Cheng, Theresa W Mills, Kathryn L Miranda Dominguez, Oscar Zeithamova, Dagmar Perrone, Anders Sturgeon, Darrick Feldstein Ewing, Sarah W Fisher, Philip A Pfeifer, Jennifer H Fair, Damien A
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Published in
Developmental cognitive neuroscience
Characterizing typologies of childhood adversity may inform the development of risk profiles and corresponding interventions aimed at mitigating its lifelong consequences. A neurobiological grounding of these typologies requires systematic comparisons of neural structure and function among individuals with different exposure histories. Using seed-t...
Su, Mengmeng Li, Ping Zhou, Wei Shu, Hua
Published in
Brain and cognition
The present longitudinal study investigated the effects of early childhood socioeconomic status on language-related resting-state functional connectivity and reading outcome in adolescence. Seventy-nine children participated in this study. Socioeconomic status was measured via parent questionnaire measuring parental education and family income at 1...
Dong, Haohao Wang, Ming Zheng, Hui Zhang, Jialin Dong, Guang-Heng
Published in
Progress in neuro-psychopharmacology & biological psychiatry
Individuals with internet gaming disorder (IGD) usually report a higher sense of loneliness. Although studies have suggested a key role of the prefrontal cortex-based resting-state functional connectivity (rsFC) in both IGD and loneliness, the potential mechanism between IGD and loneliness remains unclear. Fifty-seven IGD and 81 matched recreationa...
Ma, Zilu Tu, Wenyu Zhang, Nanyin
Published in
NeuroImage
The brain undergoes a protracted, metabolically expensive maturation process from childhood to adulthood. Therefore, it is crucial to understand how network cost is distributed among different brain systems as the brain matures. To address this issue, here we examined developmental changes in wiring cost and brain network topology using resting-sta...
Ma, Zijuan Zhong, Yuan Hines, Christina S Wu, Yun Li, Yuting Pang, Manlong Li, Jian Wang, Chiyue Fox, Peter T Zhang, Ning
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Published in
Brain imaging and behavior
Studies identify the habenula as a key subcortical component in anxiety, with a role in predicting error coding within the evaluative system. However, no clinical reports of generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) describe resting state functional connectivity of habenular circuits. We hypothesized that resting-state functional connectivities of habenul...
Lefco, Ray W Brissenden, James A Noyce, Abigail L Tobyne, Sean M Somers, David C
Published in
NeuroImage
Visual attention and visual working memory tasks recruit a common network of lateral frontal cortical (LFC) and posterior parietal cortical (PPC) regions. Here, we examine finer-scale organization of this frontoparietal network. Three LFC regions recruited by visual cognition tasks, superior precentral sulcus (sPCS), inferior precentral sulcus (iPC...
Ma, Jiyoung Kim, Myeongju Kim, Jungyoon Hong, Gahae Namgung, Eun Park, Shinwon Lim, Soo Mee Lyoo, In Kyoon Yoon, Sujung
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Sleep medicine
Bright light (BL) exposure is a safe non-pharmacological intervention for sleep disturbances. However, the functional brain correlates underlying the effects of bright light exposure need to be further clarified. As alterations in the salience network were reported in individuals with sleep disturbances, we have investigated whether bright light ex...
Bashwiner, David M Bacon, Donna K Wertz, Christopher J Flores, Ranee A Chohan, Muhammad O Jung, Rex E
Published in
NeuroImage
While the behavior of "being musically creative"- improvising, composing, songwriting, etc.-is undoubtedly a complex and highly variable one, recent neuroscientific investigation has offered significant insight into the neural underpinnings of many of the creative processes contributing to such behavior. A previous study from our research group (Ba...
Krukow, Paweł Jonak, Kamil Grochowski, Cezary Plechawska-Wójcik, Małgorzata Karakuła-Juchnowicz, Hanna
Published in
Progress in neuro-psychopharmacology & biological psychiatry
Among multiple cognitive impairments present in schizophrenia, a decline in fast information processing is one of the most severe neuropsychological deficit. Reduced ability to efficiently launch a coherent cognitive activity might be a significant factor contributing to poor results in time-limited tasks obtained by schizophrenia patients. The aim...
Bharti, Komal Khan, Muhammad Beaulieu, Christian Graham, Simon J. Briemberg, Hannah Frayne, Richard Genge, Angela Korngut, Lawrence Zinman, Lorne Kalra, Sanjay
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NeuroImage : Clinical
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is characterized primarily by motor neuron but also frontotemporal lobar degeneration. Although the cerebellum is involved in both motor and cognitive functions, little is known of its role in ALS. We targeted the dentate nucleus (DN) in the cerebellum and the associated white matter fibers tracts connecting the ...