Argentine National Observatory

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    Psychophysiology and Somatic Practice

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    This project presents a qualitative observational study exploring the effects of deep diaphragmatic regulation on psychoemotional state and psychophysiological processes. The work is based on more than 3000 individual body-oriented sessions and focuses on interoceptive awareness, autonomic regulation, tissue dynamics, and altered states of consciousness emerging during non-invasive somatic interaction. This project is published as a scientific preprint and does not represent a clinical or medical study

    Air pollution through the french media

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    The linguistic and cognitive effects of a one-week online Italian language course: A pilot study

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    All data, analysis code and supplementary materials (including the course programme outline, raw dataset, R scripts and participant feedback

    Latent Failure-Risk Inference for Predictive Detection of Methane Super-Emitters

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    Moving from primarily reactive monitoring toward earlier warning signals using satellite time serie

    Podcast Vozes do CELGA-ILTEC

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    O podcast «Vozes do CELGA-ILTEC», desenvolvido pelo Centro de Estudos de Linguística Geral e Aplicada da Universidade de Coimbra, pretende dar a conhecer ao público em geral o percurso académico, profissional e pessoal dos diversos membros do centro de investigação

    Linguaggio tossico e costruzione del consenso su Instagram e Facebook: un’analisi dei contenuti politici e giornalistici in campagna elettorale.

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    Questo repository contiene i Materiali Supplementari dello studio “Linguaggio tossico e costruzione del consenso su Instagram e Facebook: un’analisi dei contenuti politici e giornalistici in campagna elettorale” pubblicato sulla rivista ComPol. I materiali includono tabelle e figure aggiuntive a supporto delle analisi presentate nell’articolo. I dati grezzi non sono resi disponibili in quanto soggetti alle policy di Meta

    Human cell-based models of cardiac ischaemia-reperfusion injury: a scoping review of experimental procedures

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    Cardiac ischaemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) is a major contributor to myocardial damage following coronary diseases and cardiac transplantation. Despite extensive preclinical research demonstrating cardioprotective strategies in animal models, successful translation into human therapies has been limited. While animal models capture systemic in vivo complexity, they do not fully replicate human cardiac physiology, and the intertwined nature of signalling pathways in vivo makes mechanistic dissection challenging. Human cell-based in vitro models offer a valuable complementary way to study cardiac ischaemia-reperfusion injury. They allow researchers to tightly control experimental conditions, explore underlying mechanisms in detail, and test potential therapeutic strategies. Despite these advantages, there is substantial heterogeneity in how cardiac IRI is modelled in vitro. Studies differ widely in the cell types used, the methods and durations of ischaemia and reperfusion, oxygen and nutrient conditions, and the outcomes assessed. This lack of consistency makes results harder to interpret, reduces reproducibility, and limits meaningful comparisons between studies. This systematic scoping review focuses on human cell-based in vitro models of cardiac IRI. It aims to comprehensively map the experimental approaches used to simulate ischaemia and reperfusion in human cardiac cells, including human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes, primary cardiac cells, and advanced 3D models. The review will synthesise current evidence on commonly employed ischaemia induction methods such as oxygen-glucose deprivation, ischaemic mimetic buffers, and hypoxic chamber exposure as well as reperfusion strategies involving reoxygenation and nutrient restoration. Key methodological features will be systematically examined, including ischaemia and reperfusion durations, oxygen levels, nutrient conditions, and outcome assessment techniques. The review will compare practices across studies, highlighting variability in endpoints such as cell viability, oxidative stress, mitochondrial function, and contractility. It will also evaluate emerging methods, including the use of 3D and multicellular models and the potential for personalised approaches using hiPSC-derived cardiac cell populations. Expected outcomes include a comprehensive mapping of existing methodologies, identification of common practices and inconsistencies, and recognition of critical gaps in current experimental designs. This synthesis will inform researchers about the strengths and limitations of current human cell-based cardiac IRI models and will support efforts toward methodological standardisation. Ultimately, this work aims to enhance reproducibility, improve translational relevance, and facilitate the development of more robust and personalised therapeutic strategies for reducing cardiac IRI

    Electronic Lab Notebook Template

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    Clinical supervision of psychologists in primary care: a scoping review protocol

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    Abstract Introduction The prevalence of long-term conditions (LTCs) and mental health disorders in England is increasing, placing significant strain on primary care services. General practitioners (GPs) face escalating workloads and often lack specialist training in behaviour change interventions, despite evidence of their effectiveness. The integration of practitioner psychologists into primary care services has been recommended as way to address these challenges, however, this recommendation has yet to be implemented across the UK. Clinical supervision is central to safe and effective psychological practice, however, existing UK supervision guidelines do not specifically address supervision within primary care contexts. Currently, there has been no review on the topic of clinical supervision of psychological professionals within UK primary care settings. Objective This scoping review aims to map the extent, range and nature of literature on clinical supervision of psychology professionals integrated within primary care, identify gaps and inform future guidelines. Methods and analysis The review will follow Arksey and O’Malley’s framework and Joanna Briggs Institute recommendations. English-language sources published from 1998 onwards will be searched across multiple databases (e.g., CINAHL, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Web of Science) and grey literature. Screening and data extraction will be conducted independently by two reviewers using Covidence, with results synthesised narratively. Reporting will adhere to the PRISMA-ScR checklist. Ethics and dissemination Ethics approval is not required for this scoping review. Dissemination of the findings will include a peer-reviewed publication and presentation at conference events. Key words Clinical supervision, integration, primary care, psychology professional

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