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Heats of compression of glass bead-water and clay-water mixtures were determined from the peak heights of the thermograms produced when these mixtures were subjected to pressure in a Calvet differential microcalorimeter. It is known that the heat of compression is directly proportional to the peak height. When the latter quantity was plotted against the pressure applied to any mixture, two intersecting straight lines were obtained. The change in slope at the point of intersection was interpreted as being the result of a pressure-induced higher-order phase transition in the water.
The differential peak height, ε, was defined as the rate of change of peak height with pressure/g of water present in the mixture. Hence, it is directly proportional to the rate of change of the heat of compression with pressure/g of water. Values of ε were determined for both glass bead-water and clay-water mixtures containing different proportions of solids. It was found that ε remained nearly constant with increasing proportions of glass beads, whereas, it varied in a non-uniform way with increasing proportions of clay. Also, its values in the clay-water mixtures were relatively high. Calculations showed that the difference in ε values for the two mixtures could not be ascribed to the exchangeable cations associated with the clay particles. Consequently, it was ascribed to the effect of the particle surfaces on the structure of the vicinal water.
This article examines the development, early operation and subsequent failure of the Tot-Kolowa Red Cross irrigation scheme in Kenya’s Kerio Valley. Initially conceived as a technical solution to address regional food insecurity, the scheme aimed to scale up food production through the implementation of a fixed pipe irrigation system and the provision of agricultural inputs for cash cropping. A series of unfolding circumstances, however, necessitated numerous modifications to the original design as the project became increasingly entangled with deep and complex histories of land use patterns, resource allocation and conflict. Failure to understand the complexity of these dynamics ultimately led to the project’s collapse as the region spiralled into a period of significant unrest. In tracing these events, we aim to foreground the lived realities of imposed development, including both positive and negative responses to the scheme’s participatory obligations and its wider impact on community resilience.
Previous research established that white matter hyperintensities (WMH), a biomarker of small vessel cerebrovascular disease, are strong predictors of cognitive function in older adults and associated with clinical presentation of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), particularly when distributed in posterior brain regions. Secondary prevention clinical trials, such as the Anti-Amyloid Treatment in Asymptomatic Alzheimer’s (A4) study, target amyloid accumulation in asymptomatic amyloid positive individuals, but it is unclear the extent to which small vessel cerebrovascular disease accounts for performance on the primary cognitive outcomes in these trials. The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between regional WMH volume and performance on the Preclinical Alzheimer Cognitive Composite (PACC) among participants screened for participation in the A4 trial. We also determined whether the association between WMH and cognition is moderated by amyloid positivity status.
Participants and Methods:
We assessed demographic, amyloid PET status, cognitive screening, and raw MRI data for participants in the A4 trial and quantitated regional (by cerebral lobe) WMH volumes from T2-weighted FLAIR in amyloid positive and amyloid negative participants at screening. Cognition was assessed using PACC scores, a z-score sum of four cognitive tests: The Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), the Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test, Logical Memory Test, and Digit Symbol Substitution Test. We included 1329 amyloid positive and 329 amyloid negative individuals (981 women; mean age=71.79 years; mean education=16.58 years) at the time of the analysis. The sample included Latinx (n=50; 3%), non-Latinx (n=1590; 95.9%), or unspecified ethnicity (n=18; 1.1%) individuals who identified as American Indian/Alaskan Native (n=7; 0.4%), Asian (n=38; 2.3%), Black/African American (n=41; 2.5%), White (n=1551 ; 93.5%), or unspecified (n=21; 1.3%) race. We first examined the associations of total and regional WMH volume and amyloid positivity on PACC scores (the primary cognitive outcome measure for A4) using separate general linear models and then determined whether amyloid positivity status and regional WMH statistically interacted for those WMH regions that showed significant main effects.
Results:
Both increased WMH, in the frontal and parietal lobes particularly, and amyloid positivity were independently associated with poorer performance on the PACC, with similar magnitude. In subsequent models, WMH volume did not interact with amyloid positivity status on PACC scores.
Conclusions:
Regionally distributed WMH are independently associated with cognitive functioning in typical participants enrolled in a secondary prevention clinical trial for AD. These effects are of similar magnitude to the effects of amyloid positivity on cognition, highlighting the extent to which small vessel cerebrovascular disease potentially drives AD-related cognitive profiles. Measures of small vessel cerebrovascular disease should be considered explicitly when evaluating outcomes in trials, both as potential effect modifiers and as possible targets for intervention or prevention. The findings from this study cannot be generalized widely, as the participants are not representative of the overall population.
Neuropsychiatric symptoms concerning mood are common in Alzheimer's disease (AD), but it is unclear if they are etiologically related to AD pathophysiology or due to factors considered to be non-pathogenic, such as small vessel cerebrovascular disease. New generation clinical trials for AD often enroll participants with evidence of AD pathophysiology, indexed by amyloid PET scanning, but who are cognitively asymptomatic. We used screening data from the Anti-Amyloid Treatment in Asymptomatic Alzheimer's (A4) study to examine the extent to which depressive symptoms are associated with amyloid pathophysiology and small vessel cerebrovascular disease, in the form of white matter hyperintensities (WMH).
Participants and Methods:
The A4 study randomizes cognitively healthy older adults with evidence of amyloid pathophysiology on PET scanning. We used screening data, which included amyloid status (positive, negative) by visual read, amyloid PET standard uptake value ratio (SUVR) in cortical regions, and MRI data acquired in a subset (n=1,197, mean age 71.6 +/- 4.8 years, 57% women) to quantitate total WMH volume. Depressive symptoms were evaluated with the 15-item Geriatric Depression Scale, which we used both as a continuous variable and to define 'depressed' and 'non-depressed' groups, based on a cut score of > 5. We examined whether 1) depressive symptoms and proportion of depressed individuals differed between amyloid positive and negative groups, 2) there is a relationship between amyloid SUVR and depressive symptoms that differs as a function of amyloid positivity status, and 3) there is a relationship between WMH volume and depressive symptoms that differs as a function of amyloid positivity status.
Results:
Although depressive symptom severity did not differ between groups (t=0.14, p=0.88), a greater proportion of individuals were classified as depressed in the amyloid negative group than the amyloid positive group (3.5% vs. 1.9%, X2=4.60, p=0.032). Increased amyloid SUVR was associated with increased GDS scores among amyloid positive individuals (r=0.117, p=0.002) but not among amyloid negative individuals (r=0.006, p=0.68, Positivity Status x SUVR interaction on GDS: ß=0.817, p=0.029). Increased WMH was associated with higher GDS scores (ß=0.105, p=0.017) but not differentially in amyloid positive and negative participants (Positivity Status x WMH interaction on GDS: ß=-0.010, p=0.243).
Conclusions:
These analyses have several implications. First, individuals who are screened to participate in a clinical trial but do not have evidence of amyloidosis may be misattributing concerns about underlying AD pathophysiology to depressive symptoms. Second, the severity of AD pathophysiology, indexed by amyloid PET SUVR, may drive a small increase in depressive symptomatology among individuals over visual diagnostic thresholds. Third, small vessel cerebrovascular changes are additionally associated with depressive symptoms but in a manner that is independent of AD pathophysiology. Overall, depressive symptoms and depression are likely multiply determined among prospective clinical trial participants for preclinical AD.
Late Life Major Depressive Disorder (LLD) and Hoarding Disorder (HD) are common in older adults with prevalence estimates up to 29% and 7%, respectively. Both LLD and HD are characterized by executive dysfunction and disability. There is evidence of overlapping neurobiological dysfunction in LLD and HD suggesting potential for compounded executive dysfunction and disability in the context of comorbid HD and LLD. Yet, prevalence of HD in primary presenting LLD has not been examined and potential compounded impact on executive functioning, disability, and treatment response remains unknown. Thus, the present study aimed to determine the prevalence of co-occurring HD in primary presenting LLD and examine hoarding symptom severity as a contributor to executive dysfunction, disability, and response to treatment for LLD.
Participants and Methods:
Eighty-three adults ages 65-90 participating in a psychotherapy study for LLD completed measures of hoarding symptom severity (Savings Inventory-Revised: SI-R), executive functioning (WAIS-IV Digit Span, Letter-Number Sequencing, Coding; Stroop Interference; Trail Making Test-Part B; Letter Fluency), functional ability (World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule-II-Short), and depression severity (Hamilton Depression Rating Scale) at post-treatment. Pearson's Chi-squared tests evaluated group differences in cognitive and functional impairment rates and depression treatment response between participants with (HD+LLD) and without (LLD-only) clinically significant hoarding symptoms. Linear regressions were used to examine the association between hoarding symptom severity and executive function performance and functional ability and included as covariates participant age, years of education, gender, and concurrent depression severity.
Results:
At post-treatment, 24.1% (20/83) of participants with LLD met criteria for clinically significant hoarding symptoms (SI-R.41). Relative to LLD-only, the LLD+HD group demonstrated greater impairment rates in Letter-Number Sequencing (χ2(1)=4.0, p=.045) and Stroop Interference (χ2(1)=4.8, p=.028). Greater hoarding symptom severity was associated with poorer executive functioning performance on Digit Span (t(71)=-2.4, β=-0.07, p=.019), Letter-Number Sequencing (t(70)=-2.1, β=-0.05, p=.044), and Letter Fluency (t(71)=-2.8, β=-0.24, p=.006). Rates of functional impairment were significantly higher in the LLD+HD (88.0%) group compared to the LLD-only (62.3%) group, (χ2(1)=5.41, p=.020). Additionally, higher hoarding symptom severity was related to greater disability (t(72)=2.97, β=0.13, p=.004). Furthermore, depression treatment response rates were significantly lower in the LLD+HD group at 24.0% (6/25) compared to 48.3% (28/58) in the LLD-only group, χ2(1)=4.26, p=.039.
Conclusions:
The present study is among the first to report prevalence of clinically significant hoarding symptoms in primary presenting LLD. The findings of 24.1% co-occurrence of HD in primary presenting LLD and increased burden on executive functioning, disability, and depression treatment outcomes have important implications for intervention and prevention efforts. Hoarding symptoms are likely under-evaluated, and thus may be overlooked, in clinical settings where LLD is identified as the primary diagnosis. Taken together with results indicating poorer depression treatment response in LLD+HD, these findings underscore the need for increased screening of hoarding behaviors in LLD and tailored interventions for this LLD+HD group. Future work examining the course of hoarding symptomatology in LLD (e.g., onset age of hoarding behaviors) may provide insights into the mechanisms associated with greater executive dysfunction and disability.
High cognitive activity possibly reduces the risk of cognitive decline and dementia.
Aims
To investigate associations between an individual's need to engage in cognitively stimulating activities (need for cognition, NFC) and structural brain damage and cognitive functioning in the Dutch general population with and without existing cognitive impairment.
Method
Cross-sectional data were used from the population-based cohort of the Maastricht Study. NFC was measured using the Need For Cognition Scale. Cognitive functioning was tested in three domains: verbal memory, information processing speed, and executive functioning and attention. Values 1.5 s.d. below the mean were defined as cognitive impairment. Standardised volumes of white matter hyperintensities (WMH), cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and presence of cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD) were derived from 3T magnetic resonance imaging. Multiple linear and binary logistic regression analyses were used adjusted for demographic, somatic and lifestyle factors.
Results
Participants (n = 4209; mean age 59.06 years, s.d. = 8.58; 50.1% women) with higher NFC scores had higher overall cognition scores (B = 0.21, 95% CI 0.17–0.26, P < 0.001) and lower odds for CSVD (OR = 0.74, 95% CI 0.60–0.91, P = 0.005) and cognitive impairment (OR = 0.60, 95% CI 0.48–0.76, P < 0.001) after adjustment for demographic, somatic and lifestyle factors. The association between NFC score and cognitive functioning was similar for individuals with and without prevalent cognitive impairment. We found no significant association between NFC and WMH or CSF volumes.
Conclusions
A high need to engage in cognitively stimulating activities is associated with better cognitive functioning and less presence of CSVD and cognitive impairment. This suggests that, in middle-aged individuals, motivation to engage in cognitively stimulating activities may be an opportunity to improve brain health.
The Arabian leopard Panthera pardus nimr is categorized as Critically Endangered, with < 200 individuals estimated to remain in the wild. Historically the species ranged over an extensive area of western Saudi Arabia but, with no confirmed sightings since 2014, investigating potential continued presence and distribution is of critical conservation importance. We present the results of a comprehensive survey designed to detect any remaining Arabian leopard populations in Saudi Arabia. We conducted 14 surveys, deploying 586 camera-trap stations at 13 sites, totalling 82,075 trap-nights. Questionnaire surveys were conducted with 843 members of local communities across the Arabian leopard's historical range to assess the presence of leopards, other predators and prey species. Predator scats were collected ad hoc by field teams and we used mitochondrial DNA analysis to identify the originating species. We obtained 62,948 independent photographs of animals and people, but none were of Arabian leopards. Other carnivores appeared widespread and domestic animals were numerous, but wild prey were comparatively scarce. Three questionnaire respondents reported sightings of leopards within the previous year, but targeted camera-trap surveys in these areas did not yield evidence of leopards. Of the 143 scats sent for analysis, no DNA was conclusively identified as that of the leopard. From this extensive study, we conclude there are probably no surviving, sustainable populations of Arabian leopards in Saudi Arabia. Individual leopards might be present but were not confirmed. Any future Arabian leopard conservation in Saudi Arabia will probably require reintroduction of captive-bred leopards.
OBJECTIVES/GOALS: Glioblastomas (GBMs) are heterogeneous, treatment-resistant tumors that are driven by populations of cancer stem cells (CSCs). In this study, we perform an epigenetic-focused functional genomics screen in GBM organoids and identify WDR5 as an essential epigenetic regulator in the SOX2-enriched, therapy resistant cancer stem cell niche. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Despite their importance for tumor growth, few molecular mechanisms critical for CSC population maintenance have been exploited for therapeutic development. We developed a spatially resolved loss-of-function screen in GBM patient-derived organoids to identify essential epigenetic regulators in the SOX2-enriched, therapy resistant niche. Our niche-specific screens identified WDR5, an H3K4 histone methyltransferase responsible for activating specific gene expression, as indispensable for GBM CSC growth and survival. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: In GBM CSC models, WDR5 inhibitors blocked WRAD complex assembly and reduced H3K4 trimethylation and expression of genes involved in CSC-relevant oncogenic pathways. H3K4me3 peaks lost with WDR5 inhibitor treatment occurred disproportionally on POU transcription factor motifs, required for stem cell maintenance and including the POU5F1(OCT4)::SOX2 motif. We incorporated a SOX2/OCT4 motif driven GFP reporter system into our CSC cell models and found that WDR5 inhibitor treatment resulted in dose-dependent silencing of stem cell reporter activity. Further, WDR5 inhibitor treatment altered the stem cell state, disrupting CSC in vitro growth and self-renewal as well as in vivo tumor growth. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results unveiled the role of WDR5 in maintaining the CSC state in GBM and provide a rationale for therapeutic development of WDR5 inhibitors for GBM and other advanced cancers. This conceptual and experimental framework can be applied to many cancers, and can unmask unique microenvironmental biology and rationally designed combination therapies.
This article presents reflections from 12 experts on language learners strategy (LLS) research. They were asked to offer their reflections in one of their domains of expertise, linking research into LLS with successful language learning and use practices. In essence, they were called upon to provide a review of recent scholarship by identifying areas where results of research had already led to the enhancement of learner strategy use, as well as to describe ongoing and future research efforts intended to enhance the strategy domain. The LLS areas dealt with include theory building, the dynamics of delivering strategy instruction (SI), meta-analyses of SI, learner diversity, SI for young language learners, SI for fine-tuning the comprehension and production of academic-level, grammar strategies at the macro and micro levels, lessons learned from many years of LLS research in Greece, the past and future roles of technology aimed at enhancing language learning, and applications of LLS in content instruction. This review is intended to provide the field with an updated statement as to where we have been, where we are now, and where we need to go. Ideally, it will provide ideas for future studies.
Recent research has shown that risk and reward are positively correlated in many environments, and that people have internalized this association as a “risk-reward heuristic”: when making choices based on incomplete information, people infer probabilities from payoffs and vice-versa, and these inferences shape their decisions. We extend this work by examining people’s expectations about another fundamental trade-off — that between monetary reward and delay. In 2 experiments (total N = 670), we adapted a paradigm previously used to demonstrate the risk-reward heuristic. We presented participants with intertemporal choice tasks in which either the delayed reward or the length of the delay was obscured. Participants inferred larger rewards for longer stated delays, and longer delays for larger stated rewards; these inferences also predicted people’s willingness to take the delayed option. In exploratory analyses, we found that older participants inferred longer delays and smaller rewards than did younger ones. All of these results replicated in 2 large-scale pre-registered studies with participants from a different population (total N = 2138). Our results suggest that people expect intertemporal choice tasks to offer a trade-off between delay and reward, and differ in their expectations about this trade-off. This “delay-reward heuristic” offers a new perspective on existing models of intertemporal choice and provides new insights into unexplained and systematic individual differences in the willingness to delay gratification.
Since time immemorial, the small island states of the Caribbean have continuously developed regional integration schemes to achieve greater independence and development among themselves. This has resulted in several multipronged approaches to integration covering a wide scope. The Caribbean Community and Common Market (CARICOM) was established by the Treaty of Chaguaramas, which was signed by Barbados, Guyana, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago and came into effect on 1 August 1973, after which 11 other territories joined.
CARICOM is a unique arrangement. According to Payne (1994), writing in the second decade of its existence, CARICOM's survival was secured on the basis that it would steer clear of Caribbean political integration and all its facets, namely supranationalism, which threatens national independence and sovereignty. With respect to its governance mechanisms, Payne's discussion describes the CARICOM system as being managed by a chain of organs comprised of member states’ politicians and is merely ‘serviced by its secretariat’. Decision-making within the Community has to be by unanimous agreement but the implementation of all decisions is up to the individual member state and ‘its own constitutional procedures’ (1994).
In following the trends of regional integration worldwide, the European Union has launched its AI strategy and roadmap. However, in the conceptualization of AI within the Caribbean, the author affirms the belief that as developed countries increase their adoption of AI, the gap between the developing and developed countries will widen (Szcepanski 2019).
This research aims to examine the utilization of artificial intelligence (AI) within the Caribbean. This topic was selected with the aim of identifying key trends in AI within CARICOM. An assessment of key private sectors, regional organizations and civil society representatives across four CARICOM territories as well as national policymakers involved in the information and communication technology (ICT) arena was done to identify related opportunities in AI within CARICOM and the subsequent prospects for increasing economic growth, ethical governance and cross-border flows.
Introduction of the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME)
As with previous integration attempts, upon realizing the limitations of the regional initiative, Caribbean heads of governments agreed to deepen their state of regional integration and thus conceptualized a Caribbean Single Market and Economy.
Neuropsychological assessment via video conferencing has been proposed during the COVID-19 pandemic. Existing literature has demonstrated feasibility and acceptance of neuropsychological measures administered by videoconference, although few studies have examined feasibility and patient acceptance of TNP visits directly to patients’ homes (DTH-TNP).
Methods:
We modified a previously published patient satisfaction survey for DTH-TNP and developed a clinician feasibility survey to examine experiences during DTH-TNP.
Results:
Seventy-two patients (age range: preschool-geriatric) evaluated by DTH-TNP for cognitive problems at an academic medical center responded to voluntary surveys between April 20, 2020, and August 19, 2020, and 100% indicated satisfaction. Fifty-nine percent of patients reported limitations (e.g., technological concern) during the appointment. 134 clinician surveys were collected and indicated that clinicians achieved the goal of their appointment in 90% of encounters.
Conclusions:
These qualitative data suggest that patients and clinicians found DTH-TNP to be satisfactory during the COVID-19 pandemic, while also recognizing limitations of the practice. These results are limited in that voluntary surveys are subject to bias. They support the growing body of literature suggesting that DTH-TNP provides a valuable service, though additional research to establish reliability and validity is needed.
Rats are social animals that produce high-frequency whistles said to reflect their underlying affective state. Injecting rats with a glutamate agonist (domoic acid) at a sensitive period of brain development, models aspects of schizophrenia. This is known as the neonatal DOM model.
Aims
We investigated whether DOM rats display altered social behaviour – as seen in patients with schizophrenia – using their high-frequency whistles as a proxy for the emotional valence of social situations.
Methods
We used 19 male Sprague Dawley rats, injected with either a low-dose of domoic acid or saline at postnatal days 8 to 14. The social behaviour of the rats was investigated at four levels:
– anticipation of social interaction;
– dyadic encounter;
– three-chamber test;
– tickling.
Tests were carried out at postnatal days 34 to 40 and 50 to 56. Rat whistles were recorded on all days of testing.
Results
In progress.
Conclusions
The interest in rat whistles as a supplement to traditional behavioural tests has increased. New software allows for detailed qualitative analysis of the whistle subtypes and thus new complexity to their interpretation. This study can help unravel information encoded in the whistles and shed light on the social behaviour of the DOM rat thus investigating it is applicability as a model of schizophrenia.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.
Between 2001 and 2017, the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh conducted training and research in Belize built around an annual two-week field course, part of the Edinburgh M.Sc. programme in Biodiversity and Taxonomy of Plants, focused on tropical plant identification, botanical-collecting and tropical fieldwork skills. This long-term collaboration in one country has led to additional benefits, most notably capacity building, acquisition of new country records, completion of M.Sc. thesis projects and publication of the findings in journal articles, and continued cooperation. Detailed summaries are provided for the specimens collected by students during the field course or return visits to Belize for M.Sc. thesis projects. Additionally, 15 species not recorded in the national checklist for Belize are reported. The information in this paper highlights the benefits of collaborations between institutions and countries for periods greater than the typical funding cycles of three to five years.
Freshwater habitats in China are potentially suitable for invasive alien turtle species and, consequently, raising turtles in aquaculture facilities and the trade in turtles this supplies pose risks to habitats and native wetland communities when exotic turtles escape or are released deliberately. Online trade (e-commerce) is making an increasing contribution to turtle sales in China, seemingly driving demand and thus potentially exacerbating the risk of release. We document the scale and spatial pattern of online sales of non-native turtles over 90 days on China's Taobao.com e-commerce site. The majority of sales were in the ecologically sensitive middle and lower Yangtze river basin (82.35% of > 840,000 slider turtles Trachemys scripta elegans, and 68.26% of > 100,000 snapping turtles, Chelydridae spp.). These species are native to the Americas. Concurrently, over 2008–2018, we found 104 mentions of feral turtle issues listed on Baidu News where, among the 53 prefectures mentioned, issues with invasive turtle populations also focused predominantly in the middle and lower Yangtze river basin. Although circumstantial, this association suggests that the substantial online sale of alien turtles could be having detrimental effects in China's Yangtze river basin. It is important to safeguard these wetland habitats, which are of global importance, by improving policies for detecting and regulating invasive alien turtle issues and by warning consumers about the ecological hazard of their purchases.
Physical attraction is an important dimension of both romantic and companionate relationship of partners. This article presents a comprehensive cross-cultural validation of the short version of the Physical Attraction Scale (PAS-S) scale — the first and only multidimensional measure of physical attraction available for research and practice. The initial development of the scale was completed in a multisite study conducted with a large sample of university students, largely from the midwest and southeast of the United States. Results demonstrated a two-dimensional factor structure, excellent reliability, and evidence of content, convergent and discriminant validity. The following cross-cultural studies, which used the PAS-S, confirmed its robust factor structure, validity and reliability in the samples from 10 cultural regions in six countries. Therefore, this short version of the PAS-S can be recommended for cross-cultural practice and research. The versions of the scale in English, French, Portuguese, Russian and Georgian are provided in appendices. Based on the results of cross-cultural validation, authors recommend the PAS-S for research purposes and practical use in counselling and therapy. The scale provides a short and informative measure of (1) how a person feels attraction to their partner in close relationships and (2) which aspects of attraction are problematic.
The search for life in the Universe is a fundamental problem of astrobiology and modern science. The current progress in the detection of terrestrial-type exoplanets has opened a new avenue in the characterization of exoplanetary atmospheres and in the search for biosignatures of life with the upcoming ground-based and space missions. To specify the conditions favourable for the origin, development and sustainment of life as we know it in other worlds, we need to understand the nature of global (astrospheric), and local (atmospheric and surface) environments of exoplanets in the habitable zones (HZs) around G-K-M dwarf stars including our young Sun. Global environment is formed by propagated disturbances from the planet-hosting stars in the form of stellar flares, coronal mass ejections, energetic particles and winds collectively known as astrospheric space weather. Its characterization will help in understanding how an exoplanetary ecosystem interacts with its host star, as well as in the specification of the physical, chemical and biochemical conditions that can create favourable and/or detrimental conditions for planetary climate and habitability along with evolution of planetary internal dynamics over geological timescales. A key linkage of (astro)physical, chemical and geological processes can only be understood in the framework of interdisciplinary studies with the incorporation of progress in heliophysics, astrophysics, planetary and Earth sciences. The assessment of the impacts of host stars on the climate and habitability of terrestrial (exo)planets will significantly expand the current definition of the HZ to the biogenic zone and provide new observational strategies for searching for signatures of life. The major goal of this paper is to describe and discuss the current status and recent progress in this interdisciplinary field in light of presentations and discussions during the NASA Nexus for Exoplanetary System Science funded workshop ‘Exoplanetary Space Weather, Climate and Habitability’ and to provide a new roadmap for the future development of the emerging field of exoplanetary science and astrobiology.