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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Quantification and determination of the interindividual variability observed in a group of cockroaches and its implications at a collective level

Planas-Sitjà, Isaac 10 April 2017 (has links)
In this thesis, we used the American cockroach study the relationship between animal personality and collective behaviour. These questions do not only regard domiciliary cockroaches or insects; in fact, the questions we discuss here have a large scope and concern most of the known gregarious species distributed in several taxa. One of our aims is to develop general tools, methods and analyses that could be used for the study of collective behaviour.We show evidence of personality in several behavioural traits and different contexts in the American cockroach. These behavioural differences were observed in a context without social interactions during the daytime (isolated condition) and nighttime (solitary exploration behaviour) and in a social context (rate of joining a shelter and sheltering time). Based on the short-term experiments, this personality can be understood as differences in the probability of joining a shelter. We show that the behavioural variability existing in a population of domiciliary cockroaches is very high. The composition of personalities within a group can lead to group personality – consistent differences in group behaviour. For instance, groups composed of different behavioural profiles show different collective dynamics. Regarding the long-term experiments, our results show that the individuals that were aggregated at a site that was repeatedly disturbed by a lighting stimulus during their resting period showed slow migration to a new shelter, which allowed the initial aggregation site to remain the site of choice for a few days. Moreover, the disturbance regime did not influence the group's global activity rhythm. At the individual level, we observed interindividual differences (personalities) in terms of their position prior to the disturbance but not for the different steps of the fleeing behaviour itself. In addition, we show that thigmotaxis affects the reaction time to the disturbance: individuals near the walls of the shelter react more slowly thanindividuals in the centre. Finally, an approach coupling modelling and experimental data shows that behavioural variability plays a secondary role during migration dynamics, thus highlighting the plasticity of personality traits depending on the context. / Un des comportements collectifs les plus répandus, qu’il s’agisse de vertébrés (mammifères, oiseaux, poissons), d’insectes ou encore de bactéries, est la tendance des individus à se regrouper. Les causes proximales de ces rassemblements ou agrégats, c'est-à-dire les mécanismes à leur origine, ont retenu moins d’attention que l’étude des causes ultimes. De plus, dans la plupart des études portant sur les processus d’agrégation, notamment chez notre organisme modèle, la blatte, la diversité des comportements individuels est souvent sous-estimée ou ignorée. L’objectif de cette thèse est l’étude du rôle des différences interindividuelles, également connues comme personnalité animale ou syndromes comportementales, dans les processus de prise de décision collective et notamment la formation des agrégats.Pour cela, nous avons utilisé des groupes de mâles de la blatte américaine Periplaneta americana. Ces insectes peuvent s’agréger dans un ou plusieurs abris et présenter des différences dans leur réponse au milieu, aux conspécifiques et dans le partage de l’information. Dans le cadre de prises de décisions collectives, nous avons mis en évidence une personnalité individuelle mais également au niveau du groupe. Celles-ci se manifestent dans la recherche d’un abri dont certains individus jouent un rôle clef. Nous avons montré que les groupes présentent une stabilité qui est observable au niveau de la dynamique d'agrégation et qui dépend de la distribution des personnalités au sein de ceux-ci. De plus, nous remarquons que ces différences de personnalités au sein des groupes affectent la prise de décision collective, notamment la vitesse du choix et le nombre total d’individus abrités. De manière surprenante, la composition des groupes n’affecte pas la probabilité que ceux-ci atteignent un consensus: la majorité des blattes étant agrégées sous le même abri.Concernant les influences croisées entre l’effet sociale et la personnalité des blattes, nous montrons que les effets sociaux tendent à supprimer les différences inter-individuelles et créent une corrélation entre le comportement de chaque individu et le comportement du groupe. De plus, nous observons que la présence de différentes personnalités dans un groupe augmente les amplifications sociales, celles-ci étant dues aux interactions entre les membres du groupe. Finalement, nous abordons la question du rôle de la personnalité sur le comportement de fuite lors des perturbations lumineuses et sur la dynamique d’émigration quand le site de repos est régulièrement perturbé. Nous avons montré l’existence de personnalités exprimées pendant la phase active nocturne et de différences interindividuelles au niveau du thigmotactisme pendant la journée (phase passive de repos et d’agrégation). Curieusement, ces différences inter-individuelles ne sont pas observées lors du comportement de fuite et au niveau de la dynamique global d’émigration. Dans la dernière partie de notre thèse, nous discutons, en particulier, des synergies et des conflits entre les différentes personnalités et les dynamiques collectives et avançons l’hypothèse que les phénomènes que nous avons mis en évidence sont partagés par de nombreuses espèces grégaires. / Doctorat en Sciences / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
32

The development of a new transformational leadership questionnaire.

Alimo-Metcalfe, Beverly M., Alban-Metcalfe, R.J. January 2001 (has links)
No / This study sought to investigate the characteristics of 'nearby' leaders by eliciting the constructs of male and female top, senior, and middle-level managers and professionals working in organizations in two large UK public sectors (local government and the National Health Service). An instrument, the Transformational Leadership Questionnaire (TLQ-LGV), was developed and piloted on a national sample of 1464 managers working for local government organizations. Analysis of the data, presented here, revealed the existence of nine highly robust scales with high reliabilities (.85) and with convergent validity (range r = .46 to .85). These findings are discussed, together with suggestions for subsequent research.
33

Contrôle attentionnel et vieillissement normal : contribution à la mémoire de travail et variabilité interindividuelle

Sylvain-Roy, Stéphanie 03 1900 (has links)
Dans le contexte actuel du vieillissement de la population, il importe de s’intéresser aux changements qui surviennent avec l’avancement en âge. Le vieillissement s’accompagne de modifications pour différentes fonctions cognitives, dont la mémoire de travail (MdeT), un système permettant le maintien temporaire et la manipulation d’une petite quantité d’informations. Les travaux de cette thèse portent sur le vieillissement normal de la MdeT et des fonctions de contrôle attentionnel (FCA) qui la sous-tendent (l’alternance, l’inhibition et la mise à jour). D’abord, la première étude (Chapitre II) visait à préciser l’effet du vieillissement normal sur la MdeT et sur chacune des FCA qui la sous-tendent. Elle avait également pour but d’identifier les FCA qui contribuent à la réalisation de différentes tâches de MdeT, et si cette contribution diffère selon le groupe d’âge. Des tâches mesurant chacune des FCA ainsi que des tâches de MdeT ont été administrées à des personnes âgées et à des jeunes adultes. Les analyses contrôlant pour le ralentissement cognitif ont révélé que les habiletés d’alternance et de mise à jour sont préservées chez les personnes âgées, mais que l’inhibition est atteinte comparativement aux jeunes adultes. Les analyses ont également montré que l’impact du vieillissement sur la MdeT dépend de la tâche utilisée. Enfin, les résultats ont indiqué que la contribution des FCA à la MdeT dépend à la fois de la tâche de MdeT et du groupe d’âge. En particulier, la mise à jour contribue davantage à la MdeT des personnes âgées qu’à celle des jeunes, ce qui pourrait refléter une tentative de compensation. La seconde étude (Chapitre III) avait pour objectif de caractériser la variabilité interindividuelle au niveau des FCA, pour les personnes âgées et pour les jeunes adultes. Des analyses hiérarchiques en grappes réalisées sur les habiletés d’alternance, d’inhibition et de mise à jour, ont permis de déterminer si différents profils de contrôle attentionnel étaient présents. L’étude cherchait également à déterminer si les individus appartenant à des profils de contrôle attentionnel distincts diffèrent quant à certaines variables intellectuelles ou de santé. Les analyses ont mis en évidence trois profils de contrôle attentionnel distincts parmi les personnes âgées, l’inhibition étant une FCA critique pour distinguer entre les trois sous-groupes. Trois profils de contrôle attentionnel ont également été identifiés chez les jeunes adultes, et ces profils étaient caractérisés par moins de variabilité intra-individuelle que ceux des âgés. Les analyses ont par ailleurs montré que les profils de contrôle attentionnel se distinguent sur certaines variables intellectuelles et de santé. Les implications théoriques et cliniques de ces résultats seront discutées en fin de thèse (Chapitre IV). / As the population is aging, it is increasingly important to study the changes that occur with advancing age. Normal aging is characterized by changes in various cognitive functions, such as working memory (WM), a limited capacity system that temporarily holds and manipulates a small quantity of information. The work presented in this thesis focused on the normal aging of WM and of the attentional control functions (ACFs) that underlie this system (shifting, inhibition, and updating). The first study (Chapter II) aimed at exploring the impact of normal aging on WM and on each of the ACFs. We also sought to determine which ACFs contribute to performance on different WM tests, and whether age group has an impact on those contributions. Tasks measuring each ACF as well as WM tasks were administered to healthy older adults and to younger adults. The analyses controlling for cognitive slowing revealed that older adults’ shifting and updating abilities are preserved, but that their inhibition abilities are impaired compared to younger adults. Moreover, the impact of normal aging on WM is task-dependent. The results also indicated that the relative contribution of the ACFs to WM depends on both the WM task used and the age group. In particular, older adults relied more than younger adults on updating to perform WM tasks, which might reflect a compensation attempt. The second study (Chapter III) aimed at characterizing interindividual variability in the ACFs of both older and younger adults. Cluster analyses were performed on the shifting, inhibition, and updating abilities, in order to determine whether different attentional control profiles were present. This study also explored whether the individuals that belonged to distinct attentional control profiles differed as to intellectual and health variables. The analyses revealed three attentional control profiles among older adults, and inhibition was the ACF for which the three profiles differed the most. Three attentional control profiles were also identified among younger adults, and their profiles were characterized by less intra-individual variability than those of older adults. The results also showed that individuals belonging to different attentional control profiles differed on some intellectual and health variables. The theoretical and clinical implications of those findings are discussed in Chapter IV.
34

Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (Val66Met) and Serotonin Transporter (5-HTTLPR) Polymorphisms Modulate Plasticity in Inhibitory Control Performance Over Time but Independent of Inhibitory Control Training

Enge, Sören, Fleischhauer, Monika, Gärtner, Anne, Reif, Andreas, Lesch, Klaus-Peter, Kliegel, Matthias, Strobel, Alexander 31 March 2017 (has links) (PDF)
Several studies reported training-induced improvements in executive function tasks and also observed transfer to untrained tasks. However, the results are mixed and there is a large interindividual variability within and across studies. Given that training-related performance changes would require modification, growth or differentiation at the cellular and synaptic level in the brain, research on critical moderators of brain plasticity potentially explaining such changes is needed. In the present study, a pre-post-follow-up design (N = 122) and a 3-weeks training of two response inhibition tasks (Go/NoGo and Stop-Signal) was employed and genetic variation (Val66Met) in the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) promoting differentiation and activity-dependent synaptic plasticity was examined. Because Serotonin (5-HT) signaling and the interplay of BDNF and 5-HT are known to critically mediate brain plasticity, genetic variation in the 5-HTT gene-linked polymorphic region (5-HTTLPR) was also addressed. The overall results show that the kind of training (i.e., adaptive vs. non-adaptive) did not evoke genotype-dependent differences. However, in the Go/NoGo task, better inhibition performance (lower commission errors) were observed for BDNF Val/Val genotype carriers compared to Met-allele ones supporting similar findings from other cognitive tasks. Additionally, a gene-gene interaction suggests a more impulsive response pattern (faster responses accompanied by higher commission error rates) in homozygous l-allele carriers relative to those with the s-allele of 5-HTTLPR. This, however, is true only in the presence of the Met-allele of BDNF, while the Val/Val genotype seems to compensate for such non-adaptive responding. Intriguingly, similar results were obtained for the Stop-Signal task. Here, differences emerged at post-testing, while no differences were observed at T1. In sum, although no genotype-dependent differences between the relevant training groups emerged suggesting no changes in the trained inhibition function, the observed genotype-dependent performance changes from pre- to post measurement may reflect rapid learning or memory effects linked to BDNF and 5-HTTLPR. In line with ample evidence on BDNF and BDNF-5-HT system interactions to induce (rapid) plasticity especially in hippocampal regions and in response to environmental demands, the findings may reflect genotype-dependent differences in the acquisition and consolidation of task-relevant information, thereby facilitating a more adaptive responding to task-specific requirements.
35

Contrôle attentionnel et vieillissement normal : contribution à la mémoire de travail et variabilité interindividuelle

Sylvain-Roy, Stéphanie 03 1900 (has links)
Dans le contexte actuel du vieillissement de la population, il importe de s’intéresser aux changements qui surviennent avec l’avancement en âge. Le vieillissement s’accompagne de modifications pour différentes fonctions cognitives, dont la mémoire de travail (MdeT), un système permettant le maintien temporaire et la manipulation d’une petite quantité d’informations. Les travaux de cette thèse portent sur le vieillissement normal de la MdeT et des fonctions de contrôle attentionnel (FCA) qui la sous-tendent (l’alternance, l’inhibition et la mise à jour). D’abord, la première étude (Chapitre II) visait à préciser l’effet du vieillissement normal sur la MdeT et sur chacune des FCA qui la sous-tendent. Elle avait également pour but d’identifier les FCA qui contribuent à la réalisation de différentes tâches de MdeT, et si cette contribution diffère selon le groupe d’âge. Des tâches mesurant chacune des FCA ainsi que des tâches de MdeT ont été administrées à des personnes âgées et à des jeunes adultes. Les analyses contrôlant pour le ralentissement cognitif ont révélé que les habiletés d’alternance et de mise à jour sont préservées chez les personnes âgées, mais que l’inhibition est atteinte comparativement aux jeunes adultes. Les analyses ont également montré que l’impact du vieillissement sur la MdeT dépend de la tâche utilisée. Enfin, les résultats ont indiqué que la contribution des FCA à la MdeT dépend à la fois de la tâche de MdeT et du groupe d’âge. En particulier, la mise à jour contribue davantage à la MdeT des personnes âgées qu’à celle des jeunes, ce qui pourrait refléter une tentative de compensation. La seconde étude (Chapitre III) avait pour objectif de caractériser la variabilité interindividuelle au niveau des FCA, pour les personnes âgées et pour les jeunes adultes. Des analyses hiérarchiques en grappes réalisées sur les habiletés d’alternance, d’inhibition et de mise à jour, ont permis de déterminer si différents profils de contrôle attentionnel étaient présents. L’étude cherchait également à déterminer si les individus appartenant à des profils de contrôle attentionnel distincts diffèrent quant à certaines variables intellectuelles ou de santé. Les analyses ont mis en évidence trois profils de contrôle attentionnel distincts parmi les personnes âgées, l’inhibition étant une FCA critique pour distinguer entre les trois sous-groupes. Trois profils de contrôle attentionnel ont également été identifiés chez les jeunes adultes, et ces profils étaient caractérisés par moins de variabilité intra-individuelle que ceux des âgés. Les analyses ont par ailleurs montré que les profils de contrôle attentionnel se distinguent sur certaines variables intellectuelles et de santé. Les implications théoriques et cliniques de ces résultats seront discutées en fin de thèse (Chapitre IV). / As the population is aging, it is increasingly important to study the changes that occur with advancing age. Normal aging is characterized by changes in various cognitive functions, such as working memory (WM), a limited capacity system that temporarily holds and manipulates a small quantity of information. The work presented in this thesis focused on the normal aging of WM and of the attentional control functions (ACFs) that underlie this system (shifting, inhibition, and updating). The first study (Chapter II) aimed at exploring the impact of normal aging on WM and on each of the ACFs. We also sought to determine which ACFs contribute to performance on different WM tests, and whether age group has an impact on those contributions. Tasks measuring each ACF as well as WM tasks were administered to healthy older adults and to younger adults. The analyses controlling for cognitive slowing revealed that older adults’ shifting and updating abilities are preserved, but that their inhibition abilities are impaired compared to younger adults. Moreover, the impact of normal aging on WM is task-dependent. The results also indicated that the relative contribution of the ACFs to WM depends on both the WM task used and the age group. In particular, older adults relied more than younger adults on updating to perform WM tasks, which might reflect a compensation attempt. The second study (Chapter III) aimed at characterizing interindividual variability in the ACFs of both older and younger adults. Cluster analyses were performed on the shifting, inhibition, and updating abilities, in order to determine whether different attentional control profiles were present. This study also explored whether the individuals that belonged to distinct attentional control profiles differed as to intellectual and health variables. The analyses revealed three attentional control profiles among older adults, and inhibition was the ACF for which the three profiles differed the most. Three attentional control profiles were also identified among younger adults, and their profiles were characterized by less intra-individual variability than those of older adults. The results also showed that individuals belonging to different attentional control profiles differed on some intellectual and health variables. The theoretical and clinical implications of those findings are discussed in Chapter IV.
36

Rekonstrukce vlivu mletí obilí na svalovou aktivitu horní končetiny / Reconstruction of the influence of grinding technology on upper limb muscle activity

Struška, Michal January 2018 (has links)
Interpretation of changes of humeral asymmetry during the Holocene period was based on the analysis of upper limb muscle activity during cereal grinding using the saddle quern and rotary quern. The aim of the diploma thesis was to test if the dominant upper limb muscle activity during cereal grinding using the saddle quern and rotary quern might be estimated by measuring the activity of musculus deltoideus (pars clavicularis), musculus infraspinatus, musculus pectoralis major and musculus triceps brachii (caput longum). Using surface electromyography, we have analyzed activity of musculus biceps brachii, musculus deltoideus (pars clavicularis), musculus deltoideus (pars acromialis), musculus deltoideus (pars spinalis), musculus pectoralis major, musculus infraspinatus, musculus triceps brachii (caput laterale) and musculus triceps brachii (caput longum) during cereal grinding using the saddle quern and rotary quern in 25 subjects. Consistent with our prediction, musculus biceps brachii was the least active muscle during saddle quern grinding and clockwise rotary grinding, therefore it is possible to exclude musculus biceps brachii from the sample of analyzed muscles. Pars clavicularis, pars acromialis and pars spinalis of musculus deltoideus were more active during rotary quern grinding than...
37

Formes et intensité de la pression sociale dans Enfance de Nathalie Sarraute

Chagnon, Arianne 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
38

Localisation de sources sonores virtuelles : caractérisation de la variabilité inter-individuelle et effet de l'entraînement

Andeol, Guillaume 29 June 2012 (has links)
La variabilité inter-individuelle en localisation auditive a été étudiée à travers plusieurs expérimentations. La première expérimentation a exploré la variabilité inter-individuelle en localisation auditive de sources sonores virtuelles (HRTFs individuelles et non individuelles) dans une population de 25 auditeurs naïfs préalablement soumis à un entraînement procédural. D'après nos résultats, la variabilité inter-individuelle dans la dimension gauche/droite pourrait être liée à une préférence individuelle vers un type d'indices parmi ceux utilisables pour la localisation dans cette dimension (indices binauraux/spectraux). Dans les dimensions haut/bas et avant/arrière, la variabilité inter-individuelle pourrait être liée à l'attention spatiale et à sa variation entre les zones de l'espace. Une seconde expérimentation réalisée chez les mêmes auditeurs a montré qu'une amélioration des capacités de localisation était possible par un entraînement par feedback visuel ou audio-moteur. Cette amélioration était souvent fonction de la performance avant entraînement, conduisant ainsi à une réduction de la variabilité inter-individuelle après entraînement. La variabilité inter-individuelle dans la dimension haut/bas après entraînement était en partie expliquée par l'activité du faisceau olivocochléaire efférent médian (FOCEM), structure du système auditif probablement impliquée dans le codage des indices spectraux de localisation. Ce résultat a été conforté par les résultats d'une troisième expérimentation qui ont révélé que les auditeurs dont la performance de localisation était la moins altérée dans le bruit étaient ceux dont le FOCEM avait été déterminé comme le plus actif. / Several experiments were performed to investigate interindividual variability in auditory localization. The first experiment explored interindividual variability in the localization of virtual sound sources (individualized and non-individualized HRTFs) in 25 naive listeners following procedural training. The results suggest that interindividual variability in localization performance in the left-right dimension stems from interindividual differences in the use of the different types of cues available for sound localization in this dimension (binaural/spectral cues). Interindividual variability in sound-localization performance in the up-down and front-back dimensions appears to be related primarily to spatial attention and to its variation across the area of space. A second experiment in the same group of listeners showed that localization performance can be improved by the provision of visual or auditory-motor feedback. The improvement depended upon pre-training performance, in such a way that interindividual variability in performance was smaller after training than before training. In addition, interindividual variability in the up-down dimension after training was found to be related to interindividual differences in the activity of the medial olivocochlear bundle (MOCB), an efferent auditory system that is currently likely thought to be involved in the processing of spectral cues for sound localization. This result was supported by the results of a third experiment which revealed that the listeners in whom localization performance was least impacted by background noise were those in whom the strongest MOCB had been measured.
39

Interindividual Variability of Drug Transport Proteins : Focus on Intestinal Pgp (ABCB1) and BCRP (ABCG2)

Englund, Gunilla January 2005 (has links)
<p>The appearance of adverse drug reactions is a common reason for hospitalization in Western countries. Research on underlying biological mechanisms for interindividual variability in drug response aims to better identify patients with exceptional genetic traits, disease conditions or risk of drug-drug interactions and thereby help to prevent adverse drug reactions. </p><p>Active transport mechanisms are involved in the absorption and disposition of several therapeutic agents. The main objective of this thesis was to investigate factors potentially affecting transport proteins and thus contributing to variability in drug absorption and disposition. Studies of physiological, genetic, environmental, and pathological factors were included. The main focus was the two ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters: P-glycoprotein 170 (Pgp) and Breast Cancer Resistance Protein (BCRP). </p><p>Quantification of transport protein mRNAs along the human intestine indicated that eight of the nine investigated drug transporters were expressed in a region-dependent manner. Effects of drug-drug interactions may therefore vary depending on the site of absorption. The genetic aspect was illustrated by identification of sequence variation in the gene encoding BCRP, the most highly expressed ABC transporter along the human intestine. Drug-drug interactions are important environmental causes of interindividual variability. An evaluation of the effects of Pgp-mediated drug-drug interactions showed that patients receiving Pgp inhibitors had elevated serum concentrations of the Pgp substrate digoxin and that digoxin concentrations were positively correlated with the number of co-administered Pgp inhibitors. The final topic in this thesis was that of drug-disease interactions. BCRP and Pgp were down-regulated during active inflammation in patients with ulcerative colitis. This may contribute to altered concentrations of drug in the intestinal mucosa during periods of inflammation and possibly to changes in drug absorption.</p><p>To summarize, results of this thesis emphasize the complex background to the interindividual variability of drug transport proteins, where physiological, genetic, environmental and pathological factors all can contribute.</p>
40

Interindividual Variability of Drug Transport Proteins : Focus on Intestinal Pgp (ABCB1) and BCRP (ABCG2)

Englund, Gunilla January 2005 (has links)
The appearance of adverse drug reactions is a common reason for hospitalization in Western countries. Research on underlying biological mechanisms for interindividual variability in drug response aims to better identify patients with exceptional genetic traits, disease conditions or risk of drug-drug interactions and thereby help to prevent adverse drug reactions. Active transport mechanisms are involved in the absorption and disposition of several therapeutic agents. The main objective of this thesis was to investigate factors potentially affecting transport proteins and thus contributing to variability in drug absorption and disposition. Studies of physiological, genetic, environmental, and pathological factors were included. The main focus was the two ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters: P-glycoprotein 170 (Pgp) and Breast Cancer Resistance Protein (BCRP). Quantification of transport protein mRNAs along the human intestine indicated that eight of the nine investigated drug transporters were expressed in a region-dependent manner. Effects of drug-drug interactions may therefore vary depending on the site of absorption. The genetic aspect was illustrated by identification of sequence variation in the gene encoding BCRP, the most highly expressed ABC transporter along the human intestine. Drug-drug interactions are important environmental causes of interindividual variability. An evaluation of the effects of Pgp-mediated drug-drug interactions showed that patients receiving Pgp inhibitors had elevated serum concentrations of the Pgp substrate digoxin and that digoxin concentrations were positively correlated with the number of co-administered Pgp inhibitors. The final topic in this thesis was that of drug-disease interactions. BCRP and Pgp were down-regulated during active inflammation in patients with ulcerative colitis. This may contribute to altered concentrations of drug in the intestinal mucosa during periods of inflammation and possibly to changes in drug absorption. To summarize, results of this thesis emphasize the complex background to the interindividual variability of drug transport proteins, where physiological, genetic, environmental and pathological factors all can contribute.

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