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Changes in Mental State for Help-Seekers of Lifeline Australia’s Online Chat Service: Lexical Analysis Approach

Changes in Mental State for Help-Seekers of Lifeline Australia’s Online Chat Service: Lexical Analysis Approach

Post hoc t tests were also conducted to determine which phases of conversation were significantly different from one another. Trend analysis and linear regression were then performed on the mean token counts across 9 overlapping conversation windows to determine the direction (slope) and magnitude (R²) of change within each lexical category. This method allowed better understanding of the dynamic change across conversations. Figure 1 shows the workflow of analyses and included categories.

Kelly Mazzer, Sonia Curll, Hakar Barzinjy, Roland Goecke, Mark Larsen, Philip J Batterham, Nickolai Titov, Debra Rickwood

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e63257

User Experiences With Digital Future-Self Interventions in the Contexts of Smoking and Physical Inactivity: Mixed Methods Multistudy Exploration

User Experiences With Digital Future-Self Interventions in the Contexts of Smoking and Physical Inactivity: Mixed Methods Multistudy Exploration

After computing descriptive statistics, a 1-sample t test examined whether anticipated difficulty scores differed from the neutral 0 point. One- and 3-way repeated-measure (RM) ANOVAs explored differences in anticipated difficulty and anticipated completion time based on behavior (smoking vs PA), polarity (desired vs undesired future self), and modality (verbal vs visual description) of the future-self tasks. Assumptions were verified (Multimedia Appendix 2).

Kristell M Penfornis, Nele Albers, Willem-Paul Brinkman, Mark A Neerincx, Andrea WM Evers, Winifred A Gebhardt, Eline Meijer

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e63893

Improving HIV Prevention Among Heterosexual Men Seeking Sexually Transmitted Infection Services in Malawi: Protocol for a Type I Effectiveness-Implementation Hybrid Randomized Controlled Trial of Systems Navigator–Delivered Integrated Prevention Package (HPTN 112-NJIRA Study)

Improving HIV Prevention Among Heterosexual Men Seeking Sexually Transmitted Infection Services in Malawi: Protocol for a Type I Effectiveness-Implementation Hybrid Randomized Controlled Trial of Systems Navigator–Delivered Integrated Prevention Package (HPTN 112-NJIRA Study)

Nonliterate participants will document their informed consent by marking their ICF(s) (eg, with an X, thumbprint, or other mark) in the presence of a literate third-party witness. Participants will be provided with a copy of their ICF if they are willing to receive it. All minors (under the age of 18) will be required to provide assent along with parental consent. According to Malawi guidelines, individuals aged 15 years and above may initiate Pr EP if they meet other eligibility criteria.

Sarah E Rutstein, Laura Limarzi-Klyn, Jane S Chen, Yaw O Agyei, Shahnaz Ahmed, Ian Bell, Myron Cohen, Jessica M Fogel, Vivian Go, Dan Haines, Erica L Hamilton, Irving F Hoffman, Mina C Hosseinipour, Mark A Marzinke, William C Miller, Mathews Mukatipa, Julie Pulerwitz, Hans M L Spiegel, Ting Ye, Mitch Matoga

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e72981

Effect of Live Environmental Music Therapy and Prerecorded Music on State Anxiety, Stress, Pain, and Well-Being Levels of Patients and Caregivers in the Emergency Department Waiting Room: Protocol for a Multicenter Randomized Clinical Trial

Effect of Live Environmental Music Therapy and Prerecorded Music on State Anxiety, Stress, Pain, and Well-Being Levels of Patients and Caregivers in the Emergency Department Waiting Room: Protocol for a Multicenter Randomized Clinical Trial

For the comparison of measures of central tendency in the cases of quantitative variables, tests such as the Student t test or sum of Wilcoxon or Kruskal–Wallis ranges will be performed, depending on the presence or not of normality in the distribution of the variables. A statistical significance value of 5% will be used for all hypothesis test cases. The analysis regarding the effect of the interventions will be carried out separately by type of participant (patient or caregiver).

Angélica Hernández, Ana María Díaz, Ornella Fiorillo Moreno, Raúl Suárez, Moshé Amarillo, Ana María Moreno, Bryan Alonso Ríos Suarez, Lina Marcela Gómez González, Guiselle Alexandra Cristancho Olaya, Mark Ettenberger

JMIR Res Protoc 2025;14:e69131

College Community–Based Physical Activity Support at a Public University During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Retrospective Longitudinal Analysis of Intra- Versus Interpersonal Components for Uptake and Outcome Association

College Community–Based Physical Activity Support at a Public University During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Retrospective Longitudinal Analysis of Intra- Versus Interpersonal Components for Uptake and Outcome Association

This feature was only used by a few individuals, whereas the features in the subsequent 3 bullets were used by a majority of the 335 participants. g The top 3 teams by average step count per member received T-shirts, grouped by the academic status of users who founded the team. Participants could actively form their own teams. Those not doing so were randomly assigned to a team in the first half of the first week of the challenge.

Garrett I Ash, Selene S Mak, Adrian D Haughton, Madilyn Augustine, Phillip O Bodurtha, Robert S Axtell, Beatrice Borsari, Jason J Liu, Shaoke Lou, Xin Xin, Lisa M Fucito, Sangchoon Jeon, Matthew Stults-Kolehmainen, Mark B Gerstein

JMIR Mhealth Uhealth 2025;13:e51707

Temporal Dynamics of Subtle Cognitive Change: Validation of a User-Friendly Multidomain Digital Assessment Using an Alcohol Challenge

Temporal Dynamics of Subtle Cognitive Change: Validation of a User-Friendly Multidomain Digital Assessment Using an Alcohol Challenge

This includes conditions with primary pathology anchored in the central nervous system (CNS—ie, neurodevelopmental, neuropsychiatric, and neurodegenerative disorders, as well as trauma), as well as CNS impairment secondary to other drivers of brain dysfunction (eg, “brain fog” following chemotherapy, chimeric antigen receptor T-cell, or radiation therapy, COVID-19).

John Frederick Dyer, Florentine Marie Barbey, Ayan Ghoshal, Ann Marie Hake, Bryan J Hansen, Md Nurul Islam, Judith Jaeger, Rouba Kozak, Hugh Marston, Mark Moss, Viet Nguyen, Rebecca Louise Quinn, Leslie A Shinobu, Elizabeth Tunbridge, Brian Murphy, Niamh Kennedy

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e55469