We examine how optimism predicts creativity both directly and through the mediating role of positive affect and the positivity ratio (the ratio between the frequency of positive and negative affective states). Five hundred and ninety five employees reported their positive and negative affect, as well as their optimism. Their creativity was reported by supervisors. The main findings are the following: (1) optimism predicts creativity both directly and through the mediating role of positive affect and the positivity ratio; (2) the relationship between the positivity ratio and creativity is curvilinear, in such a way that an ''excessive'' ratio is detrimental to creativity. The findings stress the relevance of optimism both for individuals and organizations, and suggest that examining positivity ratios is fruitful in the creativity domain, as it has been in other domains, and that negative affect should not be viewed simply as an obstacle when studying employees' creativity. We are grateful to Fred Luthans, Carolin Youssef, and Bruce Avolio for their permission to use the PsyCap questionnaire, from which the items for measuring optimism were extracted.
We aimed to determine the prevalence of extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL)-producing Escherichia coli in fecal samples of healthy pigs, and to evaluate their clonality and associated resistance. Forty-nine percent of pigs sampled (n=35/71) in a slaughterhouse in Portugal revealed ESBL-producing E. coli isolates. Most isolates produced CTX-M-1 enzyme (71.4%; n=25/35), followed by CTX-M-9 (11.4%; n=4/35), CTX-M-14 (5.7%; n=2/35), SHV-12 (5.7%; n=2/35), and CTX-M-32 (5.7%; n=2/35). Ninety-four percent of the isolates presented a phenotype of multi-resistance. Most isolates belonged to phylogroups B1 (42.8%; n=15/35) and A (40%; n=14/35). Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) analysis revealed nine sequence types (STs) under six clonal complexes (CCs) and nine singletons, including overrepresentation of CC10 and three new STs (ST2524, ST2525, ST2528). We observed the frequent presence of CTX-M-producing E. coli in pigs at slaughter level, most of them belonging to CC10, commonly recovered from clinical samples.
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