Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"Fall" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Intra-individual variability in cognitive performance predicts falls in older adults with chronic stroke Dimri V; Davis JC; Boa Sorte Silva NC; Balbim GM; Eng JJ; Liu-Ambrose T; 41474479
HKAP
2 Synergistic effects of exercise, cognitive training and vitamin D on gait performance and falls in mild cognitive impairment-secondary outcomes from the SYNERGIC trial Pieruccini-Faria F; Son S; Zou G; Almeida QJ; Middleton LE; Bray NW; Lussier M; Shoemaker JK; Speechley M; Liu-Ambrose T; Burhan AM; Camicioli R; Li KZH; Fraser S; Berryman N; Bherer L; Montero-Odasso M; 40966614
SOH
3 Automated abdominal aortic calcification scoring from vertebral fracture assessment images and fall-associated hospitalisations: the Manitoba Bone Mineral Density Registry Sim M; Gebre AK; Dalla Via J; Reid S; Jozani MJ; Kimelman D; Monchka BA; Gilani SZ; Ilyas Z; Smith C; Suter D; Schousboe JT; Lewis JR; Leslie WD; 40080298
ENCS
4 Improvements in Postural Stability, Dynamic Balance, and Strength Following 12 Weeks of Online Ballet-Modern Dance Classes for Older Women Chen EH; Bergdahl A; Roberts M; 38863786
HKAP
5 At-home computerized executive-function training to improve cognition and mobility in normal-hearing adults and older hearing aid users: a multi-centre, single-blinded randomized controlled trial Downey R; Gagné N; Mohanathas N; Campos JL; Pichora-Fuller KM; Bherer L; Lussier M; Phillips NA; Wittich W; St-Onge N; Gagné JP; Li K; 37864139
PERFORM
6 Rethinking microbial infallibility in the metagenomics era O' Malley MA; Walsh DA; 34160589
BIOLOGY
7 Particulate matter transported from urban greening plants during precipitation events in Beijing, China. Cai M, Xin Z, Yu X 31284207
ENCS
8 The Association between Generalized Anxiety Disorder, Subthreshold Anxiety Symptoms and Fear of Falling among Older Adults: Preliminary Results from a Pilot Study. Payette MC, Bélanger C, Benyebdri F, Filiatrault J, Bherer L, Bertrand JA, Nadeau A, Bruneau MA, Clerc D, Saint-Martin M, Cruz-Santiago D, Ménard C, Nguyen P, Vu TTM, Comte F, Bobeuf F, Grenier S 28452660
PERFORM
9 Consensus on Shared Measures of Mobility and Cognition: From the Canadian Consortium on Neurodegeneration in Aging (CCNA). Montero-Odasso M, Almeida QJ, Bherer L, Burhan AM, Camicioli R, Doyon J, Fraser S, Muir-Hunter S, Li KZH, Liu-Ambrose T, McIlroy W, Middleton L, Morais JA, Sakurai R, Speechley M, Vasudev A, Beauchet O, Hausdorff JM, Rosano C, Studenski S, Verghese J, Canadian Gait and Cognition Network 30101279
PERFORM
10 Association Between Falls and Brain Subvolumes: Results from a Cross-Sectional Analysis in Healthy Older Adults. Beauchet O, Launay CP, Barden J, Liu-Ambrose T, Chester VL, Szturm T, Grenier S, Léonard G, Bherer L, Annweiler C, Helbostad JL, Verghese J, Allali G, Biomathics and Canadian Gait Consortium 27785698
PERFORM
11 Posterior dopamine D2/3 receptors and brain network functional connectivity. Nagano-Saito A, Lissemore JI, Gravel P, Leyton M, Carbonell F, Benkelfat C 28700819
PERFORM

 

Title:Rethinking microbial infallibility in the metagenomics era
Authors:O' Malley MAWalsh DA
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34160589/
DOI:10.1093/femsec/fiab092
Publication:FEMS microbiology ecology
Keywords:bioremediationenrichment cultureshypothesis versus explorationmetagenomicsmicrobial diversitymicrobial infallibility
PMID:34160589 Category: Date Added:2021-06-23
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 School of History and Philosophy of Science, Carslaw Building, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
2 Department of Biology, Concordia University, 7141 Sherbrooke St. West Montreal, QC, H4B 1R6, Canada.

Description:

The 'principle of microbial infallibility' was a mainstay of microbial physiology and environmental microbiology in earlier decades. This principle asserts that wherever there is an energetic gain to be made from environmental resources, microorganisms will find a way to take advantage of the situation. Although previously disputed, this claim was revived with the discovery of anammox bacteria and other major contributors to biogeochemistry. Here, we discuss the historical background to microbial infallibility, and focus on its contemporary relevance to metagenomics. Our analysis distinguishes exploration-driven metagenomics from hypothesis-driven metagenomics. In particular, we show how hypothesis-driven metagenomics can use background assumptions of microbial infallibility to enable the formulation of hypotheses to be tested by enrichment cultures. Discoveries of comammox and the anaerobic oxidation of methane are major instances of such strategies, and we supplement them with outlines of additional examples. This overview highlights one way in which metagenomics is making the transition from an exploratory data-analysis programme of research to a hypothesis-testing one. We conclude with a discussion of how microbial infallibility is a heuristic with far-reaching implications for the investigation of life.





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