TY - JOUR A1 - Baldermann, Susanne A1 - Blagojevic, Lara A1 - Frede, Katja A1 - Klopsch, R. A1 - Neugart, Susanne A1 - Neumann, A. A1 - Ngwene, Benard A1 - Norkeweit, Jessica A1 - Schroeter, D. A1 - Schroeter, A. A1 - Schweigert, Florian J. A1 - Wiesner, M. A1 - Schreiner, Monika T1 - Are Neglected Plants the Food for the Future? JF - Critical reviews in plant sciences N2 - Malnutrition, poor health, hunger, and even starvation are still the world's greatest challenges. Malnutrition is defined as deficiency of nutrition due to not ingesting the proper amounts of nutrients by simply not eating enough food and/or by consuming nutrient-poor food in respect to the daily nutritional requirements. Moreover, malnutrition and disease are closely associated and incidences of such diet-related diseases increase particularly in low- and middle-income states. While foods of animal origin are often unaffordable to low-income families, various neglected crops can offer an alternative source of micronutrients, vitamins, as well as health-promoting secondary plant metabolites. Therefore, agricultural and horticultural research should develop strategies not only to produce more food, but also to improve access to more nutritious food. In this context, one promising approach is to promote biodiversity in the dietary pattern of low-income people by getting access to nutritional as well as affordable food and providing recommendations for food selection and preparation. Worldwide, a multitude of various plant species are assigned to be consumed as grains, vegetables, and fruits, but only a limited number of these species are used as commercial cash crops. Consequently, numerous neglected and underutilized species offer the potential to diversify not only the human diet, but also increase food production levels, and, thus, enable more sustainable and resilient agro- and horti-food systems. To exploit the potential of neglected plant (NP) species, coordinated approaches on the local, regional, and international level have to be integrated that consequently demand the involvement of numerous multi-stakeholders. Thus, the objective of the present review is to evaluate whether NP species are important as “Future Food” for improving the nutritional status of humans as well as increasing resilience of agro- and horti-food systems. KW - Fruits KW - malnutrition KW - orphan crops KW - underutilized species KW - vegetables Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1080/07352689.2016.1201399 SN - 0735-2689 SN - 1549-7836 VL - 35 SP - 106 EP - 119 PB - Institut d'Estudis Catalans CY - Philadelphia ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Achilles, E. I. S. A1 - Fink, G. R. A1 - Fischer, Martin H. A1 - Dovern, A. A1 - Held, A. A1 - Timpert, D. C. A1 - Schroeter, C. A1 - Schuetz, K. A1 - Kloetzsch, C. A1 - Weiss, P. H. T1 - Effect of meaning on apraxic finger imitation deficits JF - Neuropsychologia : an international journal in behavioural and cognitive neuroscience N2 - Apraxia typically results from left-hemispheric (LH), but also from right-hemispheric (RH) stroke, and often impairs gesture imitation. Especially in LH stroke, it is important to differentiate apraxia-induced gesture imitation deficits from those due to co-morbid aphasia and associated semantic deficits, possibly influencing the imitation of meaningful (MF) gestures. To explore this issue, we first investigated if the 10 supposedly meaningless (ML) gestures of a widely used finger imitation test really carry no meaning, or if the test also contains MF gestures, by asking healthy subjects (n=45) to classify these gestures as MF or ML. Most healthy subjects (98%) classified three of the 10 gestures as clearly MF. Only two gestures were considered predominantly ML. We next assessed how imitation in stroke patients (255 LH, 113 RH stroke) is influenced by gesture meaning and how aphasia influences imitation of LH stroke patients (n=208). All patients and especially patients with imitation deficits (17% of LH, 27% of RH stroke patients) imitated MF gestures significantly better than ML gestures. Importantly, meaningfulness-scores of all 10 gestures significantly predicted imitation scores of patients with imitation deficits. Furthermore, especially in LH stroke patients with imitation deficits, the severity of aphasia significantly influenced the imitation of MF, but not ML gestures. Our findings in a large patient cohort support current cognitive models of imitation and strongly suggest that ML gestures are particularly sensitive to detect imitation deficits while minimising confounding effects of aphasia which affect the imitation of MF gestures in LH stroke patients. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - Apraxia KW - Meaning KW - Cognitive models of imitation Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2015.12.022 SN - 0028-3932 SN - 1873-3514 VL - 82 SP - 74 EP - 83 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER -