1.Mental health awareness and stigmatization: A cross-sectional study of knowledge, attitudes, and perceptions among medical students at a Philippine medical school
Christine R. Sy ; Jose Ronilo G. Juangco
Health Sciences Journal 2025;14(1):36-42
INTRODUCTION
Mental health plays a crucial role in overall well-being, yet stigma and misconceptions persist, even among future healthcare professionals. This study assessed medical students’ knowledge, attitudes, and perceptions (KAP) regarding mental health and explored their association with sociodemographic characteristics.
METHODSWe conducted an analytical cross-sectional study among 270 medical students at a private Philippine university from September to October 2023. Participants completed a validated questionnaire. Descriptive statistics, Spearman’s correlation, and odds ratios were calculated.
RESULTSMost respondents exhibited high knowledge (80.7%), positive attitudes (90.4%), and favorable perceptions (95.6%) toward mental health. Students who had not interacted with individuals with mental illness were 2.87 times more likely to display negative attitudes (OR = 2.87, 95% CI: 1.19–6.90, p = 0.015). Attitude and perception showed a moderate positive correlation (r = 0.409, p < 0.001), while knowledge and perception demonstrated a weak negative correlation (r = -0.129, p = 0.034).
CONCLUSIONThese medical students generally possessed good knowledge, positive attitudes, and perceptions regarding mental health. Academic progression and real-life exposure positively influence attitudes, highlighting the need for experiential learning to reduce stigma and promote empathy in medical training.
Human ; Mental Health ; Knowledge ; Attitude ; Perception ; Philippines
2.Perceptions of teledermatology in the COVID-19 era: are patients ready for it?
Dawn Ai Qun OH ; Yi Wei YEO ; Shiu Ming PANG ; Choon Chiat OH ; Haur Yueh LEE ; Karen Jui Lin CHOO
Singapore medical journal 2025;66(12):640-644
INTRODUCTION:
The COVID-19 pandemic has changed care provision models, with a rapid increase in the adoption of telemedicine to reduce in-person visits. Although there are many benefits to teledermatology, there are also factors that hinder its widespread adoption. We aimed to examine patients' perceptions of teledermatology to identify the barriers to its adoption.
METHODS:
A prospective study was conducted from 15 June to 14 August 2020. Patients were invited to complete a questionnaire in an outpatient dermatology clinic via direct approach by clinical staff or posters posted at the door of consultation rooms.
RESULTS:
Out of 2,276 clinic attendances, 997 survey responses (43.8%) were collected over a 3-month period. When asked if they would change their subsequent visit to teledermatology, 294 (29.5%) patients were keen, 166 (16.6%) were unsure and 537 (53.9%) declined. Significant factors for declining teledermatology were lack of prior exposure to videoconferencing ( P < 0.01) and lower educational level ( P = 0.019). Patients also raised concerns regarding the ability of teledermatology to address medical concerns (32.1%) and indicated a preference for face-to-face consultation (29.7%).
CONCLUSION
Factors that influence patients' decision to adopt teledermatology, such as concerns about its ability to address medical issues, lack of IT literacy or experience in teleconferencing, are modifiable. Targeted strategies such as careful patient selection, a dedicated teleconsultation workflow, and the use of a novel 'teledermatology patient journey' (including a clinic walkthrough at the first visit) and an intuitive audio-enabled user interface, may improve patient perceptions and adoption of teleconsultation service.
Humans
;
COVID-19/epidemiology*
;
Dermatology/methods*
;
Telemedicine
;
Male
;
Female
;
Prospective Studies
;
Middle Aged
;
Adult
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
SARS-CoV-2
;
Aged
;
Perception
;
Young Adult
;
Pandemics
;
Skin Diseases/diagnosis*
;
Videoconferencing
3.Parents' perceptions and experiences of physical activity in childhood cancer survivors in Singapore: a qualitative study.
Lindsey Jean Ross WELLER ; Debbie Grant CAVERS ; Neneh ROWA-DEWAR
Singapore medical journal 2025;66(6):314-320
INTRODUCTION:
The survival rate for childhood cancer has increased with advances in medical care. Along with this comes the growing burden of long-term side effects of cancer treatment and cancer survivorship. Childhood cancer survivors are more likely to be sedentary and have a lower quality of life. Physical activity (PA) can promote health and well-being in childhood cancer survivors, but few studies have explored the role of parents of childhood cancer survivors (PCCS) in promoting PA. This qualitative study aims to explore the perceptions of PCCS in Singapore and the role they may have with regard to PA.
METHODS:
Participants were recruited through a local charity via email, social media and posters. One-hour semi-structured interviews were conducted online with seven parents. With consent, the interviews were recorded, transcribed verbatim and analysed using thematic analysis.
RESULTS:
Our study discussed thematically parents' accounts on (1) the barriers and enablers of PA and (2) the complications of cancer that potentially affect the levels of PA in childhood cancer survivors. Parents reported that childhood cancer negatively affects the quality of life and participation in PA. The determinants of participation in PA were multifaceted, and socioecological and health belief models were used to demonstrate how these factors were interlinked.
CONCLUSION
Participation in PA is influenced at an individual, family, community and societal level. The improved understanding facilitated by this research can be used to shape paediatric cancer care practices in Singapore and guide institutional or national policy interventions.
Humans
;
Singapore
;
Parents/psychology*
;
Cancer Survivors/psychology*
;
Qualitative Research
;
Female
;
Male
;
Quality of Life
;
Exercise
;
Child
;
Adult
;
Neoplasms
;
Adolescent
;
Perception
;
Middle Aged
;
Interviews as Topic
4.Neural network for auditory speech enhancement featuring feedback-driven attention and lateral inhibition.
Yudong CAI ; Xue LIU ; Xiang LIAO ; Yi ZHOU
Journal of Biomedical Engineering 2025;42(1):82-89
The processing mechanism of the human brain for speech information is a significant source of inspiration for the study of speech enhancement technology. Attention and lateral inhibition are key mechanisms in auditory information processing that can selectively enhance specific information. Building on this, the study introduces a dual-branch U-Net that integrates lateral inhibition and feedback-driven attention mechanisms. Noisy speech signals input into the first branch of the U-Net led to the selective feedback of time-frequency units with high confidence. The generated activation layer gradients, in conjunction with the lateral inhibition mechanism, were utilized to calculate attention maps. These maps were then concatenated to the second branch of the U-Net, directing the network's focus and achieving selective enhancement of auditory speech signals. The evaluation of the speech enhancement effect was conducted by utilising five metrics, including perceptual evaluation of speech quality. This method was compared horizontally with five other methods: Wiener, SEGAN, PHASEN, Demucs and GRN. The experimental results demonstrated that the proposed method improved speech signal enhancement capabilities in various noise scenarios by 18% to 21% compared to the baseline network across multiple performance metrics. This improvement was particularly notable in low signal-to-noise ratio conditions, where the proposed method exhibited a significant performance advantage over other methods. The speech enhancement technique based on lateral inhibition and feedback-driven attention mechanisms holds significant potential in auditory speech enhancement, making it suitable for clinical practices related to artificial cochleae and hearing aids.
Humans
;
Attention/physiology*
;
Speech Perception/physiology*
;
Neural Networks, Computer
;
Speech
;
Noise
;
Feedback
5.Research on bimodal emotion recognition algorithm based on multi-branch bidirectional multi-scale time perception.
Peiyun XUE ; Sibin WANG ; Jing BAI ; Yan QIANG
Journal of Biomedical Engineering 2025;42(3):528-536
Emotion can reflect the psychological and physiological health of human beings, and the main expression of human emotion is voice and facial expression. How to extract and effectively integrate the two modes of emotion information is one of the main challenges faced by emotion recognition. In this paper, a multi-branch bidirectional multi-scale time perception model is proposed, which can detect the forward and reverse speech Mel-frequency spectrum coefficients in the time dimension. At the same time, the model uses causal convolution to obtain temporal correlation information between different scale features, and assigns attention maps to them according to the information, so as to obtain multi-scale fusion of speech emotion features. Secondly, this paper proposes a two-modal feature dynamic fusion algorithm, which combines the advantages of AlexNet and uses overlapping maximum pooling layers to obtain richer fusion features from different modal feature mosaic matrices. Experimental results show that the accuracy of the multi-branch bidirectional multi-scale time sensing dual-modal emotion recognition model proposed in this paper reaches 97.67% and 90.14% respectively on the two public audio and video emotion data sets, which is superior to other common methods, indicating that the proposed emotion recognition model can effectively capture emotion feature information and improve the accuracy of emotion recognition.
Humans
;
Emotions
;
Algorithms
;
Facial Expression
;
Time Perception
;
Neural Networks, Computer
;
Speech
6.A method for emotion transition recognition using cross-modal feature fusion and global perception.
Lilin JIE ; Yangmeng ZOU ; Zhengxiu LI ; Baoliang LYU ; Weilong ZHENG ; Ming LI
Journal of Biomedical Engineering 2025;42(5):977-986
Current studies on electroencephalogram (EEG) emotion recognition primarily concentrate on discrete stimulus paradigms under controlled laboratory settings, which cannot adequately represent the dynamic transition characteristics of emotional states during multi-context interactions. To address this issue, this paper proposes a novel method for emotion transition recognition that leverages a cross-modal feature fusion and global perception network (CFGPN). Firstly, an experimental paradigm encompassing six types of emotion transition scenarios was designed, and EEG and eye movement data were simultaneously collected from 20 participants, each annotated with dynamic continuous emotion labels. Subsequently, deep canonical correlation analysis integrated with a cross-modal attention mechanism was employed to fuse features from EEG and eye movement signals, resulting in multimodal feature vectors enriched with highly discriminative emotional information. These vectors are then input into a parallel hybrid architecture that combines convolutional neural networks (CNNs) and Transformers. The CNN is employed to capture local time-series features, whereas the Transformer leverages its robust global perception capabilities to effectively model long-range temporal dependencies, enabling accurate dynamic emotion transition recognition. The results demonstrate that the proposed method achieves the lowest mean square error in both valence and arousal recognition tasks on the dynamic emotion transition dataset and a classic multimodal emotion dataset. It exhibits superior recognition accuracy and stability when compared with five existing unimodal and six multimodal deep learning models. The approach enhances both adaptability and robustness in recognizing emotional state transitions in real-world scenarios, showing promising potential for applications in the field of biomedical engineering.
Humans
;
Emotions/physiology*
;
Electroencephalography
;
Neural Networks, Computer
;
Eye Movements
;
Perception
7.Development and application of gustatory evoked potentiometer.
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2025;39(3):276-280
Human taste is an important function of chemical perception. In recent years, brain taste evoked potentials have received more and more attention as a feasible tool for objective assessment of taste dysfunction. This paper reviews the main characteristics of gustatory evoked potential signals, the most widely used recording and processing techniques, and the scientific advances and relevance of gustatory evoked potentials in many important applications. In particular, taste evoked potentials are used to study the central effects of food intake and taste disorders, which may affect cognition and personality, or may be potential indicators of the onset or progression of neurological disorders. For these reasons, this paper presents and analyzes the latest scientific results and future challenges of using gustatory evoked potentials as an attractive solution to objective monitoring techniques for taste disorders. Human taste is an important function of chemical perception. In recent years, brain gustatory evoked potentials have received more and more attention as a feasible tool for objective assessment of taste dysfunction. This paper reviews the main characteristics of gustatory evoked potential signals, the most widely used recording and processing techniques, and the scientific advances and relevance of gustatory evoked potentials in many important applications. In particular, gustatory evoked potentials are used to study the central effects of food intake and taste disorders, which may affect cognition and personality, or may be potential indicators of the onset or progression of neurological disorders. For these reasons, this paper presents and analyzes the latest scientific results and future challenges of using gustatory evoked potentials as an attractive solution to objective monitoring techniques for taste disorders.
Humans
;
Evoked Potentials
;
Taste/physiology*
;
Taste Perception/physiology*
8.Perception of Mandarin aspirated/unaspirated consonants in children with cochlear implants.
Yani LI ; Qun LI ; Jian WEN ; Lin LI ; Yun ZHENG
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2025;39(4):312-318
Objective:This study aims to investigate the perception of Mandarin aspirated and unaspirated consonants by children with cochlear implants (CIs) under quiet and noisy conditions. It also examines factors that may affect their acquisition, such as auditory conditions, place of articulation, manner of articulation, chronological age, age at implantation, and non-verbal intelligence. Methods:Twenty-eight CI children aged 3 to 5 years who received implantation from 2018 to 2023 were recruited. Additionally, 88 peers with normal hearing (NH) were recruited as controls. Both groups participated in a perception test for aspirated/unaspirated consonants under quiet and noisy conditions, along with tests for speech recognition, speech production, and non-verbal intelligence. The study analyzed the effects of group (CI vs. NH), auditory condition, and consonant characteristics on children's perception of aspirated/unaspirated consonants in Mandarin, as well as the factors contributing to CI children's acquisition of these consonants. Results:①CI children's ability to perceive aspirated/unaspirated consonants was significantly poorer than that of their NH peers (χ²= 14.16, P<0.01), and their perception accuracy was influenced by the acoustic features of consonants (P<0.01); ②CI children's consonant perception abilities were adversely affected by noise (P<0.01), with accuracy in noisy conditions particularly influenced by the manner of articulation (P<0.05); ③The age at implantation significantly affected CI children's ability to perceive aspirated/unaspirated consonants (β= -0.223, P=0.012), with earlier implantation associated with better performance. Conclusion:It takes time for CI children to acquire Mandarin aspirated/unaspirated consonants, and early implantation shows many advantages, especially for the perception ability of fine speech features.
Humans
;
Cochlear Implants
;
Child, Preschool
;
Speech Perception
;
Cochlear Implantation
;
Male
;
Female
;
Language
9.Comparison and study of multiple scales results in children with cochlear reimplantation, mainly the speech, spatial, and other qualities of hearing scale for parents.
Tian NI ; Jinyuan SI ; Haotian LIU ; Xinyi YAO ; Xiangling ZHANG ; Huilin YIN ; Lin ZHANG ; Xiuyong DING ; Yu ZHAO
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2025;39(5):433-442
Objective:To compare the outcomes of multiple scales, primarily the speech, spatial, and other qualities of hearing scale for parents(SSQ-P), in children with ipsilateral vs. Contralateral cochleareimplantat ion(CRI). Methods: A total of 69 children who received cochlear implantation surgery from April 1999 to June 2024 were included. Patients were divided into two groups based on whether the implantation was on the same side. General information such as gender, age, age at initial implantation and reimplantation was collected. The primary caregivers of the children were followed up by telephone using the categories of auditory performance(CAP), speech intelligibility rating(SIR), and SSQ-P questionnaires. Statistical methods including stepwise regression, linear regression, and permutation tests were employed to investigate if there were any statistically significant differences in the scores of CAP, SIR, SSQ-P total, SSQ-P speech perception, SSQ-P spatial hearing, and SSQ-P auditory quality dimensions between the ipsilateral and contralateral reimplantation groups. Results:Of the 69 children included, 62 were in the ipsilateral reimplantation group with a mean age of 11.1 years, and 7 were in the contralateral reimplantation group with a mean age of 11.7 years. Statistical analysis showed that patients in the contralateral reimplantation group had significantly lower SSQ-P total scores (P<0.05) and spatial hearing dimension scores (P<0.05) than those in the ipsilateral reimplantation group after controlling for the corresponding confounders. Conclusion:The effect of ipsilateral reimplantation of cochlear implants is superior to that of contralateral reimplantation in terms of overall auditory function and spatial hearing in daily life for children, but the mechanisms require further investigation.
Humans
;
Cochlear Implantation
;
Child
;
Parents
;
Speech Perception
;
Male
;
Cochlear Implants
;
Female
;
Hearing
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Speech
;
Child, Preschool
10.Analyzing the factors influencing speech recognition ability in patients with age-related hearing loss.
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2025;39(7):657-666
Objective:To explore various factors influencing speech recognition ability in patients with age-related hearing loss(ARHL) and to investigate the correlation between speech recognition ability and cognitive function. Methods:This case-control study enrolled 150 ARHL patients(experimental group) and 132 normal-hearing controls. Participants underwent relevant assessments of auditory function, cognitive function, and tinnitus severity. Various statistical analyses were performed to evaluate the results. Results:①The PBmax and MoCA scores were significantly lower in the ARHL group compared to the control group(P<0.05). ②PBmax in the ARHL group was significantly influenced by multiple factors(P<0.05). ③Negative correlations were observed between PBmax in the ARHL group and age, degree of hearing loss, duration of the disease, duration of the worst hearing loss, smoking status, and tinnitus severity(P<0.05), while positive correlations were found between PBmax and education level, occupation type, frequency of verbal communication, and cognitive function level(P<0.05). ④Higher education level, frequent verbal communication, and high cognitive function level were protective factors for PBmax in ARHL patients(P<0.05), whereas the other factors were independent risk factors(P<0.05). ⑤A significant correlation was found between PBmax and MoCA scores in the ARHL group, and this correlation between cognitive function and speech recognition ability remained significant across different degrees of hearing loss(<0.05). Conclusion:Speech recognition ability in ARHL patients is influenced by multiple factors. Cognitive function demonstrates a robust, bidirectional association with speech recognition ability, even after adjusting for hearing loss severity.
Humans
;
Case-Control Studies
;
Middle Aged
;
Male
;
Female
;
Aged
;
Speech Perception
;
Cognition
;
Presbycusis/physiopathology*
;
Adult
;
Hearing Loss


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