The study used a small homogeneous sample of college students, leaving unknown how genetic, demographic, or baseline stress vulnerability factors modulate heat-anxiety responses. This knowledge gap limits generalizability and personalized risk assessment for climate-related mental health effects. Gap type: open_question Source paper: Heat exposure intervention, anxiety level, and multi-omic profiles: A randomized crossover study. (2023, Environment international, PMID:37871510)
Landscape Summary: How do individual differences in stress susceptibility affect heat-induced anxiety responses and biomarker profiles? is a 0.8 priority gap in stress-neurobiology. It has 0 linked hypotheses with average composite score 0.000. Status: open.
Colonna, Sevlever, et al. (TREM2 biology)
How do individual differences in stress susceptibility affect heat-induced anxiety responses and biomarker profiles? — INVOKE-2 (completed)
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