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Community ecologists have attempted to explain species abundance distribution (SAD) shape for more than 80 years, but usually without relating SAD shape explicitly to ecological variables. We explored whether the scale (total assemblage abundance) and shape (assemblage evenness) of avifaunal SADs were related to ecological covariates. We used data on avifaunas, in-site habitat structure and landscape context that were assembled from previous studies; this amounted to 197 transects distributed across 16,000 km(2) of the box-ironbark forests of southeastern Australia. We used Bayesian conditional autoregressive models to link SAD scale and shape to these ecological covariates. Variation in SAD scale was relatable to some ecological covariates, especially to landscape vegetation cover and to tree height. We could not find any relationships between SAD shape and ecological covariates. SAD shape, the core component in SAD theory, may hold little information about how assemblages are governed ecologically and may result from statistical processes, which, if general, would indicate that SAD shape is not useful for distinguishing among theories of assemblage structure.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-012-2438-1 | DOI Listing |
Behav Sci (Basel)
August 2025
Faculty of Psychology, Tianjin Normal University, Tianjin 300074, China.
Accurately discerning the authenticity of facial expressions is crucial for inferring others' psychological states and behavioral intentions, particularly in shaping interpersonal trust dynamics among elementary school children. While existing literature remains inconclusive regarding school-aged children's capability to differentiate between genuine and posed facial expressions, this study employed happy and sad facial stimuli to systematically evaluate their discrimination accuracy. Parallel to behavioral measures, children's gaze patterns during authenticity judgments were recorded using eye-tracking technology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Biodivers
August 2025
Faculty of Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Biochemistry and Environmental Protection, University of Novi Sad, Novi Sad, Serbia.
Chloroacetamides (CAAs) are an important class of synthetic herbicides long utilized in agriculture for their strong weed-control efficacy. However, their environmental and health impacts have raised significant concerns. Therefore, both the structural modification of known active compounds and the identification and design of new compounds with desirable properties and biological activity represent a significant challenge in pesticide chemistry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGroup Process Intergroup Relat
September 2025
York University, Canada.
Do people have mental representations of what apologetic faces look like? Do representations differ by gender? We used reverse correlation to (a) generate images that approximate mental representations of apologetic faces, (b) determine whether these images are rated highly on apology-related characteristics, and (c) see if ratings differ by gender of the image generator, target face, and/or image rater. Faces generated from male and female base faces to look apologetic were rated as more apologetic, remorseful, and sad than the base face, demonstrating these mental representations can be approximated using reverse correlation. Findings suggest visually represented apologies express multiple apology-related characteristics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Environ Res Public Health
July 2025
Department of Developmental Psychology and Socialization, University of Padova, 35131 Padova, Italy.
Emotion recognition is an essential social ability that continues to develop across adolescence, a period of critical socio-emotional changes. In the present study, we examine how signals from different sensory modalities, specifically touch and facial expressions, are integrated into a holistic understanding of another's feelings. Adolescents ( = 30) and young adults ( = 30) were presented with dynamic faces displaying either a positive (happy) or a negative (sad) expression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChildren (Basel)
June 2025
Department of Psychology, University of Cyprus, 1678 Nicosia, Cyprus.
Background/objectives: Sensory Processing Sensitivity (SPS), particularly its aesthetic subcomponent (Aesthetic Sensitivity; AES), has been linked to individual differences in emotional processing. This study examined whether parental visual attention to emotional facial expressions predicts corresponding attentional patterns in their children, and whether this intergenerational concordance is mediated by child AES and moderated by child empathy.
Methods: A sample of 124 Greek Cypriot parent-child dyads (children aged 7-12 years) participated in an eye-tracking experiment.