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In this article, we highlight the contributions of passive experiments that address important exercise-related questions in integrative physiology and medicine. Passive experiments differ from active experiments in that passive experiments involve limited or no active intervention to generate observations and test hypotheses. Experiments of nature and natural experiments are two types of passive experiments. Experiments of nature include research participants with rare genetic or acquired conditions that facilitate exploration of specific physiological mechanisms. In this way, experiments of nature are parallel to classical "knockout" animal models among human research participants. Natural experiments are gleaned from data sets that allow population-based questions to be addressed. An advantage of both types of passive experiments is that more extreme and/or prolonged exposures to physiological and behavioral stimuli are possible in humans. In this article, we discuss a number of key passive experiments that have generated foundational medical knowledge or mechanistic physiological insights related to exercise. Both natural experiments and experiments of nature will be essential to generate and test hypotheses about the limits of human adaptability to stressors like exercise. © 2023 American Physiological Society. Compr Physiol 13:4879-4907, 2023.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cphy.c220027 | DOI Listing |
Front Psychol
August 2025
School of Mathematics, Yangzhou University, Yangzhou, China.
Background: Embodied learning has attracted considerable attention in recent years. However, there is no academic consensus on whether embodied learning effectively enhances students' learning performance.
Objectives: This study aims to examine the overall effect of embodied learning on students' learning performance through a meta-analysis.
Front Psychol
August 2025
Department of Teacher Education, Taishan University, Tai'an, China.
Background: Past research has indicated the close connection between social media use and women's envy, but so far, no research has been conducted to exclusively examine the effect and mechanism of social media use on women's body-related envy.
Objective: To fill this gap, with TikTok as a representative example of video-based social media, four studies ( = 767) were conducted to explore whether and how social media use increases women's body-related envy, and the subsequent downstream consequences.
Method And Results: In Study 1a, we employed an online questionnaire survey and found that TikTok use had a significantly positive prediction on women's body-related envy.
Oecologia
September 2025
Grupo de Estudios Biofísicos y Ecofisiológicos (GEBEF), Instituto de Biociencias de La Patagonia (INBIOP), Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET) and Universidad Nacional de La Patagonia San Juan Bosco (UNPSJB), 9000, Comodoro Rivadavia, Argentina.
Under the scenario of global warming, the response of carbon (C) fluxes of arid and semi-arid ecosystems, is still not well understood. A field warming experiment using open top chambers (OTCs) was conducted in a shrub-grass patagonian steppe to evaluate the effects on bare soil respiration (R), and ecosystem respiration (R), gross primary productivity (GPP) and net C exchange (NEE) during the growing season. Air (T) and soil (T) temperature, and soil available phosphorus changed significantly while there were no changes in soil moisture, soil organic carbon, total soil nitrogen and root biomass, after one-year of treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMem Cognit
September 2025
Department of Psychology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, 97403, USA.
The "generation effect" is a phenomenon whereby people have better memory for information that is self-generated compared to information that is passively read. Throughout the years many theories have been proposed to explain this effect, one of which is the "mental effort theory," which suggests that more mental effort is allocated to self-generated information, meaning that the act of generating information inherently requires more mental effort than processing existing information. In a series of four paired-associates memory experiments, pupillometry (an independent measure of effort) was used to investigate a mental effort explanation of the generation effect within-subjects, between-subjects, and in a third experiment, within-subjects while manipulating generation difficulty.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
September 2025
Max-Planck-Institute for Biological Intelligence (Seewiesen), Starnberg, Germany.
Imitation of cultural practices is ubiquitous in humans and often involves faithful copying of intransitive (i.e., non-object directed) gestures and societal norms which play a crucial role in human cumulative cultural evolution.
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