10 results on '"Lee, Hyeongrae"'
Search Results
2. Changes in resting-state brain connectivity following computerized cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia in dialysis patients: A pilot study.
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Park, Hye Yoon, Lee, Hyeongrae, Jhee, Jong Hyun, Park, Kyung Mee, Choi, Eun Chae, An, Suk Kyoon, Namkoong, Kee, Lee, Eun, and Park, Jung Tak
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BRAIN physiology , *INSOMNIA treatment , *BRAIN mapping , *COGNITIVE therapy , *CYTOKINES , *FRONTAL lobe , *INFLAMMATORY mediators , *INTERLEUKINS , *COMPUTERS in medicine , *SLEEP , *THERAPEUTICS , *PILOT projects - Abstract
Insomnia is prevalent among dialysis patients and affects their mortality. Although cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBTi) is recommended, attending regular face-to-face CBTi sessions is a major challenge for patients. We evaluated the effectiveness of a self-directed computerized CBTi (cCBTi) in dialysis patients, and investigated changes in resting-state brain connectivity and inflammatory cytokines following cCBTi. Thirty-five patients undergoing maintenance hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis who had insomnia were screened for participation in the study, with 17 participants included in the final analyses. A self-directed cCBTi protocol accessed via tablet computer during dialysis or at home was developed and applied. Information about sleep, anxiety, depression, laboratory data, and resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging data was obtained 3–5 days before and after cCBTi. cCBTi improved sleep quality, and this was correlated with increased resting-state brain connectivity between the default-mode network and the premotor/dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. The decrement of interleukin-1β levels were correlated with improved sleep quality and increased brain connectivity after cCBTi. Our pilot study findings suggest that cCBTi is effective for dialysis patients with insomnia, and the therapeutic effects of cCBTi are related to changes in brain functional connectivity and inflammatory cytokines. • Computerized CBT for insomnia (cCBTi) improved sleep quality in dialysis patients. • Changes in brain connectivity after cCBTi correlated with improved sleep. • Decrease in IL-1β correlated with improved sleep and increased brain connectivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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3. DISRUPTED THEORY OF MIND NETWORK PROCESSING IN RESPONSE TO IDEA OF REFERENCE EVOCATION IN SCHIZOPHRENIA
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Park, Il Ho, Ku, Jeonghun, Lee, Hyeongrae, Kim, So Young, Kim, Sun I., Yoon, Kang Jun, and Kim, Jae-Jin
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- 2010
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4. Involvement of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and superior temporal sulcus in impaired social perception in schizophrenia.
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Shin, Jung Eun, Choi, Soo-Hee, Lee, Hyeongrae, Shin, Young Seok, Jang, Dong-Pyo, and Kim, Jae-Jin
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PREFRONTAL cortex , *TEMPORAL lobe , *SOCIAL perception , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *EMOTIONS , *NEUROBIOLOGY , *OXYGEN in the blood - Abstract
Background Schizophrenia is a mental disorder characterized by impairments in diverse thinking and emotional responses, which are related to social perception dysfunction. This fMRI study was designed to investigate a neurobiological basis of social perception deficits of patients with schizophrenia in various social situations of daily life and their relationship with clinical symptoms and social dysfunction. Methods Seventeen patients and 19 controls underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging, during which participants performed a virtual social perception task, containing an avatar's speech with positive, negative or neutral emotion in a virtual reality space. Participants were asked to determine whether or not the avatar's speech was appropriate to each situation. Results The significant group × appropriateness interaction was seen in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), resulting from lower activity in patients in the inappropriate condition, and left DLPFC activity was negatively correlated with the severity of negative symptoms and positively correlated with the level of social functioning. The significant appropriateness × emotion interaction observed in the left superior temporal sulcus (STS) was present in controls, but absent in patients, resulting from the existence and absence of a difference between the inappropriate positive and negative conditions, respectively. Conclusions These findings indicate that dysfunction of the DLPFC-STS network may underlie patients' abnormal social perception in various social situations of daily life. Abnormal functioning of this network may contribute to increases of negative symptoms and decreases of social functioning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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5. Distinct neural responses used to gain insight into hallucinatory perception in patients with schizophrenia
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Kim, Jae-Jin, Ku, Jeonghun, Lee, Hyeongrae, Choi, Soo Hee, and Kim, In Young
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PEOPLE with schizophrenia , *HALLUCINATIONS , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *AMYGDALOID body , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *VISUAL perception , *LINEAR statistical models , *NEURAL physiology - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: Most patients with schizophrenia suffer from various types of hallucinations, which commonly produce distress, functional disability or behavioral dyscontrol. The neural process of adapting to hallucinations in patients with schizophrenia remains unknown. Methods: Functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) responses to an unusual threatening visual stimulus designed to simulate a hallucinatory experience were compared between 16 patients with schizophrenia and 17 healthy controls. Linear and quadratic repetition-variant as well as repetition-invariant responses to the stimulus were compared between the two groups. Results: Repetition-invariant responses were similar between patients with schizophrenia and healthy controls. Patients with schizophrenia exhibited a linear activation pattern in the anterior cingulate, whereas healthy controls exhibited a parabolic activation pattern in the anterior prefrontal cortex, occipito-temporal junction and amygdala. Conclusions: These results provide us with a better understanding of the neural processes involved in gaining insight into unreality. Patients with schizophrenia may use a salience-related region instead of reality monitoring-related regions to react to the unusual stimuli, and this peculiarity of the neural processes may be related to vulnerability to psychosis. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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6. Distinct functional connectivity of limbic network in the washing type obsessive–compulsive disorder.
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Jhung, Kyungun, Ku, Jeonghun, Kim, Se Joo, Lee, Hyeongrae, Kim, Kyung Ran, An, Suk Kyoon, Kim, Sun I., Yoon, Kang-Jun, and Lee, Eun
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OBSESSIVE-compulsive disorder , *PHENOTYPES , *NEURAL circuitry , *LIMBIC system , *BIOLOGICAL neural networks , *CONTAMINATION (Psychology) , *PATIENTS - Abstract
Abstract: Neurobiological models of obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD) emphasize disturbances of the corticostriatal circuit, but it remains unclear as to how these complex network dysfunctions correspond to heterogeneous OCD phenotypes. We aimed to investigate corticostriatal functional connectivity alterations distinct to OCD characterized predominantly by contamination/washing symptoms. Functional connectivity strengths of the striatal seed regions with remaining brain regions during the resting condition and the contamination symptom provocation condition were compared among 13 OCD patients with predominant contamination/washing symptoms (CON), 13 OCD patients without these symptoms (NCON), and 18 healthy controls. The CON group showed distinctively altered functional connectivity between the ventral striatum and the insula during both the resting and symptom-provoking conditions. Also, the connectivity strength between the ventral striatum and the insula significantly correlated with contamination/washing symptom severity. As common connectivity alterations of the whole OCD subjects, corticostriatal circuits involving the orbitofrontal and temporal cortices were again confirmed. To our knowledge, this is the first study that examined specific abnormalities in functional connectivity of contamination/washing symptom dimension OCD. The findings suggest limbic network dysfunctions to play a pivotal role in contamination/washing symptoms, possibly associated with emotionally salient error awareness. Our study sample allowed us to evaluate the corticostriatal network dysfunction underlying the contamination/washing symptom dimension, which leaves other major symptom dimensions to be explored in the future. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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7. Functional and effective connectivity of anterior insula in anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa
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Kim, Kyung Ran, Ku, Jeonghun, Lee, Jung-Hyun, Lee, Hyeongrae, and Jung, Young-Chul
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ANOREXIA nervosa , *BULIMIA , *EATING disorders , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging of the brain , *BRAIN function localization , *CONTROL groups - Abstract
Abstract: The anterior insula has been proposed to play a crucial role in eating disorders. However, it is still poorly understood how the anterior insula is involved in anorexia nervosa (AN) and bulimia nervosa (BN), which are characterized by opposite motivational responses to food. We applied a cue-reactivity paradigm using blood oxygen level-dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging in women with AN (N =18) and BN (N =20) and age-matched healthy controls (N =20). We defined the left anterior insula as a region-of-interest and performed seed-based functional connectivity and effective connectivity MRI analysis. In response to food images compared to non-food images, both the AN group and BN group demonstrated increased activity in the left anterior insula. In the AN group, the left anterior insula demonstrated significant interactions with the right insula and right inferior frontal gyrus. In the BN group, the left anterior insula demonstrated significant interactions with the medial orbitofrontal cortex. The distinct patterns of functional and effective connectivity of the anterior insula may contribute to the different clinical features of AN and BN. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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8. Restoration of mammillothalamic functional connectivity through thiamine replacement therapy in Wernicke's encephalopathy
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Kim, Eosu, Ku, Jeonghun, Jung, Young-Chul, Lee, Hyeongrae, Kim, Sun I., Kim, Jae-Jin, Namkoong, Kee, and Song, Dong-Ho
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NEUROBEHAVIORAL disorders , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *WERNICKE'S encephalopathy , *VITAMIN B1 , *BRAIN function localization , *CEREBRAL hemispheres - Abstract
Abstract: Resting-state functional MRI (fMRI) is now providing further understanding of neuropsychiatric illnesses. However, its practical applicability in the clinical realms is still questionable. Here we report three consecutive followed-up resting-state fMRI data in a single case with Wernicke encephalopathy before and after high-dose thiamine replacement therapy ranging over 20 months. We measured the mammillothalamic functional connectivity strength between the first ROI (mammillary body) and a voxel which showed the highest co-activation among voxels within the anterior thalamus (the second ROI) to enhance the specificity of the functional connectivity data. We found that the time-series changes in the mammillothalamic functional connectivity generally paralleled to the changes in delayed verbal and nonverbal recall memory scores in the left and right hemisphere, respectively. Among these, the left-side connectivity and delayed verbal recall score seemed to be related to the overall clinical status change. Modified directed transfer function (dDTF) analysis also identified significant information flows with mammillary-to-thalamic direction except at the acute illness state. Our findings, though preliminary in nature, suggest the practical applicability of resting-state fMRI to trace an effect of thiamine replacement therapy on the memory tract function in Wernicke encephalopathy at single-patient level. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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9. Reduced activation in the mirror neuron system during a virtual social cognition task in euthymic bipolar disorder
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Kim, Eosu, Jung, Young-Chul, Ku, Jeonghun, Kim, Jae-Jin, Lee, Hyeongrae, Kim, So Young, Kim, Sun I., and Cho, Hyun-Sang
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NEURAL physiology , *BIPOLAR disorder , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *SELF-expression , *PHILOSOPHY of mind , *VIRTUAL reality in medicine , *SOCIAL perception - Abstract
Abstract: Social cognition entails both cognitive and affective processing, and impairments in both have accounted for residual symptoms of bipolar disorder (BD). However, there has been a lack of studies identifying neural substrates responsible for social cognitive difficulties in BD patients. Fourteen euthymic BD patients and 14 healthy normal controls underwent functional MRI while performing a virtual reality social cognition task, which incorporated both cognitive and emotional dimensions, simulating real-world social situations. During the scanning, subjects tried to guess (attribute) possible reasons for expressed emotion of virtual humans (avatars) while viewing their facial expressions, just after observing their verbal and nonverbal (facial) expressions which were emotionally valenced (happy, angry and neutral). BD patients compared to normal controls showed delayed reaction times in emotional conditions, with comparable response accuracy. Healthy normal controls activated the right anterior cingulate cortex, inferior frontal, and insular cortex in emotional conditions contrasted with neutral control conditions, that is, the regions that have been related to empathic processes during viewing others'' emotional expression. Relative to normal controls, BD patients showed reduced activations in the ‘mirror neuron system’, including the right inferior frontal cortex, premotor cortex, and insula, mainly in angry or happy condition. These results may suggest that, even during euthymic state, BD patients have difficulties in recruiting brain regions for the utilization of emotional cues as a means for understanding others. Clinical attention should be paid to emotion-related residual symptoms to help improve social outcomes in these patients. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2009
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10. Increased personal space of patients with schizophrenia in a virtual social environment
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Park, Sung-Hyouk, Ku, Jeonghun, Kim, Jae-Jin, Jang, Hee Jeong, Kim, So Young, Kim, Soo Hyun, Kim, Chan-Hyung, Lee, Hyeongrae, Kim, In Young, and Kim, Sun I.
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PEOPLE with schizophrenia , *PERSONAL space , *SOCIAL context , *SYNDROMES , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *COGNITION disorders , *VISUAL perception - Abstract
Abstract: Virtual reality may be a good alternative method for measuring personal space and overcoming some limitations in previous studies on the social aspects of schizophrenia. Using this technology, we aimed to investigate the characteristics of personal space in patients with schizophrenia and evaluate the relationship between their social behaviors and schizophrenic symptoms. The distance from a virtual person and the angle of head orientation while talking to a virtual person in a virtual environment were measured in 30 patients with schizophrenia and 30 normal controls. It was found that patients with schizophrenia had longer distances and larger angles than did normal controls. The severity of the negative syndrome had significant inverse correlations with the distance from the angry and neutral virtual persons and with the angle of head orientation toward the happy and angry virtual persons, suggesting that negative symptoms may have a close relationship with personal space, including distancing and eye gaze. The larger personal space of patients may reflect their discomfort in close situations or cognitive deficits. Showing these profiles to patients could help them realize the amount of personal space they need. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2009
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