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Dive into the research topics where Xiaoyi Fang is active.

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Featured researches published by Xiaoyi Fang.


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2011

HIV-testing behavior among young migrant men who have sex with men (MSM) in Beijing, China

Yan Song; Xiaoming Li; Liying Zhang; Xiaoyi Fang; Xiuyun Lin; Yinjie Liu; Bonita Stanton

Abstract Previous studies suggested a rapid increase of HIV prevalence among men who have sex with men (MSM) in China in recent years, from 0.4% in 2004 to 5.8% in 2006. However, some MSM had never been tested for HIV. In order to expand the accessibility to HIV testing, understanding HIV-testing behavior and barriers among MSM is important. Using data collected from 307 young migrant MSM (aged 18–29 years) in 2009 in Beijing, we aimed to identify psychological and structural barriers to HIV testing. MSM were recruited through peer outreach, informal social networks, Internet outreach, and venue-based outreach. Participants completed a confidential self-administered questionnaire. Results show that about 72% of MSM ever had an HIV test. Logistic regression analysis indicated that the HIV-testing behavior was associated with sexual risk behaviors (e.g., multiple sexual partners and inconsistent condom use for anal sex) and history of sexually transmitted diseases. Eighty four MSM (28%) who never had an HIV test reported that the psychological barriers mainly were perceived low risk of HIV infection and fears of being stigmatized. The structural barriers reported inconvenience of doing test and lack of confidentiality. Future HIV prevention programs should be strengthened among MSM to increase their awareness of HIV risk. Efforts are needed to increase access to quality and confidential HIV testing among MSM and reduce stigma against MSM.


Aids and Behavior | 2012

HIV Testing Behaviors Among Female Sex Workers in Southwest China

Yan Hong; Chen Zhang; Xiaoming Li; Xiaoyi Fang; Xiuyun Lin; Yuejiao Zhou; Wei Liu

Despite the recognized importance of HIV testing in prevention, care and treatment, HIV testing remains low in China. Millions of female sex workers (FSW) play a critical role in China’s escalating HIV epidemic. Limited data are available regarding HIV testing behavior among this at-risk population. This study, based on a cross-sectional survey of 1,022 FSW recruited from communities in Southwest China, attempted to address the literature gap. Our data revealed that 48% of FSW ever took HIV testing; older age, less education, working in higher-income commercial sex venues and better HIV knowledge were associated with HIV testing. Those who never took HIV testing were more likely to engage in high-risk behaviors including inconsistent condom use with clients and stable partners. A number of psychological and structural barriers to testing were also reported. We call for culturally appropriate interventions to reduce HIV risks and promote HIV testing for vulnerable FSW in China.


Addiction Biology | 2016

Altered resting‐state functional connectivity of the insula in young adults with Internet gaming disorder

Jin-Tao Zhang; Yuan-Wei Yao; Chiang-shan R. Li; Yu-Feng Zang; Zi-Jiao Shen; Lu Liu; Ling-Jiao Wang; Ben Liu; Xiaoyi Fang

The insula has been implicated in salience processing, craving, and interoception, all of which are critical to the clinical manifestations of drug and behavioral addiction. In this functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study, we examined resting‐state functional connectivity (rsFC) of the insula and its association with Internet gaming characteristics in 74 young adults with Internet gaming disorder (IGD) and 41 age‐ and gender‐matched healthy control subjects (HCs). In comparison with HCs, IGD subjects (IGDs) exhibited enhanced rsFC between the anterior insula and a network of regions including anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), putamen, angular gyrus, and precuneous, which are involved in salience, craving, self‐monitoring, and attention. IGDs also demonstrated significantly stronger rsFC between the posterior insula and postcentral gyrus, precentral gyrus, supplemental motor area, and superior temporal gyrus (STG), which are involved in interoception, movement control, and auditory processing. Furthermore, IGD severity was positively associated with connectivity between the anterior insula and angular gyrus, and STG, and with connectivity between the posterior insula and STG. Duration of Internet gaming was positively associated with connectivity between the anterior insula and ACC. These findings highlight a key role of the insula in manifestation of the core symptoms of IGD and the importance to examine functional abnormalities of the anterior and posterior insula separately in IGDs.


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2011

Functions and sources of perceived social support among children affected by HIV/AIDS in China.

Guoxiang Zhao; Xiaoming Li; Xiaoyi Fang; Junfeng Zhao; Yan Hong; Xiuyun Lin; Bonita Stanton

Abstract While the relationship between perceived social support (PSS) and psychosocial well-being has been well documented in the global literature, existing studies also suggest the existence of multiple domains in definition and measurement of PSS. The current study, utilizing data from 1299 rural children affected by HIV/AIDS in central China, examines the relative importance of PSS functional measures (informational/emotional, material/tangible, affectionate, and social interaction) and PSS structural measures (family/relatives, teachers, friends, and significant others) in predicting psychosocial outcomes including internalizing problems, externalizing problems, and educational resilience. Both functional and structural measures of PSS provided reliable measures of related but unique aspects of PSS. The findings of the current study confirmed the previous results that PSS is highly correlated with childrens psychosocial well-being and such correlations vary by functions and sources of the PSS as well as different psychosocial outcomes. The findings in the current study suggested the roles of specific social support functions or resources may need to be assessed in relation to specific psychosocial outcome and the context of childrens lives. The strong association between PSS and psychosocial outcomes underscores the importance of adequate social support to alleviate stressful life events and improve psychosocial well-being of children affected by HIV/AIDS. Meanwhile, the study findings call for gender and developmentally appropriate and situation-specific social support for children and families affected by HIV/AIDS.


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2011

A comparison of four sampling methods among men having sex with men in China: implications for HIV/STD surveillance and prevention

Yan Guo; Xiaoming Li; Xiaoyi Fang; Xiuyun Lin; Yan Song; Shuling Jiang; Bonita Stanton

Abstract Sample representativeness remains one of the challenges in effective HIV/STD surveillance and prevention targeting men who have sex with men (MSM) worldwide. Although convenience samples are widely used in studies of MSM, previous studies suggested that these samples might not be representative of the broader MSM population. This issue becomes even more critical in many developing countries where needed resources for conducting probability sampling are limited. We examined variations in HIV and Syphilis infections and sociodemographic and behavioral factors among 307 young migrant MSM recruited using four different convenience sampling methods (peer outreach, informal social network, Internet, and venue-based) in Beijing, China in 2009. The participants completed a self-administered survey and provided blood specimens for HIV/STD testing. Among the four MSM samples using different recruitment methods, rates of HIV infections were 5.1%, 5.8%, 7.8%, and 3.4%; rates of Syphilis infection were 21.8%, 36.2%, 11.8%, and 13.8%; and rates of inconsistent condom use were 57%, 52%, 58%, and 38%. Significant differences were found in various sociodemographic characteristics (e.g., age, migration history, education, income, and places of employment) and risk behaviors (e.g., age at first sex, number of sex partners, involvement in commercial sex, and substance use) among samples recruited by different sampling methods. The results confirmed the challenges of obtaining representative MSM samples and underscored the importance of using multiple sampling methods to reach MSM from diverse backgrounds and in different social segments and to improve the representativeness of the MSM samples when the use of probability sampling approach is not feasible.


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 2010

Perceived HIV stigma among children in a high HIV-prevalence area in central China: beyond the parental HIV-related illness and death

Xiuyun Lin; Guoxiang Zhao; Xiaoming Li; Bonita Stanton; Liying Zhang; Yan Hong; Junfeng Zhao; Xiaoyi Fang

Abstract Objectives. (1) Examine the psychometric properties of two parallel measures of HIV-related stigma (i.e., perceived public stigma and childrens personal stigma against people living with HIV/AIDS [PLWHA]) among children affected by HIV/AIDS. (2) Examine whether expressions of stigma measures differ by childs sex, developmental stage, family socioeconomic status (SES), or orphanhood status (i.e., AIDS orphans, vulnerable children, and comparison children). (3) Examine the association between HIV-related stigma and childrens psychosocial adjustments among these children. Methods. Cross-sectional data were collected from 755 AIDS orphans (children who had lost one or both their parents to AIDS), 466 vulnerable children who lived with HIV-infected parents, and 404 comparison children who did not experience HIV-related illness and death in their families. The measures included perceived public stigma, personal stigma, depressive symptoms, loneliness, self-esteem, future expectations, hopefulness about the future, and perceived control over the future. Results. Both stigma scales were positively associated with psychopathological symptoms (e.g., depression, loneliness) and negatively associated with psychosocial well-being (e.g., self-esteem, positive future expectation, hopefulness about future, and perceived control over the future). Both stigma measures contribute to childrens psychosocial problems independent of their orphanhood status and other key demographic factors. Conclusion. Community-wide stigma reduction and psychological support should be part of the care efforts for children affected by AIDS. Stigma reduction efforts should not only target the stigma against PLWHA but also possible stigma against the entire community (e.g., villages) with a high prevalence of HIV/AIDS. The stigma reduction efforts also needs to be appropriate for childrens age, gender, family SES, and AIDS experience in the family. Future research should explore individual and contextual factors such as social support, coping, and attachment in mitigating the negative effect of stigma among these children.


American Journal of Health Behavior | 2003

Social Network Positions and Smoking Experimentation among Chinese Adolescents.

Xiaoyi Fang; Xiaoming Li; Bonita Stanton; Qi Dong

OBJECTIVE To explore the relationship between peer social network positions and smoking experimentation among Chinese adolescents. METHODS Self-administered questionnaires were administered to 1040 adolescents in grades 6, 8, and 10. Paired-friendship linkages were used to assign participants into 3 mutually exclusive social network positions. RESULTS Overall isolates were more likely to have experimented with cigarettes than were group members or liaisons. However, among male 10th graders, more group members or liaisons had smoked than isolates. CONCLUSIONS Smoking experimentation differs by social position, particularly among older adolescents. The association of social position with smoking experimentation could not be explained completely by traditional peer-related variables.


Addiction Biology | 2017

Activation of the ventral and dorsal striatum during cue reactivity in Internet gaming disorder.

Lu Liu; Sarah W. Yip; Jin-Tao Zhang; Ling-Jiao Wang; Zi-Jiao Shen; Ben Liu; Shan-Shan Ma; Yuan-Wei Yao; Xiaoyi Fang

Studies conducted in drug addiction suggest a transition in processing of drug‐related cues from the ventral to the dorsal component of the striatum. However, this process has not been studied in a behavioral addiction. Assessment of this process in a non‐drug addiction can provide insight into the pathophysiology of both substance and behavioral addictions. Thirty‐nine male Internet gaming disorder (IGD) subjects and 23 male matched healthy controls (HCs) participated in functional magnetic resonance imaging during performance of a cue‐reactivity task involving alternating presentation of Internet gaming‐related stimuli (game cues) and general Internet surfing‐related stimuli (control cues). Cue‐induced neural activations in the ventral and dorsal striatum (DS) were compared between IGD and HC participants. Associations between cue‐reactivity within these regions and cue‐induced craving and severity and duration of IGD were also explored. IGD participants exhibited higher cue‐induced activations within both the ventral and DS when compared with HCs. Within the IGD group, activity within the left ventral striatum (VS) was correlated negatively with cue‐induced craving; positive associations were found between activations within the DS (right putamen, pallidum and left caudate) and duration of IGD. Cue‐induced activity within the left putamen was negatively associated with right VS volumes among IGD participants. Consistent with studies in substance addictions, our results suggest that a transition from ventral to dorsal striatal processing may occur among individuals with IGD, a condition without the impact of substance intake.


Sexually Transmitted Infections | 2005

Relation of sexual risks and prevention practices with individuals' stigmatising beliefs towards HIV infected individuals: an exploratory study

Hongjie Liu; Xiaoming Li; Bonita Stanton; Xiaoyi Fang; Rong Mao; Xinguang Chen; Hongmei Yang

Objective: To investigate how an individual’s stigmatising beliefs towards people living with HIV are related to his or her own sexual risk and protective behaviours. Methods: A cross sectional survey was conducted to assess HIV related stigmatising beliefs, risk sexual behaviours, and preventive practices among sexually experienced rural to urban migrants aged 18–30 years in 2002 in Beijing and Nanjing, two large Chinese cities. Results: Among 2153 migrants, 7.2% reported having had more than one sexual partner in the previous month, 9.9% had commercial sex partners, and 12.5% had an episode of a sexually transmitted disease (STD). Only 18% reported frequently or always using condoms, with 20% sometimes or occasionally using them. 57% of the Chinese migrants were willing to take a voluntary HIV test, and 65% had HIV related stigmatising beliefs towards people living with HIV. Multiple logistic regression analysis depicts that individual’s stigmatising beliefs towards people with HIV were positively associated with having had an episode of an STD, having multiple sex partners, or having had commercial sex partners, and were negatively associated with condom use and the willingness to accept an HIV test. Conclusion: The finding that one’s own stigmatising belief is a potential barrier to HIV related preventive practices highlights the difficulties and challenges in implementing behavioural interventions.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2015

Impaired decision-making under risk is associated with gaming-specific inhibition deficits among college students with Internet gaming disorder

Yuan-Wei Yao; Ling-Jiao Wang; Sarah W. Yip; Pin-Ru Chen; Song Li; Jiansong Xu; Jin-Tao Zhang; Linyuan Deng; Qin-Xue Liu; Xiaoyi Fang

A growing body of evidence indicates that both inhibition and decision-making deficits play essential roles in the development and maintenance of Internet gaming disorder (IGD). Clarifying whether impaired decision-making among individuals with IGD is related to poor inhibition will advance our understanding of IGD and contribute to intervention development. However, the relationship between these two functions remains unclear. In this study, we sought to systemically examine inhibitory processes, decision-making and the relationship between the two among individuals with IGD. Thirty-four individuals with IGD and 32 matched healthy controls (HCs) were recruited. In comparison to HCs, IGD subjects demonstrated inhibition deficits during performance of the gaming-related Go/No-Go task and impaired decision-making under risk. In addition, errors on No-Go trials during the gaming-related Go/No-Go task were positively associated with decision-making impairments under risk but not under ambiguity among IGD subjects. These results suggest individuals with IGD are impaired in some aspects of inhibition and decision-making functions, and that decision-making deficits under risk are linked to poor inhibition specifically related to gaming cues, which has implications for the development of novel intervention.

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Xiaoming Li

University of South Carolina

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Xiuyun Lin

Beijing Normal University

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Jin-Tao Zhang

McGovern Institute for Brain Research

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Jing Lan

Beijing Normal University

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Nan Zhou

Beijing Normal University

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Linyuan Deng

Beijing Normal University

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Lu Liu

Beijing Normal University

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