Results 131 to 140 of about 89,139 (298)
Pengsheng Li,1,2,* Haiyan Wang,2,3,* Jinping Feng,2 Gengdong Chen,1,2 Zixing Zhou,1,2 Xiaoyan Gou,2,3 Shaoxin Ye,1,2 Dazhi Fan,1,2 Zhengping Liu,1,2 Xiaoling Guo2 1Foshan Fetal Medicine Research Institute, Affiliated Foshan Maternity & Child ...
Li P +9 more
doaj
Abstract Primates show a high degree of locomotor diversity that engenders similar variance in limb bone cross‐sectional geometry and bending strength: leaping primates have stronger hindlimb bones whereas suspensory species have stronger forelimb bones.
Angela M. Mossor +7 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract The cortical bone structure of long bone diaphyses changes throughout growth via skeletal modeling and has important implications for bone strength and structural integrity. Ontogenetic trends in diaphyseal structure have been identified in both chimpanzees and humans but it is not yet clear how these trends compare given notable differences ...
Karen R. Swan +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Valuing parental engagement, as part of home–school collaboration, can benefit children's learning. This article focuses on parents and school‐based staff's (N = 120) experiences of children's learning occurring at home during the COVID‐19 lockdowns (2020–2021), both school‐mandated and other learning activities.
Ashley Brett +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Prenatal stress and neonatal rat brain development
Chronic or repeated stress during human fetal brain development has been associated with various learning, behavioral, and/or mood disorders, including depression in later life. The mechanisms accounting for these effects of prenatal stress are not fully
Steinbusch, H.W.M. +15 more
core +1 more source
Neural correlates of prenatal stress in young women. [PDF]
BACKGROUND: Prenatal stress is hypothesized to have a disruptive impact on neurodevelopmental trajectories, but few human studies have been conducted on the long-term neural correlates of prenatal exposure to stress. The aim of this study was to explore
Manara R +4 more
core +1 more source
ABSTRACT Introduction Residential environments have been linked to brain structure, particularly in children, older adults, and clinical populations. However, little is known about how different dimensions of the housing environment relate to brain white matter microstructure in healthy adults, or whether specific environmental factors show stronger ...
Keisuke Kokubun +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Humans are not unique: difficult birth is common in placental mammals
ABSTRACT Human childbirth is widely presumed to be uniquely difficult and dangerous compared to birth in other mammals. Tight fetopelvic proportions can result in obstructed labour and contribute to high rates of maternal and neonatal mortality. Ideas summarised under the ‘obstetrical dilemma’ have contributed to this assumption by explaining difficult
Nicole D. S. Grunstra
wiley +1 more source
Epilepsy, a relatively common and chronic neurological condition, affects 1-2% of the population. The underlying pathophysiology of epileptogenesis is not completely understood.
Korgan, Austin
core
Maternal Prenatal Depressive Symptoms Predict Parental Stress
Mother’s level of prenatal depressive symptoms can affect maternal health and infant behavior. Misri and colleagues (2010) demonstrated a link between prenatal depression and later parental stress in a clinical sample of 94 mothers.
Elizarraras, Jitka
core

