2017
|
Sign up to set email alerts
Changing Patterns of Emerging Zoonotic Diseases in Wildlife, Domestic Animals, and Humans Linked to Biodiversity Loss and Globalization
Abstract: The fundamental human threats to biodiversity including habitat destruction, globalization, and species loss have led to ecosystem disruptions altering infectious disease transmission patterns, the accumulation of toxic pollutants, and the invasion of alien species and pathogens. To top it all, the profound role of climate change on many ecological processes has affected the inability of many species to adapt to these relatively rapid changes. This special issue, "Zoonotic Disease Ecology: Effects on Humans, D… Show more
Search citation statements
Order By: Relevance
Paper Sections
Select...
44
22
4
0
Citation Types
0
48
0
0
Year Published
2018
20182026
2026Publication Types
Select...
50
8
6
3
Relationship
0
67
Authors
Journals
0
48
0
0
Order By: Relevance
“…The intersection of wildlife, infectious and parasitic diseases, and human activity in the Amazon Biome is increasingly recognized as a critical area of study, particularly within the framework of One Health [ 22 ]. Previous research has established that the Amazon’s biodiversity serves as a natural reservoir for many pathogens that have the potential to spill over into domestic animals and human populations [ 17 ]. However, our understanding of the prevalence and impact of these diseases remains limited, largely due to the challenges of conducting comprehensive surveillance in such a remote and complex environment [ 51 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
Exaggerated anticipatory anxiety is common in social anxiety disorder (SAD).
Neuroimaging studies have revealed altered neural activity in response to social stimuli in SAD, but fewer studies have examined neural activity during anticipation of feared social stimuli in SAD.
The current study examined the time course and magnitude of activity in threat processing brain regions during speech anticipation in socially anxious individuals and healthy controls (HC).
Method Participants (SAD n = 58; HC n = 16) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during which they completed a 90s control anticipation task and 90s speech anticipation task.
“…The intersection of wildlife, infectious and parasitic diseases, and human activity in the Amazon Biome is increasingly recognized as a critical area of study, particularly within the framework of One Health [ 22 ]. Previous research has established that the Amazon’s biodiversity serves as a natural reservoir for many pathogens that have the potential to spill over into domestic animals and human populations [ 17 ]. However, our understanding of the prevalence and impact of these diseases remains limited, largely due to the challenges of conducting comprehensive surveillance in such a remote and complex environment [ 51 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
Exaggerated anticipatory anxiety is common in social anxiety disorder (SAD).
Neuroimaging studies have revealed altered neural activity in response to social stimuli in SAD, but fewer studies have examined neural activity during anticipation of feared social stimuli in SAD.
The current study examined the time course and magnitude of activity in threat processing brain regions during speech anticipation in socially anxious individuals and healthy controls (HC).
Method Participants (SAD n = 58; HC n = 16) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during which they completed a 90s control anticipation task and 90s speech anticipation task.
“…Many respondents especially students supported training in biosafety and biosecurity due to individual capacity building and career progress. Capacity building addresses challenges of changing patterns of zoonotic diseases [ 10 ] like the one health approach [ 2 , 11 ]. Training could be embedded in pre-service curricula of those intending to work in disease prevention and control.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
Exaggerated anticipatory anxiety is common in social anxiety disorder (SAD).
Neuroimaging studies have revealed altered neural activity in response to social stimuli in SAD, but fewer studies have examined neural activity during anticipation of feared social stimuli in SAD.
The current study examined the time course and magnitude of activity in threat processing brain regions during speech anticipation in socially anxious individuals and healthy controls (HC).
Method Participants (SAD n = 58; HC n = 16) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during which they completed a 90s control anticipation task and 90s speech anticipation task.
“…In what concerns suppressing strategies, such as RIDL (lethal transgenesis), female killing (lethal transgenesis), SIT, or RNAi-mediated sterilization, the elimination of a species leads to profound changes in its ecosystem, such as eventually putting some non-target species in risk or giving opportunity to not-targeting species to expand [18,19]. Moreover, some authors have been arguing that biodiversity loss may even be associated with emergence of vector-borne diseases [20,21]. Regarding replacement approaches, such as anti-pathogen transgenesis, the effects of the transgene in the ecosystem are unknown.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
Exaggerated anticipatory anxiety is common in social anxiety disorder (SAD).
Neuroimaging studies have revealed altered neural activity in response to social stimuli in SAD, but fewer studies have examined neural activity during anticipation of feared social stimuli in SAD.
The current study examined the time course and magnitude of activity in threat processing brain regions during speech anticipation in socially anxious individuals and healthy controls (HC).
Method Participants (SAD n = 58; HC n = 16) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) during which they completed a 90s control anticipation task and 90s speech anticipation task.
👁 scite logo
Scite is an AI-powered platform that helps researchers discover and evaluate scientific literature through Smart Citations, showing whether studies support or contradict a claim. Now part of Research Solutions, Scite has indexed 1.6B+ citations, partners with 30+ publishers, and serves 2M users worldwide.
Contact Info
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Resources
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2026 Scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
