José de Oliveira Siqueira
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by José de Oliveira Siqueira.
Behavioural Processes | 2014
Maria Emília Yamamoto; Arrilton Araújo; Maria de Fátima Arruda; Ana Karinne Moreira Lima; José de Oliveira Siqueira; Wallisen Tadashi Hattori
Marmosets are cooperative breeders organized as extended family groups, but breeding is generally restricted to a single pair. Breeding competition is fierce in female marmosets; males, on the other hand, show low levels of intragroup aggression. We investigated male and female breeding strategies and the resulting reproductive output in 9 wild groups. Reproductive output, tenure of breeding animals, identification of the breeding system, breeding position replacements, migration and infanticide were recorded; also, we recorded grooming and aggression. Replacement of the breeding male or female was observed on nine occasions. On four occasions, the son of the breeding male inherited the breeding post, but we never observed inheritance of a breeding post by a daughter. Mostly, females attained a breeding post by immigrating to a group that had a breeding vacancy. Our results showed that Callithrix jacchus males and females use different strategies to attain a breeding position and maintain it for as long as possible. These strategies prolong the tenure of the breeding position, which is the best way to produce a large number of offspring. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Neotropical Behaviour.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Tiago Falótico; José de Oliveira Siqueira; Eduardo B. Ottoni
Capuchin monkeys at Serra da Capivara National Park (SCNP) usually forage on the ground for roots and fossorial arthropods, digging primarily with their hands but also using stone tools to loosen the soil and aid the digging process. Here we describe the stone tools used for digging by two groups of capuchins on SCNP. Both groups used tools while digging three main food resources: Thiloa glaucocarpa tubers, Ocotea sp roots, and trapdoor spiders. One explanation for the occurrence of tool use in primates is the “necessity hypothesis”, which states that the main function of tool use is to obtain fallback food. We tested for this, but only found a positive correlation between plant food availability and the frequency of stone tools’ use. Thus, our data do not support the fallback food hypothesis for the use of tools to access burrowed resources.
Frontiers in Psychiatry | 2015
Mauro Muszkat; Claudia Berlim de Mello; Patricia de Oliveira Lima Muñoz; Tania Kiehl Lucci; Vinicius Frayze David; José de Oliveira Siqueira; Emma Otta
This study used eye tracking to explore attention allocation to human and dog faces in children and adolescents with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and typical development (TD). Significant differences were found among the three groups. TD participants looked longer at the eyes than ASD and ADHD ones, irrespective of the faces presented. In spite of this difference, groups were similar in that they looked more to the eyes than to the mouth areas of interest. The ADHD group gazed longer at the mouth region than the other groups. Furthermore, groups were also similar in that they looked more to the dog than to the human faces. The eye-tracking technology proved to be useful for behavioral investigation in different neurodevelopmental disorders.
International Scholarly Research Notices | 2012
Fátima Ferreira Bortoletti; Ana Maria Teresa Benevides-Pereira; Esdras Guerreiro Vasconcellos; José de Oliveira Siqueira; Edward Araujo Júnior; Luciano Marcondes Machado Nardozza; Ricardo Werner Sebastiani; Antonio Fernandes Moron
Objective. To identify the risk factors to the development of Burnout Syndrome in Ob/Gyn Brazilian physicians in four dimensions: emotional exhaustion (EE), professional repression (PR), dehumanization (De), and emotional distancing (EmD). Methods. A prospective cross-sectional study was realized with 48 Ob/Gyn physicians (12 lecturers, 12 attending physicians, 12 medical residents, and 12 graduate students) from Department of Obstetrics, São Paulo Federal University (UNIFESP). We used a sociodemographic questionnaire focusing on the activities (administrative, educational, healthcare, and research). We applied a Burnout Syndrome Inventory (BSI) composed of two parts: triggering factors (ISB1) and the Burnout Syndrome (ISB2). The ISB1 is composed of two scales: positive organizational conditions (POC) and negative organizational conditions (NOC). The ISB2 is composed of four scales: EE, PR, De, and EmD. Results. We observed a rate below and above average to POC and NOC, respectively. The dimensions recorded a level above average to EE, an index at the upper limit of the average to De, a median index to EmD, and a median index to PR. Conclusions. The Ob/Gyn physicians are in an area of vulnerability for the development of Burnout Syndrome due to the high level of EE and De, associated with a median index of PR. The high rate of NOC contributes to the triggering of this scenery.
Frontiers in Psychiatry | 2018
Alisson Venazzi; Walter Swardfager; Benjamin Lam; José de Oliveira Siqueira; Nathan Herrmann; Hugo Cogo-Moreira
Accurate detection of Alzheimers disease (AD) is of considerable clinical importance. The Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies 2 (QUADAS-2) is the current research standard for evaluating the quality of studies that validate diagnostic tests; however, its own construct validity has not yet been evaluated empirically. Our aim was to evaluate how well the proposed QUADAS-2 items and its domains converge to indicate the study quality criteria. This study applies confirmatory factor analysis to determine whether a measurement model would be consistent with meta-analytic data. Cochrane meta-analyses assessing the accuracy of AD diagnostic tests were identified. The seven ordinal QUADAS-2 items, intended to inform study quality based on risk of bias and applicability concerns, were extracted for each of the included studies. The QUADAS-2 pre-specified factor structure (i.e., four domains assessed in terms of risk of bias and applicability concerns) was not testable. An alternative model based on two correlated factors (i.e., risk of bias and applicability concerns) returned a poor fit model. Poor factor loadings were obtained, indicating that we cannot provide evidence that the indicators convergent validity markers in the context of AD diagnostic accuracy metanalyses, where normally the sample size is low (around 60 primary included studies). A Monte Carlo simulation suggested that such a model would require at least 90 primary studies to estimate these parameters with 80% power. The reliability of the QUADAS-2 items to inform a measurement model for study quality remains unconfirmed. Considerations for conceptualizing such a tool are discussed.
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2018
Natália B. Dutra; Natalia Craciun Boccardi; Phiética Raíssa Rodrigues da Silva; José de Oliveira Siqueira; Wallisen Tadashi Hattori; Maria Emília Yamamoto; Anuska Irene Alencar
In cooperative situations, individual interests can be in conflict with those of the group, creating a social dilemma in which one must choose whether to cooperate or not. Sensitivity to social stimuli is an important factor influencing cooperative behavior in such dilemmas. The current study investigated the influence of verbal feedback and vigilance by adults on childrens donating behavior in a public goods game. The participants were 739 public school children, between 5 and 12 years of age, who were divided into 34 groups. Each group was assigned to one of four experimental conditions: control, positive feedback (praise), negative feedback (criticism), or vigilance. Participants then played eight rounds of the game. The childrens donations were greater in the feedback and vigilance conditions, but the effects were mediated by age and rounds. The results are most likely related to concerns about reputation, which tend to become stronger with age. Older children are better at self-presentation and understanding social norms. Thus, compared with younger children, they seemed more concerned with appearing to be generous, but only when they could get credit for it. Nevertheless, childrens donations still decreased across the rounds. Although adult vigilance and feedback influence childrens cooperation among peers, other mechanisms are necessary to stabilize their behavior over time.
BAYESIAN INFERENCE AND MAXIMUM ENTROPY METHODS IN SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING:#N#Proceedings of the 28th International Workshop on Bayesian Inference and Maximum Entropy#N#Methods in Science and Engineering | 2008
Hellinton Hatsuo Takada; José de Oliveira Siqueira
The common presentation of the widely known and accepted Black‐Scholes European option pricing model explicitly imposes some restrictions such as the geometric Brownian motion assumption for the underlying stock price. In this paper, these usual restrictions are relaxed using maximum entropy principle of information theory, Pearson’s distribution system, market frictionless and risk‐neutrality theories to the calculation of a unique risk‐neutral probability measure calibrated with market parameters.
Evolution and Human Behavior | 2002
Lucila de Sousa Campos; Emma Otta; José de Oliveira Siqueira
International Journal of Behavioral Development | 2008
Maria Lucia Seidl-de-Moura; Eulina da Rocha Lordelo; Mauro Luís Vieira; Cesar Augusto Piccinini; José de Oliveira Siqueira; Celina Maria Colino Magalhães; Fernando Augusto Ramos Pontes; Nadia Maria Salomão; Adriana Rimoli
Evolution and Human Behavior | 2008
Anuska Irene Alencar; José de Oliveira Siqueira; Maria Emília Yamamoto
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Ana Maria Teresa Benevides-Pereira
Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Paraná
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