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1 tials while healthy humans watched videos of everyday actions embedded in congruent, incongruent, or
2 ge and disengage with one another to execute everyday actions from movement to decision making.
3 es while participants viewed short videos of everyday actions, then probed the structure in these res
4 ndwidth of head movements experienced during everyday activities (0-30 Hz).
5 7.5% of survivors reported needing help with everyday activities (P = .71), and 66.5% in the 33 degre
6 bout location of binocular VF loss impacting everyday activities and examining visual disability in g
7 ure accurate perception and behaviour during everyday activities and for our understanding of disorde
8                                     However, everyday activities are often performed under time-press
9 participants first watched a movie depicting everyday activities in a day of an actor's life.
10                 It is unknown which types of everyday activities promote the best language environmen
11 f-motion stimuli that are experienced during everyday activities remains unknown.
12 bular system encodes this information during everyday activities using pathway-specific neural repres
13                Incident activity was: normal everyday activities, 44 (40%); exercising, 33 (30%); con
14 ificant impact on functioning and performing everyday activities, but this varies between patients.
15 ct's stress over six continuous hours during everyday activities, including desk work, cleaning, and
16                           As we go about our everyday activities, our brain computes accurate estimat
17 ered in ball milling, powder processing, and everyday activities, such as ball sports.
18  a manufactured test house during prescribed everyday activities, such as cooking, cleaning, and open
19                                       During everyday activities, this stabilizing response is evoked
20 adolescent to rely on working memory for his everyday activities, while the changing and challenging
21 ive functions are crucial for performance of everyday activities.
22 oes become aligned during the performance of everyday activities.
23 t the level of autonomy, or what constituted everyday activities.
24 nge in scores on the physical-impairment and everyday-activities domains of the Migraine Physical Fun
25 oup (P<0.001 for each dose vs. placebo), and everyday-activities scores improved by 5.5 and 5.9 point
26 ility to shape our motor behavior rapidly in everyday activity, such as when walking on sand, suggest
27 jects learned a stranger's preference for an everyday activity-relative to one of three personally kn
28 oordinate eye and hand actions is central in everyday activity.
29 ups showed significantly different scores on everyday adaptive functioning.
30 rtners, after a natural stressor, resting or everyday affiliation.
31 n how socially situated actors navigate both everyday and major life choices.
32    They have to be able to translate between everyday and medical registers.
33 ensor provides reliable detection of F(-) in everyday applications for nonexpert users, especially in
34  both their first and second languages on an everyday basis for many years.
35                                              Everyday behavior frequently involves encounters with mu
36                                       In our everyday behavior, we frequently cancel one movement whi
37 eorganization in the sensorimotor cortex and everyday behavior.
38 basis of sensory information is essential to everyday behaviors.
39 egration during action, a process central to everyday behaviour, remains unclear.
40 uals with a chronic disease by understanding everyday behaviour.
41 ts were instructed to record a 30-second ECG everyday between the 2 procedures using a portable monit
42  dementia was a routine and expected part of everyday care in the participating acute hospital settin
43                                In pursuit of everyday clinical applicability, we retrained the 4-week
44 reater recognition of cardiac amyloidosis in everyday clinical practice, but the diagnosis continues
45 nology systems, a paucity of digital data on everyday clinical practice, financial subsidies and ince
46 humanitarian settings by normalizing them to everyday clinical practice.
47  determine how best to make SDM a reality in everyday clinical practice.
48 CDC criteria have appreciable limitations in everyday clinical practice.
49 ut can also potentially be implemented as an everyday clinical tool to detect pathology-related chang
50 vey on memory and executive domains from the Everyday Cognition (ECog) scale.
51 om the Memory Functioning Questionnaire, the Everyday Cognition battery, and a 7-item questionnaire.
52 n mean participant and partner report on the Everyday Cognition scale (memory domain).
53 l-processing strategies aimed at alleviating everyday communication problems for people with hearing
54                   Synthetic materials are an everyday component of modern healthcare yet often fail r
55               These findings suggest that in everyday conditions, where listeners can often see the s
56 suspected EDCs that are used in a variety of everyday consumer products, including plastics, epoxy re
57 (study 2) and when testing a broad array of "everyday" consumption items (study 3).
58 udies might not be available to listeners in everyday conversations, meaning that speech recognition
59 s attenuated among those with high levels of everyday creative experience (study 6) and after a knowl
60  overhead, making them cumbersome to use for everyday data exploration and prototyping.
61            Flexible behavior is critical for everyday decision-making and has been implicated in rest
62 ces relate to our own is a central aspect of everyday decision-making, yet how the brain performs thi
63 risk plays a crucial role in influencing our everyday decision-making.
64                                              Everyday decisions frequently require choosing among mul
65 tastiness is a particularly strong driver in everyday decisions on food consumption.
66 stem that can respond optimally to different everyday demands.
67 natural sciences and for the construction of everyday devices, from car engines to solar cells.
68                         We will discuss both everyday dietary compositions, as well as intermittent a
69 ation (unfair treatment in 6 situations) and everyday discrimination (frequency of day-to-day experie
70                                 In contrast, everyday discrimination interacted with sex (P = 0.03).
71      PD was assessed using sum scores of the Everyday Discrimination Scale (EDS).
72                                              Everyday discrimination was not associated with incident
73 ce and engineering, give rise to fascinating everyday effects (coffee rings), and influence technolog
74 romagnetic radiation produced by a number of everyday electronic devices on the measurements made by
75                                           In everyday English, culture is the knowledge and behaviour
76                 Reverberation encountered in everyday environments can substantially attenuate these
77  unified account of visual search in complex everyday environments requires additional deliberations
78                                              Everyday environments where learning occurs, such as cla
79                                   In complex everyday environments, action selection is critical for
80                                         Many everyday estimation tasks have an inherently discrete na
81                                              Everyday examples of an inability to exert such control
82 support an emergentist view and suggest that everyday experience with the target skill may promote "l
83                Unexpected events are part of everyday experience.
84  have increased with global inequality(3,4); everyday experiences can make economic disparities more
85                                 Retrieval of everyday experiences is fundamental for informing our fu
86 on, and cognition.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Our everyday experiences strongly influence the structure an
87                                     Although everyday experiences unfold continuously over time, shif
88  HOT can arguably account better for complex everyday experiences, such as emotions and episodic memo
89 avor is perhaps the most multisensory of our everyday experiences.
90           Time is a fundamental dimension of everyday experiences.
91 ich employs experience-sampling methodology, everyday exposure to rich and poor people elicits less n
92  increased risk of infertility in women from everyday exposures to our chemical environment.
93  significantly related to impairments in the everyday expression of empathic concern.
94 ch allows for robotic closed-loop control of everyday fabrics while remaining lightweight and maintai
95  the validity of the modelled contents using everyday face tasks that generalize identity judgements
96 hresholds of reactivity and the influence of everyday factors.
97            Patients compared their levels of everyday function at the end of the trial with their lev
98                                              Everyday function demands efficient and flexible decisio
99          However, how they contribute to the everyday function of the CNS is unclear.
100 ous cognitive and mood disorders that impair everyday functioning and overall quality of life.
101 s beneficial change in subjective ratings of everyday functioning and quality of life (QOL).
102 ortant points about the role of cognition in everyday functioning and the connections between cogniti
103      Visuomotor ability is quite crucial for everyday functioning, particularly in driving and sports
104 to stimuli in the environment is integral to everyday functioning.
105 er explained by the correlation structure of everyday hand movements than by correlated muscle activi
106 y against epidemic threats, but also to meet everyday health needs, thus realising the right to healt
107 engineering analysis tools can revolutionize everyday healthcare.
108 of sounds rich in harmonic structures in our everyday hearing environment, it has remained largely un
109 t frequencies is fundamentally important for everyday hearing.
110  from various low-frequency motions, such as everyday human activities.
111 ord, Joseph LeDoux and Hakwan Lau argue that everyday human conscious experiences cannot be understoo
112 ew and retrieving old information is part of everyday human life.
113 sentations of coarse gratings and a range of everyday images.
114 arder to identify and isolate in the child's everyday interaction with referents in the world than co
115                  Such disparities in common, everyday interactions between police and the communities
116  provides resources that enable the trust of everyday interactions to be undermined.
117                                         Many everyday interactions with moving objects benefit from a
118 emotional action tendencies is essential for everyday interactions.
119 mic each other's actions and postures during everyday interactions.
120 ress affects brain-to-brain synchrony during everyday joint activities.
121  effects in the WM that can be attributed to everyday L2 use, irrespective of critical periods or the
122 exciting applications - from speeding up our everyday laboratory routines to increasing the pace of b
123 thin the rich contextual environments of our everyday language experience.
124  everyday life scenarios (Amsterdam-Nijmegen Everyday Language Test A-scale) from baseline to immedia
125  stimuli experienced in a fashion similar to everyday learning situations-namely, in the presence of
126 s described as compacted and unobservable on everyday length scales.
127 it could represent a subclinical response to everyday-level exposure.
128  with DED completed the Impact of Dry Eye on Everyday Life (IDEEL) questionnaire; the other half comp
129 ant interest owing to their integration with everyday life activities.
130        Multiagent activity is commonplace in everyday life and can improve the behavioral efficiency
131  given that such decisions are ubiquitous in everyday life and central in domains from substance use
132 sical exertion is a ubiquitous phenomenon in everyday life and especially common in a range of neurol
133 nvestment of cognitive effort is required in everyday life and has received ample attention in recent
134 valid paradigm that emulates what happens in everyday life and is an example of the increasing trend
135 ts characteristics of reading performance in everyday life and is sensitive to improved reading acces
136 f spectacle independence and satisfaction in everyday life and little to no dysphotopsia.
137 reduced academic achievement, performance in everyday life and self-esteem.
138 nging from abstract theoretical modelling to everyday life devices.
139 a) It shields reflexive processing by making everyday life feel predictable, (b) it scaffolds which c
140 t analysis in decision making takes place in everyday life for animals and humans alike.
141         Social interactions are important in everyday life for primates and many other group-living a
142 ly vulnerable cognitive domains essential in everyday life functioning, was investigated in patients
143  signals), the impact of colour blindness on everyday life is not generally considered a topic of imp
144  of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease on everyday life of individuals and to manage pressure on h
145 isease control, and work productivity in the everyday life of patients with AR.
146  be retained and used.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Everyday life requires flexibility in switching between
147 nge in verbal communication effectiveness in everyday life scenarios (Amsterdam-Nijmegen Everyday Lan
148 term complication rates and patterns from an everyday life setting is lacking.
149               The highest level of perceived everyday life stress raised the risk of either receiving
150   This study examined whether high perceived everyday life stress was associated with an increased ri
151  more empathy and sensitivity for justice in everyday life than non-religious parents.
152  objects skillfully, a facility pervasive in everyday life that has undoubtedly contributed to the su
153                                              Everyday life unfolds continuously, yet we tend to remem
154                      For making decisions in everyday life we often have first to infer the set of en
155 -are some of the most important materials in everyday life(1).
156  the labor market, in social transactions in everyday life, and in studies involving experimental eco
157  However, given the nature of face memory in everyday life, and the social context in which it takes
158 ber generation is crucial in many aspects of everyday life, as online security and privacy depend ult
159 CE STATEMENT: Normal hearing is important to everyday life, but abnormal auditory experience during d
160  a painful symptom and can severely restrict everyday life, but might also participate in maintaining
161 eek to capture the impact of hearing loss on everyday life, but to date no one has synthesized the ra
162 ure into decisions.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT In everyday life, decisions are influenced by many factors,
163 chable displays will be increasingly used in everyday life, e.g., for so-called electronic wearables.
164       Liquid droplets, widely encountered in everyday life, have no flat facets.
165 nt materials, that are now ubiquitous in our everyday life, have particularly attracted the attention
166                                           In everyday life, most of our behaviors are based on the ar
167                                       During everyday life, our self-motion is generally not restrict
168 stics of faces and voices and the demands of everyday life, showing how the pattern of findings refle
169  applications has become an integral part of everyday life, some individuals suffer from an excessive
170                                           In everyday life, such task sequences are abstract in that
171                                           In everyday life, we continuously search for and classify o
172                                           In everyday life, we have to decide whether it is worth exe
173 clothing, or just obeying traffic lights, in everyday life, we must select items based on color.
174   They are embedded in struggles and joys of everyday life, years of establishing what Louis Pasteur
175  behavioural surface, both in the clinic and everyday life.
176 ponse inhibition is essential for navigating everyday life.
177 the life sciences, with increasing impact on everyday life.
178 ed actions performed by others is central to everyday life.
179 ty of the brain that is vitally important in everyday life.
180 urround us, and touching them is integral to everyday life.
181  in reward accumulation, decision-making and everyday life.
182 lectively critical for social functioning in everyday life.
183     Behavioural flexibility is essential for everyday life.
184  structures to guide future behaviour during everyday life.
185 ext across the range of print sizes found in everyday life.
186           Word reading is a critical part of everyday life.
187 ght intensities such as those encountered in everyday life.
188 cognitive control that affect performance in everyday life.
189  possible at the distances and timescales of everyday life.
190 avigate spatial environments is critical for everyday life.
191 rol, as well as perceptual stability, during everyday life.
192 ting a function in the service of navigating everyday life.
193 hdrawal, it decouples stress from craving in everyday life.
194  and an increasing relevance of genomics for everyday life.
195 de future learning is of great importance in everyday life.
196 ogies that hold promise to revolutionize the everyday life.
197            How does power manifest itself in everyday life?
198 e data help broaden our understanding of the everyday-life impact of childhood residual amblyopia.
199          SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: In dynamic, everyday-like, environments, flexible goal-directed beha
200 ortance of these two types of information in everyday listening (e.g., conversing in a noisy social s
201                                           In everyday listening, sound reaches our ears directly from
202 riations in speech production encountered in everyday listening.
203 s fluoro-organic compounds without which our everyday lives would be unimaginable.
204     Spoken language is a central part of our everyday lives, but the precise roles that individual co
205 ursued, despite the ubiquity of glass in our everyday lives, the utilization of the glass transition
206                                   During our everyday lives, we are confronted with a vast amount of
207 n, despite having a tremendous impact on our everyday lives.
208 ld simulate how people really think in their everyday lives.
209 senses, which plays an important role in our everyday lives.
210  diverse as science, the court room, and our everyday lives.
211 ere written on the basis of the 6 domains of everyday living affected by nystagmus that were elicited
212  alcohol), promotion of physical activity in everyday living, and control of ambient and indoor pollu
213 tem scale of social distress (SD) comprising everyday living, money matters, and self and others subs
214 1% body mass at levels that may occur during everyday living.
215                                              Everyday locomotion and obstacle avoidance requires effe
216 arry as much rice as possible using a set of everyday materials and divided into treatment groups wit
217 , light-matter interactions are pervasive in everyday materials fabrication and transformation.
218 unity dynamics in complex environments using everyday materials.
219 ariety of autonomous fluidic machines out of everyday materials.
220 ross individuals(13-15) and as a function of everyday media multitasking(16-19)-negatively correlate
221                                     Using an everyday memory task in mice, we sought the neurons medi
222 olomics, are now often incorporated into the everyday methodology of biological researchers.
223 th wearable devices may be more feasible for everyday monitoring than utilizing an electroencephalogr
224                 Extant reports of children's everyday moral talk reveal patterns of participation and
225 cipation of guilt about committing potential everyday moral transgressions, and tested the extent to
226 x is a critical pathway for the integrity of everyday movements and understanding the somatotopic spe
227              One of the most interesting and everyday natural phenomenon is the formation of differen
228 of visual circuits that evolved to recognize everyday objects and shapes in our natural environment.
229  imaging system and is practical for imaging everyday objects in the microwave spectrum.
230 gy has shown that even routinely experienced everyday objects such as brands can trigger cognitively
231 uman participants (21 females), we presented everyday objects, which had beforehand been associated w
232 g distance and be seamlessly integrated onto everyday objects.
233                        Despite this being an everyday observation, the underlying physical micromecha
234 imulated low-dose (10(2)) spore exposure, an everyday occurrence for humans, revealed a counter-intui
235 ived as much attention, despite their common everyday occurrence.
236 he ALD sensor is promising and adaptable for everyday on spot environment and food safety monitoring.
237 which highlights the statistical problems in everyday perception.
238 y interactions that powerfully influence our everyday perception.
239 and therefore are likely to be important for everyday performance.
240 ubiquity, a quantitative explanation of this everyday phenomenon is still lacking.
241 nsuring a focus on the delivery of essential everyday planned care over individual patient need or mo
242 o mimic patient presentations encountered in everyday practice and included information on symptom st
243                                              Everyday practice controlling two languages during liste
244  bring leading computational research to the everyday practice of bioimage analysts.
245 ets with divergent ingredients(1-5), but the everyday practice of cooking remains understudied.
246 ance, which includes the use of medicines in everyday practice.
247 here is limited information about its use in everyday practice.
248 d fully in a patient population representing everyday practice.
249 n a central role both in clinical trials and everyday practice.
250        Culture can be thought of as a set of everyday practices and a core theme-individualism, colle
251  selective pressures very different from the everyday pressures acting on organisms.
252 on-making deficits and excessive worry about everyday problems by disrupting the online updating ("re
253                We also discuss ways in which everyday problems related to colour vision might be redu
254 hat over their life cycle, chemicals used in everyday products contribute to raising cancer risks, es
255  of silver-based nanoparticles (Ag-b-NPs) in everyday products goes hand in hand with their release i
256  emissions reductions at the center of their everyday professional activities.
257 l biodiversity hotspots and have plagued the everyday reality of many countries throughout human hist
258 proach, however, is somewhat limiting, since everyday scenes are composed of complex images, consisti
259             Long-term functional outcomes in everyday settings, as assessed through the Child and Ado
260                                           In everyday situations auditory selective attention require
261 gest that this region's dominant function in everyday situations is to support reasoning about the th
262 emain largely unaware of our eye-blinking in everyday situations, eye-blinks are inhibited at precise
263 lear implants (CIs) still face challenges in everyday situations, such as understanding conversations
264 ent attentional selection is crucial in many everyday situations.
265 mptoms compared with non-carriers, and worse everyday skills.
266           ToM is engaged ubiquitously in our everyday social behavior and features a specific develop
267 between non-mindreading characterizations of everyday social cognition and the individualist, cogniti
268                                           In everyday social environments, demands on attentional res
269 ure assistance provided to immigrants during everyday social interactions.
270 re less support, face severe difficulties in everyday social interactions.
271  aim was to investigate the level of risk in everyday social situations as perceived by adolescents/y
272  emotions (anger and anxiety) in response to everyday sounds, such as those generated by other people
273 and/or psychological reactions to aspects of everyday sounds.
274 ation in Parkinson's disease, and effects on everyday symptoms should be examined in longer-term tria
275          Motion is an essential component of everyday tactile experience: most manual interactions in
276 en background noise is present is a critical everyday task that varies widely among people.
277 xations made by humans performing a range of everyday tasks (scene viewing and exemplar and categoric
278 Working memory is a capacity upon which many everyday tasks depend and which constrains a child's edu
279                                              Everyday tasks in social settings require humans to enco
280 e cognitive benefits are apparent in complex everyday tasks such as driving.
281                                           In everyday tasks such as walking and running, we often exp
282 eye + head movements when subjects performed everyday tasks while wearing a mobile eye tracker equipp
283 e substantia nigra (SN) play a vital role in everyday tasks, such as reward-related behavior and volu
284                                  However, in everyday tasks, the stimulus within the foveola is compl
285 ize information acquisition for a variety of everyday tasks.
286                                         Many everyday thoughts and actions are shaped not only by our
287      DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) pose an everyday threat to the conservation of genetic informati
288             Attention and perception are our everyday tools to navigate our surrounding world and the
289 inical consequences and the implications for everyday treatment.
290         EBFs include an array of measures of everyday usage of a second language in different types o
291                          To be practical for everyday use, a BCI-FES system should enable smooth cont
292 s controlled largely by the wear and tear of everyday use, environmental stress and unexpected damage
293 iven the continuous influx of information in everyday vision, VSTM storage under distraction is often
294                                              Everyday visual search can be impaired in patients with
295                                A fundamental everyday visual task is to detect target objects within
296 ld or demolish may have consequences for our everyday wellbeing.
297          Pressure measurements are performed everyday with simple devices, and in the field of analyt
298 le was predictable and surmountable, such as everyday work or family obligations but not a practical
299  of lung involvement in COVID-19 patients in everyday work, both for CXR and CT imaging.
300 ethics instruction that is divorced from the everyday workflow and practices within laboratories and

 
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