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1 terpretation of the story (e.g., sobbing to "crying").
2 acial expression upon smiling, laughing, and crying.
3 in formula-fed infants, or to prevent infant crying.
4 d the significance of early increased infant crying.
5 o inhibit a putative centre for laughter and crying.
6 bering the information while their child was crying.
7 , anxiety disorder, apathy, and pathological crying.
8 h audio was recorded continuously to capture crying.
9 ral symptoms (5 patients), ocular ("tearless crying") (4 patients), and skeletal stigmata (1 patient)
10 reathing patterns changed from predominantly crying (80.9% first min) to tidal breathing (65.3% sixth
11  agreed constituted pathological laughing or crying (a total of 56 episodes were documented).
12 chure, viewed an 8-minute video about infant crying and AHT, asked questions of the nurse, and signed
13 They are most influenced by symptoms such as crying and depressed mood, and medical factors that are
14 entified three underlying factors (laughter, crying and depression) loaded on appropriate questions o
15 s of PBA should stratify for gender, examine crying and laughter as separate outcomes and adjust for
16 alizations such as mews and cries in cats or crying and laughter in humans are examples of expression
17 ith tonality and temporal characteristics of crying and monitoring a reliable surrogate for systolic
18  vocalisations from infants and adults (both crying and neutral).
19 vocalised non-verbal expressions of sadness (crying) and happiness (laughter) in a 32-participant, wi
20 eech prosody, nonverbal vocalizations (e.g., crying), and (silent) facial expressions.
21 ts) reviewed, 6 suggested probiotics reduced crying, and 6 did not.
22 iculum focused on infant sleep, soothing and crying, and feeding.
23 uent and obvious mood symptoms, ie, sadness, crying, and irritability.
24 talking, coughing, throat clearing, tantrums/crying, and vocal strain.
25 ct from mood disorders in which laughter and crying are associated with feelings of happiness or sadn
26 ed learning a lot about understanding infant crying as normal; 11023 mothers (92.2%) and 2923 fathers
27 nium-stained umbilicus (aOR = 1.79), and not crying at birth (aOR = 2.58).
28                                          The crying behaviours of newborn infants are shown to be sur
29                                              Crying (but not laughter) correlated with depression, an
30 rn in a hospital), or both, or an absence of crying by 5 min of age (for babies born at home).
31 s 'disinhibit' or 'release' the laughter and crying centre.
32 re effective in the prevention/management of crying ("colic") in infants 3 months or younger.
33 hanges in proportions of telephone calls for crying concerns to a nurse advice line and in AHT rates
34  vocal sounds such as laughing, screaming or crying convey one's feelings to others.
35                                      Initial crying created a unique volumetric pattern with delayed
36 telephone calls to the nurse advice line for crying declined by 20% for children younger than 3 month
37 the duration or number of episodes of infant crying/distress or diagnosis of "infant colic." Twelve o
38 the duration or number of episodes of infant crying/distress, or diagnosis of "infant colic." RESULTS
39 -one patients with pathological laughing and crying due to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and 14 with
40 tile colic is a common cause of inconsolable crying during the first months of life and has been thou
41              In part, this is because infant crying, especially prolonged unsoothable crying, has bee
42 ilestones, where the infant stopped smiling, crying, expressing himself, or making eye contact.
43 ng allergic reactions, prolonged or abnormal crying, fussiness, dyspnea, and gastrointestinal distres
44  with histories of pathological laughing and crying had at least one episode in the laboratory that t
45 ant crying, especially prolonged unsoothable crying, has been interpreted clinically as something wro
46 during episodes of pathological laughing and crying; (ii) to compare responses during these episodes
47  L reuteri may be effective as treatment for crying in exclusively breastfed infants with colic, ther
48 ognized is the role of the early increase in crying in otherwise normal infants in the first few mont
49 s significant overlap between depression and crying in PBA.
50  age 4 months by vigorous motor activity and crying in response to unfamiliar visual, auditory, and o
51 universal parent education about coping with crying infants appears to be effective in lowering the i
52 igorously designed studies applicable to all crying infants will help draw more definitive conclusion
53 man mothers has a specific calming effect on crying infants, inducing a coordinated physiological res
54                         The Period of PURPLE Crying intervention was associated with a reduction in t
55                         The Period of PURPLE Crying intervention, developed by the National Center on
56                    Pathological laughing and crying is a disorder of emotional expression seen in a n
57                                              Crying is a distinctive component of NOWS assessment too
58 retation, namely, that the early increase in crying is a typical behavioral development in normal inf
59                             Excessive infant crying is common, distressing, but without proven effect
60 e form of nonverbal, social vocalization, or crying is evolutionary conserved in mammals and is impai
61 advice line telephone calls regarding infant crying (January 1, 2005, to December 31, 2010).
62 ld hands and feet, pathological laughter and crying, jerky myoclonic postural/action tremor and polym
63 males and does not interfere with breathing, crying, laughter, and shouting.
64                                       Infant crying, measured as the duration or number of episodes o
65 tandard treatment with the outcome of infant crying, measured as the duration or number of episodes o
66 s of regurgitation, duration of inconsolable crying (minutes per day), number of evacuations per day,
67                                              Crying of healthy neonates was recorded before hospital
68 hy on rehabilitation efforts or pathological crying on social functioning are evident.
69 atively uncontrollable episodes of laughter, crying or both.
70 s also favored DM/Q, including the number of crying or laughing episodes (p <or= 0.0077), quality of
71 ate vocalizations such as human laughing and crying or monkey calls.
72 0.95]), and wheezing after vigorous playing, crying, or exertion (0.18 [0.04-0.79]).
73  review evidence indicating that this normal crying pattern is the most common trigger for abusive he
74      Patients with pathological laughter and crying (PLC) are subject to relatively uncontrollable ep
75 f PBA and additionally finds PBA (especially crying-predominant PBA) more prevalent in women with ALS
76 port the idea that pathological laughing and crying represents activation of all channels of emotiona
77 lms, patients with pathological laughing and crying showed impairments compared with patients who did
78 han 2 years were primarily emotional (cranky/crying, sleep, and self-soothing).
79 ics of depression in the MGD group included: crying spells, sleep disturbance and depressed appetite.
80                 Women with PBA reported more crying than men.
81 d by uncontrollable episodes of laughing and crying that often cause embarrassment, curtailment of so
82     At 3 months of age, the mean duration of crying time (38 vs 71 minutes; P < .01), the mean number
83  that Lactobacillus reuteri markedly reduced crying time at 21 days (median difference, -65 minutes/d
84                           Reduction of daily crying time, regurgitation, and constipation during the
85 ctive pattern of vigorous motor activity and crying to specific unfamiliar visual, auditory and olfac
86 atically adjust the execution of laughter or crying to the cognitive and situational context of a pot
87 ot laughter) correlated with depression, and crying was associated with poorer quality of life.
88 l sclerosis but no pathological laughing and crying were studied.
89 en, and frequent episodes of laughing and/or crying, which can be socially disabling.
90           With the exception of pathological crying, which has been shown to respond to antidepressan