https://www.selleckchem.com/products/neo2734.html 05). The model was adjusted for age, sex, BMI, hip pain, cam/pincer deformity and physical activity. 32 of the 128 participants (25%) had at least one BML. Subjects with at least one BML, compared to those without, had similar weighted characteristics of age, BMI, physical activity levels, and frequency of hip pain. Mean T was 75.25ms lower (95% CI [-149.69, -0.81]; p=0.048) (9%) in the BML compared to the no-BML group. Our results suggest that hips with BMLs are associated with hip cartilage degeneration early in the OA disease process. Our results suggest that hips with BMLs are associated with hip cartilage degeneration early in the OA disease process.Older adults tend to rate unfamiliar faces higher on trustworthiness than do their younger counterparts. Although the saying goes "look before you leap", it is still unknown whether such a strategy could also apply to facial trustworthiness perception, and our understanding of the time course in facial trustworthiness perception also remains unclear. Here, we have argued that a cognitive controlled process suggested by "socioemotional selectivity theory" could potentially lead to such biased trustworthiness perception. Two experiments were conducted to test the association between viewing time and trustworthiness perception. The first study used hierarchical linear modeling in a sample of younger (N = 30, Mage = 20.53, SD = 1.61, 50% female) and older (N = 30, Mage = 63.27, SD = 3.14, 43% female) adults, and found that viewing time and trustworthiness evaluation were positively associated. Using the same stimuli, our second study further manipulated viewing time by two levels (500 ms vs. 3000 ms) and compared younger (N = 28, Mage = 23.93, SD = 2.68, 50% female) and older (N = 30, Mage = 64.47, SD = 4.32, 50% female) adults' facial trustworthiness evaluation. As expected, a significant three-way interaction revealed that viewing time only impacted older adults' facia