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In a series of 8 experiments, we demonstrate the existence of a "labeling effect" wherein people intuitively relate preferred choices to prominently labeled cues (such as heads as opposed to tails in a coin toss) and vice versa. Importantly, the observed congruence is asymmetric-it does not manifest for nonprominent cues and nonpreferred choices. This is because the congruence is driven by a process of evaluative matching: prominent cues are liked, but nonprominent cues are neutral or at most slightly negative in contrast. When we test prominent, yet truly negatively labeled cues, we indeed find a matching with less liked products. We discuss the theoretical contributions to the study of preferences and decision making, as well as demonstrate the practical implications to researchers and practitioners by using this process to assess intuitive preferences and reduce the compromise effect. (PsycINFO Database Record
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/xlm0000471 | DOI Listing |
Oncogene
September 2025
Division of Neurosurgery, Children's Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
It has become evident from decades of clinical trials that multimodal therapeutic approaches with focus on cell intrinsic and microenvironmental cues are needed to improve understanding and treat the rare, inoperable, and ultimately fatal diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG), now categorized as a diffuse midline glioma. In this study we report the development and characterization of an in vitro system utilizing 3D Tumor Tissue Analogs (TTA), designed to replicate the intricate DIPG microenvironment. The innate ability of fluorescently labeled human brain endothelial cells, microglia, and patient-derived DIPG cell lines to self-assemble has been exploited to generate multicellular 3D TTAs that mimic tissue-like microstructures, enabling an in- depth exploration of the spatio-temporal dynamics between neoplastic and stromal cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Behav
September 2025
Université De Lorraine, Inserm, IADI, Nancy, France.
Introduction: Odor imagery (OI), or the ability to mentally simulate the presence of a smell, is a difficult cognitive function and is therefore misunderstood in terms of its neural underpinnings. In particular, the diverging results obtained in neuroimaging studies could be explained in part by the characteristics of the visual cues used to trigger this task. In this study, we investigated this question by comparing the effects of plain color patches, pictures, and words during OI using neurophysiological and psychometrical measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
September 2025
Sanko School, Gaziantep, Turkey.
This study presents a novel privacy-preserving deep learning framework for accurately classifying fine-grained hygiene and water-usage events in restroom environments. Leveraging a comprehensive, curated dataset comprising approximately 460 min of stereo audio recordings from five acoustically diverse bathrooms, our method robustly identifies 11 distinct events, including nuanced variations in faucet counts and flow rates, toilet flushing, and handwashing activities. Stereo audio inputs were transformed into triple-channel Mel spectrograms using an adaptive one-dimensional convolutional neural network (1D-CNN), dynamically synthesizing spatial cues to enhance discriminative power.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE Trans Pattern Anal Mach Intell
August 2025
Humans can easily deduce the relative pose of a previously unseen object, without labeling or training, given only a single query-reference image pair. This is arguably achieved by incorporating i) 3D/2.5D shape perception from a single image, ii) render-and-compare simulation, and iii) rich semantic cue awareness to furnish (coarse) reference-query correspondence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEye Vis (Lond)
August 2025
State Key Laboratory of Eye Health, Eye Hospital, Wenzhou Medical University, Wenzhou, China.
Background: The visual pathway, consisting of the eye, optic nerve, and brain, serves as a valuable model for studying neural regeneration. The exceptional regenerative capacity of the zebrafish visual system enables detailed investigation of neural repair mechanisms in vivo. Although the transparency of zebrafish larvae permits real-time imaging of axonal regeneration following transection, previous methodological limitations such as pigment interference and suboptimal imaging protocols have hindered high-resolution analyses of structural recovery and cellular interaction throughout the entire visual pathway after optic nerve injury.
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