Tuesday, September 30, 2025

 

High pollen count: The last straw effect on suicide risk



University of Michigan






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Beyond the sneezing and itchy eyes, high pollen seasons are now linked to a significant increase in suicide risk.

 

A new University of Michigan study found a 7.4% jump in deaths, suggesting the physical discomfort of allergies may trigger a deeper, more dangerous despair, an overlooked factor in suicide prevention.

 

The study indicates that allergies' physiological effects, such as poor sleep and mental distress, may contribute to this increased risk.

 

"A small shock could have a big effect if you're already in a vulnerable state," said Joelle Abramowitz, associate research scientist at U-M's Institute for Social Research. "We looked specifically at pollen from all different kinds of plants, including trees, weeds and grasses."

 

The effect is incremental. Researchers divided pollen levels into four tiers and found the suicide risk rose with each group: it increased by 4.5% in the second level, 5.5% in the third and peaked at 7.4% in the fourth and highest category.

 

The study, funded by the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention and U-M ISR, combines daily pollen data from 186 counties of 34 metropolitan areas across the United States, with suicide data from the National Violent Death Reporting System between 2006 and 2018. 

 

Abramowitz and co-authors Shooshan Danagoulian and Owen Fleming of Wayne State University said that while structural factors for suicide are well-researched, short-term triggers are less understood. Pollen allergies are an ideal subject for this research, considering they are an exogenous shock—meaning they are external and not caused by an individual's mental health status.

 

"During our study period, there were nearly 500,000 suicides in the U.S.," Abramowitz said. "Based on our incremental data, we estimate that pollen may have been a contributing factor in up to 12,000 of those deaths over the period, or roughly 900 to 1,200 deaths per year."

 

Vulnerable populations

 

Published in the Journal of Health Economics, the study also found that individuals with a known mental health condition or who had received prior mental health treatment had an 8.6% higher incidence of suicide on days with the highest pollen levels. White men strongly drive the effect, but the study also found an unexpectedly high vulnerability among Black individuals.

 

"While our study's data comes from the U.S., our findings likely apply globally," Abramowitz said. "This is supported by earlier research that found similar relationships in locations like Tokyo and Denmark. Our results, therefore, provide crucial new evidence that this phenomenon is a consistent, worldwide trend."

 

Public health and awareness

 

The focus should be on public health and education, as reducing the number of pollen-producing plants isn't a viable option, the researchers suggest. This includes more accurate pollen forecasting and better public communication. Providing people with clear, timely information about high-pollen days allows them to take proactive steps. Additional recommendations are limiting outdoor activities, wearing a mask or having antihistamines on hand.

 

There is also a need for a broader approach to mental health awareness, the authors said. Health care providers, particularly those in primary care, can benefit from understanding the connection between environmental factors, such as pollen, and patient well-being. This knowledge could help them tailor care more effectively, especially for vulnerable patients, and serve as a prompt to discuss mental health and stress management during high-pollen seasons or other periods of environmental stress.

 

"We should be more conscious of our responsiveness to small environmental changes, such as pollen, and our mental health in general," Abramowitz said. "Given our findings, I believe medical providers should be aware of a patient's allergy history, as other research has also established a connection between allergies and a higher risk for suicide. I hope this research can lead to more tailored care and, ultimately, save lives."

 

The authors predict that as climate change extends and intensifies the pollen season, the impact of allergies on suicide rates could more than double by the end of the century.

 

Study: Seasonal Allergies and Mental Health: Do Small Health Shocks Affect Suicidality? (DOI: 10.1016/j.jhealeco.2025.103069)

Monday, September 29, 2025

 

Forget numbers: your PIN could consist of a shimmy and a shake




University of British Columbia




In the near future, you may not need to touch a keypad to select a tip or pay for large purchases. All it may take is a swipe, tap or other quick gesture.

Hygienic tips

The innovation utilizes near-field communication (NFC), the short-range wireless technology embedded in smartphones, payment cards and terminals, passports and key fobs. UBC computer scientists say it could help prevent the spread of germs through touchpads, speed up transactions, and improve accessibility for users unable to press buttons.

Researchers debuted the technology in a paper at the User Interface Software and Technology conference yesterday.

“Now, we can provide contactless interactions that didn’t even exist before: make a gesture with your existing card to input a PIN or pick a tip amount,” says senior author Dr. Robert Xiao.

How it works

Dr. Xiao and doctoral student Bu Li analyzed raw signals from NFC chips and introduced copper coils to manipulate the generated magnetic field. By examining changes in the field as a card moved through it, they were able to define nine distinct gestures, including swiping up and down, left to right, and double tapping. Using a custom AI model, the team found the reader could distinguish between gestures with about 92 per cent accuracy.

“Gesture interaction could also add an extra layer of security,” said Li.

Innovation on the cheap

The researchers estimate upgrades would cost at most $20 per payment terminal. “Many pay terminals already have the computing power required and if they don’t, it’s a cheap upgrade,” said Dr. Xiao.

The team is working with UBC to patent the technology.

 

Walking shapes how people process sound



The path people take while walking can influence how the brain responds to sounds.



Peer-Reviewed Publication

Society for Neuroscience






Does walking influence how people process sensory information, like sounds, from the environment? In a new JNeurosci paper, researchers led by Liyu Cao, from Zhejiang University, and Barbara Händel, from University of Würzburg, explored whether walking direction influences how people process sounds. 

Thirty volunteers walked in an eight-shaped path as they listened to a continuous stream of sound with changing intensities while researchers collected recordings of brain activity. People had stronger neural responses to sound while walking as opposed to standing or walking in place. These responses changed to the same degree as manipulations to sound intensity. Notably, different walking directions changed how the brain responded to sound. Cao provides an example, “When people made a right turn, responses to sounds from the right ear were enhanced at the beginning of the turn and then suppressed, relative to the responses to sounds from left. This could reflect a change in attention during turns.”  

When the authors introduced bursts of tones into the sound stream, these tones disrupted the brain’s associative response and elicited a different response. As before, this response was strongest during walking, but only when the sound bursts happened in one ear as opposed to both ears. This finding suggests that neural responses may be particularly sensitive to auditory input from the periphery when people are walking 

Bridging the findings together, says Cao, “This could reflect a filtering operation of the brain: It might actively suppress predictable background sounds—like our own footsteps—while increasing sensitivity to unexpected sounds from the side. This might allow for faster reaction times and safer navigation in dynamic environments. It could also suggest that our auditory system appears to be optimized for detecting novelty and deviation during movement.” 

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Please contact media@sfn.org for full-text PDF. 

About JNeurosci 

JNeurosci was launched in 1981 as a means to communicate the findings of the highest quality neuroscience research to the growing field. Today, the journal remains committed to publishing cutting-edge neuroscience that will have an immediate and lasting scientific impact, while responding to authors' changing publishing needs, representing breadth of the field and diversity in authorship. 

About The Society for Neuroscience 

The Society for Neuroscience is the world's largest organization of scientists and physicians devoted to understanding the brain and nervous system. The nonprofit organization, founded in 1969, now has nearly 35,000 members in more than 95 countries. 

SPAGYRIC HERBALISM

Polyphenols Applications World Congress and Iprona will launch Global Call to Advance Robust, Reproducible Polyphenol Research, October in Malta



European black elderberry (Sambucus nigra) water extract

A standardized, reproducible, traceable extract for research groups across the globe



Mitochondria-Microbiota Task Force

Iprona and Polyphenols Applications Launch Global Call to Advance Robust, Reproducible Polyphenol Research 

image: 

ElderCraft®

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Credit: @Polyhenols Applications 2025





At the 18th World Congress on Polyphenols Applications, which will be held in Malta on October 2-3, 2025, Iprona and Polyphenols Applications will announce a global call to action, inviting researchers to strengthen the quality and reproducibility of polyphenol science.

Through this initiative, ElderCraft®, a polyphenol-standardised European black elderberry (Sambucus nigra) water extract, is now available at no cost to qualified academic and clinical research groups worldwide.

ElderCraft® is a polyphenol and anthocyanin-rich extract, sourced exclusively from Austrian elderberries and produced using gentle ultrafiltration to preserve the natural profile of bioactive compounds. Each batch comes with Certificates of Analysis (CoAs), HPLC fingerprints, and stability data, ensuring traceability, batch-to-batch consistency, and study-ready analytics.

“Robust, comparable data begins with robust, comparable materials,” said Dr. Stephan Plattner, Scientific Director, Health & Nutrition Ingredients at iprona. “By sharing ElderCraft® with the research community, we aim to reduce study-to-study variability, enable stronger meta-analyses, and help unlock clearer dose–response and subgroup insights in polyphenol science.”

Polyphenols Applications 2025, organiser of the World Congress on Polyphenols Applications, fully supports this effort and encourages researchers across mechanistic, preclinical, and clinical fields to integrate highly characterised, standardised polyphenol extracts into their work.

Why It Matters

  • Improved reproducibility: Tight batch tolerances and full analytics reduce variability between studies.
  • Meta-analysis ready: Standardisation enables stronger dose–response and subgroup evaluation.
  • Translational relevance: ElderCraft® is already used in global consumer products, connecting research to real-world impact.
  • Compliance support: Full traceability and documented quality facilitate ethical and regulatory submissions.

Research areas include immune function, gut microbiome modulation, viral defence, cardiometabolic health, cognitive performance, healthy ageing, and energy metabolism.

Request research material Link:  
https://www.craft-ingredients.info/references/eldercraft-research-material-request
 
Contact
Scientific queries/material: Dr. Stephan Plattner (Scientific Director, Health & Nutrition Ingredients, Iprona Lana) – stephan.plattner@iprona.com
 
About ElderCraft®
https://www.craft-ingredients.info/our-ingredients/eldercraft
 

The 18th World Congress on Polyphenols Applications is the global forum where polyphenol science meets clinical translation. By joining forces, iprona and Polyphenols Applications aim to accelerate high-quality, reproducible studies that advance the field and clarify the health potential of polyphenols.

About iprona

Iprona is a global leader in fruit processing and bioactive ingredient development. With decades of expertise in polyphenol-rich extracts, iprona supports science-driven innovation and the creation of evidence-based health applications.

About Polyphenols Applications

Polyphenols Applications is an international scientific platform and organiser of the World Congress on Polyphenols Applications, fostering collaboration among researchers, clinicians, and industry to advance understanding and application of polyphenols in health and disease.

www.polyphenols-site.com

Disclosure: ElderCraft® is provided by iprona for research use only. This announcement is issued in collaboration with Polyphenols Applications and supported by iprona.

 

Yang receives funding for welfare and poverty mapping project




George Mason University

Ruixin Yang, Associate Professor, Geography Geoinformation Science, College of Science, received funding for: “Welfare and Poverty Mapping with Satellite-Derived Data, Spatial Analysis and Machine Learning Application.”

The objective of this consultancy is to provide technical and advisory support in:

  • processing satellite imagery and geospatial datasets;
  • designing and implementing machine learning models for spatial analysis; and
  • supporting documentation and dissemination of findings through project reports and scientific publications.

This assignment will directly support the spatial analytics team under the Science Action program, strengthening the quality and scalability of geospatial research outputs.

Yang received $15,000 from International Food Policy Research Institute for this research. Funding began in July 2025 and ended in Aug. 2025.

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