THE SHORT-TERM EFFECT OF LASER TRABECULOPLASTY ON THE GLAUCOMATOUS VISUAL FIELD. A PROSPECTIVE STUDY USING COMPUTERIZED PERIMETRY

2009 ◽  
Vol 62 (5) ◽  
pp. 705-714 ◽  
Author(s):  
ANDERS HEIJL ◽  
BOEL BENGTSSON
2015 ◽  
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Samreen Uppal ◽  
Richard E Stead ◽  
Bheemanagouda B Patil ◽  
Emer Henry ◽  
Jonathan Moodie ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
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pp. 820-823 ◽  
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Argiris Dinopoulos ◽  
Achilleas Attilakos ◽  
Maria Paschalidou ◽  
Maria Tsirouda ◽  
Anastasia Garoufi ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 100 (8) ◽  
pp. adv00125-5 ◽  
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C Habnouni ◽  
V Tauveron ◽  
S Leducq ◽  
S Gérémia ◽  
P Allain ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
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Dongliang Zhang ◽  
Fang Sun ◽  
Yilun Zhou ◽  
Xiaofeng Duan ◽  
Yi Sun ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 125 (5) ◽  
pp. 486-491 ◽  
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A-L Hamdan ◽  
A Sibai ◽  
L Mahfoud ◽  
D Oubari ◽  
J Ashkar ◽  
...  

AbstractObjective:To investigate the short term effect of hubble-bubble smoking on voice.Study design:Prospective study.Material:Eighteen non-dysphonic subjects (seven men and 11 women) with a history of hubble-bubble smoking and no history of cigarette smoking underwent acoustic analysis and laryngeal video-stroboscopic examination before and 30 minutes after hubble-bubble smoking.Results:On laryngeal video-stroboscopy, none of the subjects had vocal fold erythema either before or after smoking. Five patients had mild vocal fold oedema both before and after smoking. After smoking, there was a slight increase in the number of subjects with thick mucus between the vocal folds (six, vs four before smoking) and with vocal fold vessel dilation (two, vs one before smoking). Acoustic analysis indicated a drop in habitual pitch, fundamental frequency and voice turbulence index after smoking, and an increase in noise-to-harmonics ratio.Conclusion:Even 30 minutes of hubble-bubble smoking can cause a drop in vocal pitch and an increase in laryngeal secretions and vocal fold vasodilation.


Author(s):  
Florian Arendt

A test was done to see if reading a newspaper which consistently overrepresents foreigners as criminals strengthens the automatic association between foreign country and criminal in memory (i.e., implicit cultivation). Further, an investigation was done to find out if reading articles from the same newspaper produces a short-term effect on the same measure and if (1) emotionalization of the newspaper texts, (2) emotional reactions of the reader (indicated by arousal), and (3) attributed text credibility moderate the short-term treatment effect. Eighty-five participants were assigned to one of three experimental conditions. Participants in the control group received short factual crime texts, where the nationality of the offender was not mentioned. Participants in the factual treatment group received the same texts, but the foreign nationality was mentioned. Participants in the emotionalized treatment group received emotionalized articles (i.e., texts which are high in vividness and frequency) covering the same crimes, with the foreign nationality mentioned. Supporting empirical evidence for implicit cultivation and a short-term effect was found. However, only emotionalized articles produced a short-term effect on the strength of the automatic association, indicating that newspaper texts must have a minimum of stimulus intensity to overcome an effect threshold. There were no moderating effects of arousal or credibility pertaining to the impact on the implicit measure. However, credibility moderated the short-term effect on a first-order judgment (i.e., estimated frequency of foreigners of all criminals). This indicates that a newspaper’s effect on the strength of automatic associations is relatively independent from processes of propositional reasoning.


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