71 research outputs found
Sex differences in the neuroanatomy of alcohol dependence: hippocampus and amygdala subregions in a sample of 966 people from the ENIGMA Addiction Working Group
Males and females with alcohol dependence have distinct mental health and cognitive problems. Animal models of addiction postulate that the underlying neurobiological mechanisms are partially distinct, but there is little evidence of sex differences in humans with alcohol dependence as most neuroimaging studies have been conducted in males. We examined hippocampal and amygdala subregions in a large sample of 966 people from the ENIGMA Addiction Working Group. This comprised 643 people with alcohol dependence (225 females), and a comparison group of 323 people without alcohol dependence (98 females). Males with alcohol dependence had smaller volumes of the total amygdala and its basolateral nucleus than male controls, that exacerbated with alcohol dose. Alcohol dependence was also associated with smaller volumes of the hippocampus and its CA1 and subiculum subfield volumes in both males and females. In summary, hippocampal and amygdalar subregions may be sensitive to both shared and distinct mechanisms in alcohol-dependent males and females
White matter diffusion estimates in obsessive-compulsive disorder across 1653 individuals: machine learning findings from the ENIGMA OCD Working Group
White matter pathways, typically studied with diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), have been implicated in the neurobiology of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). However, due to limited sample sizes and the predominance of single-site studies, the generalizability of OCD classification based on diffusion white matter estimates remains unclear. Here, we tested classification accuracy using the largest OCD DTI dataset to date, involving 1336 adult participants (690 OCD patients and 646 healthy controls) and 317 pediatric participants (175 OCD patients and 142 healthy controls) from 18 international sites within the ENIGMA OCD Working Group. We used an automatic machine learning pipeline (with feature engineering and selection, and model optimization) and examined the cross-site generalizability of the OCD classification models using leave-one-site-out cross-validation. Our models showed low-to-moderate accuracy in classifying (1) “OCD vs. healthy controls” (Adults, receiver operator characteristic-area under the curve = 57.19 ± 3.47 in the replication set; Children, 59.8 ± 7.39), (2) “unmedicated OCD vs. healthy controls” (Adults, 62.67 ± 3.84; Children, 48.51 ± 10.14), and (3) “medicated OCD vs. unmedicated OCD” (Adults, 76.72 ± 3.97; Children, 72.45 ± 8.87). There was significant site variability in model performance (cross-validated ROC AUC ranges 51.6–79.1 in adults; 35.9–63.2 in children). Machine learning interpretation showed that diffusivity measures of the corpus callosum, internal capsule, and posterior thalamic radiation contributed to the classification of OCD from HC. The classification performance appeared greater than the model trained on grey matter morphometry in the prior ENIGMA OCD study (our study includes subsamples from the morphometry study). Taken together, this study points to the meaningful multivariate patterns of white matter features relevant to the neurobiology of OCD, but with low-to-moderate classification accuracy. The OCD classification performance may be constrained by site variability and medication effects on the white matter integrity, indicating room for improvement for future research.publishedVersio
Robust estimation of bacterial cell count from optical density
Optical density (OD) is widely used to estimate the density of cells in liquid culture, but cannot be compared between instruments without a standardized calibration protocol and is challenging to relate to actual cell count. We address this with an interlaboratory study comparing three simple, low-cost, and highly accessible OD calibration protocols across 244 laboratories, applied to eight strains of constitutive GFP-expressing E. coli. Based on our results, we recommend calibrating OD to estimated cell count using serial dilution of silica microspheres, which produces highly precise calibration (95.5% of residuals <1.2-fold), is easily assessed for quality control, also assesses instrument effective linear range, and can be combined with fluorescence calibration to obtain units of Molecules of Equivalent Fluorescein (MEFL) per cell, allowing direct comparison and data fusion with flow cytometry measurements: in our study, fluorescence per cell measurements showed only a 1.07-fold mean difference between plate reader and flow cytometry data
The United States COVID-19 Forecast Hub dataset
Academic researchers, government agencies, industry groups, and individuals have produced forecasts at an unprecedented scale during the COVID-19 pandemic. To leverage these forecasts, the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) partnered with an academic research lab at the University of Massachusetts Amherst to create the US COVID-19 Forecast Hub. Launched in April 2020, the Forecast Hub is a dataset with point and probabilistic forecasts of incident cases, incident hospitalizations, incident deaths, and cumulative deaths due to COVID-19 at county, state, and national, levels in the United States. Included forecasts represent a variety of modeling approaches, data sources, and assumptions regarding the spread of COVID-19. The goal of this dataset is to establish a standardized and comparable set of short-term forecasts from modeling teams. These data can be used to develop ensemble models, communicate forecasts to the public, create visualizations, compare models, and inform policies regarding COVID-19 mitigation. These open-source data are available via download from GitHub, through an online API, and through R packages
Gender Differences in Cognitive Control: an Extended Investigation of the Stop Signal Task
Macaque Lateral Intraparietal Area and Oculomotor Behaviors
Neurons in the primate lateral intraparietal area (area LIP) carry visual,
saccade-related and eye position activities. The visual and saccade activities
are anchored in a retinotopic framework and the overall response magnitude
is modulated by eye position. It was proposed that the modulation by eye
position might be the basis of a distributed coding of target locations in a
head-centered space. Other recording studies demonstrated that area LIP is
involved in oculomotor planning. These results overall suggest that area LIP
transforms sensory information for motor functions. In this thesis I further
explore the role of area LIP in processing saccadic eye movements by
observing the effects of reversible inactivation of this area. Macaque monkeys
were trained to do visually guided and memory saccades and a double
saccade task to examine the use of eye position signal. Finally, by intermixing
visual saccades with trials in which two targets were presented at opposite
sides of the fixation point, I examined the behavior of visual extinction.
In chapter 2, I will show that lesion of area LIP results in increased latency
of contralesional visual and memory saccades. Contralesional memory
saccades are also hypometric and slower in velocity. Moreover, the
impairment of memory saccades does not vary with the duration of the delay
period. This suggests that the oculomotor deficits observed after inactivation
of area LIP is not due to the disruption of spatial memory.
In chapter 3, I will show that lesion of area LIP does not severely affect the
processing of spontaneous eye movement. However, the monkeys made
fewer contralesional saccades and tended to confine their gaze to the
ipsilesional field after inactivation of area LIP. On the other hand, lesion of
area LIP results in extinction of the contralesional stimulus. When the initial
fixation position was varied so that the retinal and spatial locations of the
targets could be dissociated, it was found that the extinction behavior could
best be described in a head-centered coordinate.
In chapter 4, I will show that inactivation of area LIP disrupts the use of eye
position signal to compute the second movement correctly in the double
saccade task. If the first saccade steps into the contralesional field, the error
rate and latency of the second saccade are both increased. Furthermore, the
direction of the first eye movement largely does not have any effect on the
impairment of the second saccade. I will argue that this study provides
important evidence that the extraretinal signal used for saccadic localization
is eye position rather than a displacement vector.
In chapter 5, I will demonstrate that in parietal monkeys the eye drifts
toward the lesion side at the end of the memory saccade in darkness. This
result suggests that the eye position activity in the posterior parietal cortex is
active in nature and subserves gaze holding.
Overall, these results further support the view that area LIP neurons encode
spatial locations in a craniotopic framework and is involved in processing
voluntary eye movements.</p
Obsessive–compulsiveness and impulsivity in a non-clinical population of adolescent males and females
Gender differences in punishment and reward sensitivity in a sample of Taiwanese college students
Auditory discrimination in female adolescents varying in schizotypal features: Preliminary findings
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