behavior.Chromium (Cr) pollution has serious harm to crop growth, while little is known on the role of melatonin (MT) on seed germination and physiology in Cr-stressed wheat. The effects of seed soaking with MT on growth, reserve mobilization, osmotic regulation and antioxidant capacity of wheat seeds during germination under hexavalent chromium (100 μM) stress were investigated. The results indicated that Cr toxicity decreased the seed germination rate by 16% and suppressed the growth of germinated seeds compared to unstressed seeds. MT in the concentration-dependent manner increased germination rate and promoted subsequent growth when seeds were exposed to Cr stress, but the effect could be counteracted at high concentration. Seed soaking with MT (100 μM) markedly decreased Cr accumulation in seeds, radicals and coleoptiles by 15%, 6% and 15%, respectively, and enhanced α-amylase activity and soluble sugar and free amino acids content in seeds to improve reserve mobilization under Cr stress, compared with Cr treatment. Furthermore, decreasing the level of osmotic regulators (soluble sugar and soluble protein) in radicles under MT combined with Cr treatment confirmed the reduction of osmotic stress caused by Cr stress. Importantly, MT pretreatment reduced H2O2 content by 19% and O2·- release rate by 45% in radicles under Cr toxicity compared with Cr-stressed wheat, in terms of promoting scavenging ability and decreasing production ability, which was to upregulate the activities and encoding genes expression levels of superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT), ascorbic acid peroxidase (APX) and peroxidase (POD) and to downregulate plasma membrane-bound NADPH oxidase (NOX) encoding genes (TaRbohD, TaRbohF) expression, respectively. In all, these results provided evidence that seed soaking with MT could be a potentially method to protect wheat seeds from Cr toxicity, which effectively ameliorated germination under Cr stress by enhancing reserve mobilization and antioxidant metabolism in wheat. Psychotic episodes have been associated with damage to both grey matter (GM) and white matter (WM). Although a recent meta-analysis suggest that in long term treatment, first generation antipsychotics (FGA) are associated with progressive reduction in GM, second generation antipsychotics (SGA) seem to have benefits to WM microstructure. A search was conducted to identify controlled trials published from January 2000 to January 2021, which assessed WM integrity as measured by DTI in drug-naïve patients with FEP before and after antipsychotic administration. 3 studies met the criteria for inclusion. All studies demonstrated lower FA in psychotic patients vs HC. A 6-week study reported that antipsychotic medication results in a further decrease in FA within the bilateral ACG and right ACR, regions important in emotional processing. An 8-week study found that antipsychotic treatment increase FA in the SLF, resulting in improved symptoms and increased processing speed. A 3rd study found an increase in FA in several regions along with a negative correlation between FA and PANSS at remission. Drug-naïve FEP patients have WM dysfunction at baseline and antipsychotic medications appear to alter or improve WM especially at remission. More controlled trials are warranted to validate these conclusions. Drug-naïve FEP patients have WM dysfunction at baseline and antipsychotic medications appear to alter or improve WM especially at remission. More controlled trials are warranted to validate these conclusions. Negative symptoms are associated with poor outcomes and functioning. Latent structure of negative symptoms is important for identifying potential intervention targets for novel treatments. Self-report instruments have been developed to measure negative symptoms. Previous findings on latent structure of negative symptoms are inconsistently and mainly rely on clinician-rated instruments. We aimed to explore the latent structure of the Self-Evaluation of Negative Symptoms Scale (SNS) in 204 clinically-stable outpatients with schizophrenia. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was used to compare the competing models (i.e., one-factor, two-factor and five-factor models), and estimated goodness-of-fit indexes. Other clinician-rated scales for psychopathology and medication side-effects were also collected. The CFA found the five-factor model performing best, with a comparative fit index (CFI) of > 0.95, a Tucker Lewis Index (TLI) of > 0.95, and a root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA) of < 0.06. The robust chi-square difference test for the weighted least squares with mean and variance adjusted estimation (WLSMV) also indicated a significant better fit for the five-factor model. Our preliminary findings support a five-factor latent structure of self-report negative symptoms in schizophrenia patients. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/iox1.html Further research in this area should utilize multiple clinician-rated and self-report measures, and recruit large and homogeneous samples with schizophrenia. Our preliminary findings support a five-factor latent structure of self-report negative symptoms in schizophrenia patients. Further research in this area should utilize multiple clinician-rated and self-report measures, and recruit large and homogeneous samples with schizophrenia.Individuals with eating disorders (EDs) may be particularly susceptible to body image related cognitive fusion (i.e., excessive entanglement with one's body image related thoughts such that they unduly influence on behavior). The Cognitive Fusion Questionnaire-Body Image (CFQ-BI) is the only existing measure of this construct, yet its psychometric properties have not been examined within a clinically diagnosed ED sample. The current study used confirmatory factor analysis and explored measurement invariance, construct validity, and incremental validity of the CFQ-BI when used with adolescent (n = 75) and adult (n = 100) females admitting to residential ED treatment. A modified version of the single-factor structure of the CFQ-BI best fit the data and configural, metric, and scalar invariance were supported across age groups (i.e., adolescents or adults) and ED behavioral presentations (i.e., restrictive behaviors or binge/purge behaviors). Adults' and individuals with binge/purge behavioral presentations reported significantly more body image related fusion compared to adolescents and adults, respectively.