, the Wellcome Trust, and the Fleming Fund.
104        UK Medical Research Council, Wellcome Trust, and the UK Department for International Developme
105 s Bristol National Health Service Foundation Trust, and the University of Bristol.
106 ognizing the need to focus on deserving this trust, and thus which act as powerful barriers to necess
107 d Social Research Council, Philip Leverhulme Trust, and UNICEF.
108 t, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Wellcome Trust, and Valent BioSciences LLC.
109 at sensor media themselves are assumed to be trusted, and any authentication and encryption is done e
110 ee proposed best practices to support public trust, appropriate to ASN and other food and nutrition o
111 iers to success, and earning and maintaining trust are components that contribute to the effectivenes
112       Surgeons described the construction of trust as a stepwise process taking place before, during,
113                                              TRUST assembled more than 30 million complementarity-det
114 & Melinda Gates Foundation, UNICEF, Wellcome Trust, Associacao Brasileira de Saude Coletiva.
115 ted more improvement in adherence had a more trusting attitude toward the adherence score and a great
116 ere as follows: (1) an initial propensity to trust based on the perceived risk of the case and trustw
117 minance-based interactions to democratic and trust-based relationships.
118 eneral large-scale brain networks in shaping trust behavior over time.
119 ces, and subsequently, the ability to adjust trust behavior towards different agents.
120  use this information to adaptively modulate trust behavior.
121 biased perceptions; and 3) in the absence of trust between policy makers and the science community, a
122 ment for International Development, Wellcome Trust, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Medical Research
123 ment for International Development, Wellcome Trust, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, UK Medical Resea
124                                     Wellcome Trust, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, UK Medical Resea
125                                     Wellcome Trust, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, UK Medical Resea
126 nfidence judgments revealed that attentional trust boosting, and its cardiac modulation, did not refl
127 rch Council, Dementias Platform UK, Wellcome Trust, Brain Research UK, Wolfson Foundation, Weston Bra
128        UK Medical Research Council, Wellcome Trust, British Heart Foundation, and AFA Insurances.
129 e neuropsychoeconomic (NPE) underpinnings of trust by combining complementary methodologies from neur
130 rch community not only needs to be worthy of trust by the public, but also urgent steps need to be ta
131 red Indians with Europeans from the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium study; T1D (n = 1963), T2D
132 Foundation, Imperial College London Wellcome Trust Centre for Global Health Research, and Richard and
133 ment for International Development, Wellcome Trust, Children's Investment Fund Foundation, and London
134 other people even at zero acquaintance, thus trusting complete strangers even though they privately e
135           Medical Research Council, Wellcome Trust, Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nive
136  in Cambridge University Hospital Foundation Trust [CUHFT], a tertiary referral center in Cambridge,
137                                              Trust decisions are inherently uncertain, as people usua
138                                     Wellcome Trust, DELTAS Africa Initiative.
139                                     Wellcome Trust, Department for International Development Civil So
140 tment of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Wellcome Trust, Department of Science and Technology and National
141 ological motives for choosing to reciprocate trust differ between individuals, which raises the quest
142  does not rely on classical cryptography and trusted electronics.
143  care in a nonthreatening way, build patient trust, enable symptom control, strengthen coping, and gu
144 l and digital contact tracing require public trust, engagement of minority communities, prompt COVID-
145 tion interacted with attentional boosting of trust, enhancing high trust faces specifically during re
146                                     Wellcome Trust/EPSRC Centre for Medical Engineering, National Ins
147 cs Unit Centre, DJ Fielding Medical Research Trust, EU COST Action, and the US National Cancer Instit
148 nosaur Trust, NIH/NHLBI, ERS, EMBO, Wellcome Trust, EU, AHA, ACClinPharm, Netherlands CVRI, Dutch Hea
149               The SkSES approach is based on trusted execution environments (TEEs) offered by current
150 ttentional boosting of trust, enhancing high trust faces specifically during relaxed diastolic cardia
151  (withdrawal of trust); (6) re-evaluation of trust for future cases.
152 ent at the handover, family member, carer or trusted friend (of the patient) allowed to be present, l
153  World Bank Research Budget, Japan Nutrition Trust Fund, Power of Nutrition, and the National Nutriti
154 acility for Women, Children, and Adolescents Trust Fund; Development and Data Science grant; and the
155 s of psychopathy, and then played a modified Trust Game in the role of the Trustee.
156                          When we manipulated trust game investor expectations, acetaminophen increase
157 Here, we combine data from three independent trust game studies to find that the relative prevalence
158 mpared their learning behavior in a repeated trust game, and a non-social control task, to healthy, m
159 f-generated expectations on investments in a trust game.
160 decisions about reciprocity using a modified Trust Game.
161 as linked to emotional processing during the trust game.
162 heir interaction on beliefs and behaviors in trust games.
163 ambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Glaucoma clinic.
164                      Royal Society, Wellcome Trust, Global Challenges Research Fund (UK Research and
165                                     Wellcome Trust, Global Challenges Research Fund, and Health Data
166 lies on cryptographic algorithms executed on trusted hardware.
167 ment for International Development, Wellcome Trust, Health Data Research UK, Medical Research Council
168 onal Institute for Health Research, Wellcome Trust, Heart Foundation Australia.
169 cancer nurse specialist working practices at trusts, however, more detailed studies with longitudinal
170 l gut samples (obtained via the MRC-Wellcome Trust Human Developmental Biology Resource-UK) were char
171 percent reported that it would improve their trust in a product if a QRA process had been used to mak
172 ry from a large secondary mental health-care Trust in an ethnically diverse and urban location in sou
173  and have the potential to strengthen public trust in analysis of sensitive health data.
174 ange of problems currently undermines public trust in biomedical research.
175 n tree analyses, we found that low levels of trust in fisheries management was the most powerful pred
176       Respondents reporting higher levels of trust in information from government sources were more l
177 evel institutional social capital (levels of trust in institutions), social mobility, income inequali
178 s that the rich-poor gap, level of citizens' trust in institutions, economic opportunity, and public
179 he future state of an environment must weigh trust in new observations against prior experiences.
180 icated, we observed only a small decrease in trust in numbers and trustworthiness of the source, and
181  available public surveys about the public's trust in nutrition science and the factors that influenc
182 ored current practices and threats to public trust in nutrition science, including gaps that erode tr
183 e earning and keeping the public's continued trust in nutrition science.
184            Antisocial individuals have lower trust in others unless they know that they can punish th
185 ge forensics has emerged to help return some trust in photography.
186 ol measures appear to be dependent on public trust in relevant authorities and information, but littl
187                                     Building trust in science and evidence-based decision-making depe
188                                              Trust in science increases when scientists and the outle
189 heir studies, while simultaneously improving trust in scientific results and machine learning tools.
190 cal trial data management, and could bolster trust in the clinical research process and the ease at w
191 ve around ethical concerns regarding lack of trust in the diagnostic accuracy of computers.
192                Qualitative research revealed trust in the guideline and found that its accessibility
193  vaccine delays or refusals due to a lack of trust in the importance, safety, or effectiveness of vac
194 pants were not largely concerned with losing trust in the organ donation process.
195 te or cooperate and were asked to rate their trust in the other player.
196 lth data for research is relatively low, and trust in the process of data's being shared with multipl
197  of the resident; (2) a decision to initiate trust in the resident to begin the surgery; (3) close ob
198 isk-benefit assessments, personal intuition, trust in the study team, and religious faith.
199 assess reliability and validity of patient's trust in the surgical decision making process.
200                                   The 5-item Trust in the Surgical Decision Scale has strong evidence
201 accination rates globally include low public trust in vaccines, constraints on affordability or acces
202 s a different perspective on disagreement in trust in wider society, and motivates new research into
203 here individuals rated familiarity with, and trust in, 60 news sources from three categories: (i) mai
204 on physical restraint usage in mental health Trusts in the United Kingdom evaluated.
205 e association studies) is restricted to only trusted individuals.
206                                     Wellcome Trust Institutional Strategic Support Fund grant (105605
207 table attractor switching between two highly trusted interpretations.
208                                  The Nobeoka Trust is an on-land analog of the modern splay fault at
209              This study showed that surgical trust is constructed through an iterative process involv
210                        The resulting lack of trust is impacting law enforcement, national security, t
211       Having a reliable and valid measure of trust is important to assess the quality of the patient-
212  Research Council, Norwegian Regional Health Trusts, Kavli Trust, MEandYou Foundation, and Norwegian
213  at South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, King's College London, and NIHR Collaboration for
214 ung cancer nurse specialist and according to trust-level reported working practices.
215 l Marsden National Health Service Foundation Trust (London, UK).
216 (Royal Brompton and Harefield NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK), and randomly assigned (1:1) to phase
217 igible patients (The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, United Kingdom).
218 cil, Norwegian Regional Health Trusts, Kavli Trust, MEandYou Foundation, and Norwegian ME Association
219  Despite the common use of fingerprints as a trusted means of identification, no method currently exi
220  that having algorithms up-rank content from trusted media outlets may be a promising approach for fi
221 lection of 47,457 question-answer pairs from trusted medical sources which we introduce and share in
222  Council of Science and Technology, Wellcome Trust, Medical Research Council, and Kidney Research UK.
223                                     Wellcome Trust, Medical Research Council, British Heart Foundatio
224                                     Wellcome Trust, Medical Research Council, British Heart Foundatio
225                                     Wellcome Trust, Medical Research Council, Department of Health an
226   In October 2017, Malawi-Liverpool Wellcome Trust (MLW) organized a wide range of community engageme
227      However, less than half of participants trusted more than one potential user of data, although t
228        UK Medical Research Council, Wellcome Trust, National Institute for Health Research Oxford Hea
229 48.FUNDINGMedical Research Council, Wellcome Trust, National Institute for Health Research.
230               UK NIHR, BHF, UK MRC, Dinosaur Trust, NIH/NHLBI, ERS, EMBO, Wellcome Trust, EU, AHA, AC
231                                     Wellcome Trust, NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre, NIHR Oxfo
232  would submit to this process would earn the trust of consumers and healthcare providers, as well as
233 ey function correctly and that they gain the trust of experts.
234  Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance and The Wellcome Trust of Great Britain.
235 who were familiar with genetics and who were trusting of the users asking for data were more likely t
236 lead to an attentional boosting of perceived trust on high trust and ambiguous neutral faces, suggest
237  the other person prior to their decision to trust or not trust.
238 trust suggests that people feel obligated to trust other people even at zero acquaintance, thus trust
239                                     Wellcome Trust, Pan American Health Organization.
240 actice, the researchers could cooperate with trusted peers to reflect on how and why they may each pe
241                                              Trust pervades nearly every social aspect of our daily l
242        To do so, we ask whether crowdsourced trust ratings can effectively differentiate more versus
243                                              Trust ratings did not change across treatment sessions.
244 ion that an over-the-counter drug can impact trust-related behavior.
245                                   The use of trusted relays can extend these distances from across a
246 f 0.12 bits per second, without the need for trusted relays.
247 ions motivated by the conviction that public trust remains key to the realization of the benefits of
248 cess involved in the formulation of surgical trust remains poorly understood.
249 high rate poses a serious threat to consumer trust, reputations of seafood businesses and the sustain
250    This study was done at the KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Research Programme among residents of the Kilifi H
251  Youth (TODAY) Study showcases a successful, trusting research collaboration with tribal nations and
252 ata become data stewards, with fiduciary (or trust) responsibilities to patients to carefully safegua
253 onal Institute for Health Research, Wellcome Trust, Rosetrees Trust, Stoneygate Trust.
254 n's second affiliation was given as Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Wellcome Genome Campus, Hinxton,
255               A previously published 10-item trust scale was qualitatively tested with patients, and
256         Antisocial individuals honor others' trust significantly less (if they cannot be punished) bu
257 holars focus on whether diversity undermines trust, social capital, and collective goods provision.
258 r Health Research, Wellcome Trust, Rosetrees Trust, Stoneygate Trust.
259 ar Disease in Russia supported by a Wellcome Trust Strategic Award (100217) and was supported by the
260      This work was supported by the Wellcome Trust Strategic Award for Medical Mycology and Fungal Im
261                                  Research on trust suggests that people feel obligated to trust other
262 ment for International Development, Wellcome Trust, Swiss Development Cooperation, UNICEF, and US Nat
263 & Melinda Gates Foundation, UK Aid, Wellcome Trust, Swiss Development Cooperation, US National Instit
264 ent a model that can be used to estimate the trust that humans assign to a machine.
265                 However, a coherent model of trust that integrates separate findings under a conceptu
266                                           We trust that these guidelines will help to reduce misunder
267 1 respondents, 349 (31.9%, 95% CI 27.4-36.9) trusted that local authorities represent their interest.
268 out feelings within the family (P = .00) and trusting that health care professionals made every possi
269                     We find that forecasters trust the model rarely, in a pattern that suggests they
270 pert advisors, but only the best forecasters trust the models when they can be expected to perform we
271 y 9% of participants would be less likely to trust the organ donation process.
272 guidelines to guide physicians on whether to trust the results of an OCT scan.
273 works, BrainNet allows Receivers to learn to trust the Sender who is more reliable, in this case, bas
274  lore often emphasizes 'quieting the mind', 'trusting the body' and 'avoiding overthinking' in referr
275                          Helmsley Charitable Trust, the National Center for Advancing Translational S
276      British Heart Foundation, the UK Marfan Trust, the UK Marfan Association.
277 Hutch Center for AIDS Research; the Wellcome Trust; the University of Washington Royalty Research Fun
278  behaviour before deciding whether or not to trust them.
279 titute for Health Research, and the Wellcome Trust through the Joint Global Health Trials Scheme (MR/
280 nhanced our previous computational algorithm TRUST to extract the B cell immunoglobulin hypervariable
281 blind, randomised trial at Vestfold Hospital Trust (Tonsberg, Norway), in which patients (aged >=18 y
282 at knowledge into useful terms, establishing trusted two-way communication channels, evaluating the p
283    Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Wellcome Trust, UK Department for International Development, and
284  GlaxoSmithKline, Servier, HemoCue, Wellcome Trust, UK Medical Research Council, UK National Institut
285                                     Wellcome Trust, UK Ministry of Defence, and National Institute fo
286 herman Foundation, NeMO Foundation, Wellcome Trust, UK National Institute for Health Research Cambrid
287             This reduces the credibility and trust upon which all science depends for support.
288 ment for International Development, Wellcome Trust, US National Institutes of Health, Royal College o
289 the South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust using its Clinical Record Interactive Search (CRIS
290 but demonstrate that even complex brains can trust vital functions to individual neurons.
291     The aim of this study was to explore how trust was constructed between surgeons and residents in
292 ng themes of control and responsibility, and trust was noted to increase over time and over repeated
293   The main reasons described for withdrawing trust were: inability to follow instructions, failure to
294 idence, socioeconomic status, and sources of trust, were determined using univariate Bayesian logisti
295 and the damaging effect on eroding community trust-were conceptualized beforehand in the 1925 novel A
296 novative New Diagnostics, Sir Halley Stewart Trust, WHO, TB REACH, and IFHAD: Innovation for Health a
297 onal Institute for Health Research, Wellcome Trust, WHO, US Alzheimer's Association, and European Res
298 d that 99.0% predicted-negative cases can be trusted with high confidence, leading to a potential red
299 pants from two National Health Service (NHS) Trusts within the United Kingdom (UK).
300                                     Wellcome Trust, Wolfson Foundation, British Heart Foundation, Nat

 
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