1.Epidemic characteristics and drug resistance of non-typhoid salmonella in Zhongshan city from 2013 to 2015
Quanshan ZHANG ; Tao ZHOU ; Simao FU ; Guangqing XIE ; Zhantu LIANG ; Xiaoling LONG
Chinese Pediatric Emergency Medicine 2018;25(2):132-135
Objective To investigate the epidemiological characteristics and drug sensitivity of non-typhoid salmonella in Zhongshan city.Methods We collected the positive cases of non-typhoid salmonella in children of Zhongshan city from 2013 to 2015.The sex,age,place of residence,onset time and main serum type of these cases were collected.The characteristics of the cases were described by descriptive epidemiologi-cal study.Results From 2013 to 2015,3 040 stool specimens from patients with enteritis were collected and 402 strain of non-typhoid salmonella were separated out. The total detection rate was 13.22%,the annual detection rate were 10.26%,12.21% and 16.76%,respectively.The peak period was from July to August every year.Of the 402 children,240 were male,162 were female,and the ratio was 1.48:1.The minimum age was 1 month,the maximum was 5 years and 8 months,the mean age was 13.62 months.All patients were characterized by diarrhea and fever,including 64 cases of bloody stool and 1 case of sepsis.The most com-mon serotypes were 4,5,12:i:-and 4,12:i:-.The resistant strains were salmonella typhimurium and variety salmonella typhimurium strains.From 2013 to 2015,the resistance rate of ceftriaxone and ceftazidime in non-typhoid salmonella isolates increased linearly (ceftriaxone: 17.35%, 26.23%, 39.01%; ceftazidime:12.24%,17.21%,30.77%).The differences were statistically significant(χ2=30.3,P<0.01;χ2=26.3, P<0.01).Conclusion The positive rate of nontyphoid salmonella increased year by year from 2013 to 2015.The most common serotype was salmonella typhimurium, and the resistant strains were salmonella typhimurium and salmonella typhimurium variety.The resistance rate of non-typhoid salmonella to ceftriaxone and ceftazidime increased year by year,and the highest rate of ceftazidime resistance was in July 2015.Non-typhoid salmonella was more resistant to ceftriaxone than ceftazidime.
2. Gender Role, But Not Sex, Shapes Humans’ Susceptibility to Emotion
Jiajin YUAN ; Jiemin YANG ; Hong LI ; Dandan ZHANG ; Quanshan LONG ; Tatia M. C. LEE ; Dandan ZHANG ; Dandan ZHANG
Neuroscience Bulletin 2021;37(2):201-216
It is unknown whether the famous sex-related difference in emotion processing is accounted for by biological sex, gender role, or their interaction. To clarify the issue, in Study 1 we recorded event-related potentials in response to negative and positive images of diverse intensities when 47 masculine (26 males) and 47 feminine (22 males) subjects performed a non-emotional task. The occipital P1 and N1 amplitudes were larger in women than in men, while feminine subjects showed larger N1 amplitudes than masculine subjects, regardless of sex. Moreover, feminine subjects showed enhanced frontocentral N2 (210–270 ms) amplitudes for highly and mildly negative than for neutral stimuli, while masculine subjects showed an emotion effect only for highly negative stimuli. The feminine-specific effect for mildly negative stimuli was positively correlated to the feminine score, and this correlation was located to the anterior cingulate and the superior and medial frontal gyri. Furthermore, feminine but not masculine subjects showed enhanced parietal P3 (330–560 ms) amplitudes for highly and mildly positive than for neutral stimuli, an effect positively related to the feminine score and localized to the precuneus, posterior cingulate, and superior temporal gyrus. Machine learning analyses verified that single-trial N2 and P3 amplitudes of feminine subjects reliably discriminated the intensity of negative and positive stimuli, respectively. For ecological considerations, in Study 2 we used an observational approach (n = 300) and confirmed that feminine gender role, rather than biological sex, predicted individual differences in daily experience of emotion-related psychopathological symptoms. These findings provide solid evidence for the critical impact of gender role rather than sex on emotional susceptibility.
3.Facial Expression Enhances Emotion Perception Compared to Vocal Prosody: Behavioral and fMRI Studies.
Heming ZHANG ; Xuhai CHEN ; Shengdong CHEN ; Yansong LI ; Changming CHEN ; Quanshan LONG ; Jiajin YUAN
Neuroscience Bulletin 2018;34(5):801-815
Facial and vocal expressions are essential modalities mediating the perception of emotion and social communication. Nonetheless, currently little is known about how emotion perception and its neural substrates differ across facial expression and vocal prosody. To clarify this issue, functional MRI scans were acquired in Study 1, in which participants were asked to discriminate the valence of emotional expression (angry, happy or neutral) from facial, vocal, or bimodal stimuli. In Study 2, we used an affective priming task (unimodal materials as primers and bimodal materials as target) and participants were asked to rate the intensity, valence, and arousal of the targets. Study 1 showed higher accuracy and shorter response latencies in the facial than in the vocal modality for a happy expression. Whole-brain analysis showed enhanced activation during facial compared to vocal emotions in the inferior temporal-occipital regions. Region of interest analysis showed a higher percentage signal change for facial than for vocal anger in the superior temporal sulcus. Study 2 showed that facial relative to vocal priming of anger had a greater influence on perceived emotion for bimodal targets, irrespective of the target valence. These findings suggest that facial expression is associated with enhanced emotion perception compared to equivalent vocal prosodies.
Adult
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Brain Mapping
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methods
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Cerebral Cortex
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diagnostic imaging
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physiology
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Emotions
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physiology
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Facial Expression
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Facial Recognition
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physiology
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Female
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Humans
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Psychomotor Performance
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physiology
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Social Perception
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Speech Perception
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physiology
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Young Adult