104 results on '"Moser DA"'
Search Results
2. An integrated brain–behavior model for working memory
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Moser, DA, Doucet, GE, Ing, A, Dima, D, Schumann, G, Bilder, RM, and Frangou, S
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Biological Psychology ,Cognitive and Computational Psychology ,Psychology ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Mind and Body ,Underpinning research ,1.2 Psychological and socioeconomic processes ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Neurological ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Brain ,Cognition ,Computer Simulation ,Connectome ,Data Interpretation ,Statistical ,Female ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Memory ,Short-Term ,Neuroimaging ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Working memory (WM) is a central construct in cognitive neuroscience because it comprises mechanisms of active information maintenance and cognitive control that underpin most complex cognitive behavior. Individual variation in WM has been associated with multiple behavioral and health features including demographic characteristics, cognitive and physical traits and lifestyle choices. In this context, we used sparse canonical correlation analyses (sCCAs) to determine the covariation between brain imaging metrics of WM-network activation and connectivity and nonimaging measures relating to sensorimotor processing, affective and nonaffective cognition, mental health and personality, physical health and lifestyle choices derived from 823 healthy participants derived from the Human Connectome Project. We conducted sCCAs at two levels: a global level, testing the overall association between the entire imaging and behavioral-health data sets; and a modular level, testing associations between subsets of the two data sets. The behavioral-health and neuroimaging data sets showed significant interdependency. Variables with positive correlation to the neuroimaging variate represented higher physical endurance and fluid intelligence as well as better function in multiple higher-order cognitive domains. Negatively correlated variables represented indicators of suboptimal cardiovascular and metabolic control and lifestyle choices such as alcohol and nicotine use. These results underscore the importance of accounting for behavioral-health factors in neuroimaging studies of WM and provide a neuroscience-informed framework for personalized and public health interventions to promote and maintain the integrity of the WM network.
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- 2018
3. REVISÃO DE LITERATURA ACERCA DE COLONIZAÇÃO DO TRATO RESPIRATÓRIO SUPERIOR EM ESTUDANTES DA ÁREA DE SAÚDE
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Fernandes, Carlos Daniel Martins, primary, SILVA, FABIANO FAGUNDES MOSER DA, additional, AMARAL, KAUAN GABRIEL, additional, and CARNEIRO, NATHALIA RODRIGUES SOUZA, additional
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- 2024
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4. ABORDAGEM CONTEMPORÂNEA DAS PRINCIPAIS QUEIXAS UROLÓGICAS NA ADOLESCÊNCIA
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ZYLBERSZTEJN, DANIEL SUSLIK, primary, SANTOS, JOÃO VITOR QUADRA VIEIRA DOS, additional, BREITENBACH, TIAGO CATALDO, additional, TAVARES, PATRIC MACHADO, additional, and SILVA, RODRIGO ULIANO MOSER DA, additional
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- 2022
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5. A EDUCAÇÃO AMBIENTAL COMO INSTRUMENTO DA CONSTRUÇÃO DE SOLUÇÕES COMUNITÁRIAS PARA O ENFRENTAMENTO DA PROBLEMÁTICA DO ACESSO À ÁGUA POTÁVEL NA ZONA RURAL DO RIO GRANDE DO SUL
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DOMINGUES, RAQUEL DAL MAGRO, primary and CONCEIÇÃO, JULIANE MOSER DA, additional
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- 2023
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6. EPIDEMIOLOGIA E FISIOPATOLOGIA NA INFERTILIDADE MASCULINA
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RODRIGO ULIANO MOSER DA SILVA and JOÃO VITOR QUADRA VIEIRA DOS SANTOS
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- 2023
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7. Prevalência de microrganismos responsáveis por infecções do Trato Urinário em um laboratório da cidade de Anápolis, Goiás
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Louriane Lemos Ferraz, Susan Kelly Fiuza De Souza Oliveira, Izadora Marques Cicuto, Gabriel Borges Pires, and Fabiano Fagundes Moser da Silva
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- 2022
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8. ABORDAGEM CONTEMPORÂNEA DAS PRINCIPAIS QUEIXAS UROLÓGICAS NA ADOLESCÊNCIA
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DANIEL SUSLIK ZYLBERSZTEJN, JOÃO VITOR QUADRA VIEIRA DOS SANTOS, TIAGO CATALDO BREITENBACH, PATRIC MACHADO TAVARES, and RODRIGO ULIANO MOSER DA SILVA
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- 2022
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9. Prevalência de microrganismos responsáveis por infecções do Trato Urinário em um laboratório da cidade de Anápolis, Goiás
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Lemos Ferraz, Louriane, primary, Kelly Fiuza De Souza Oliveira, Susan, additional, Marques Cicuto, Izadora, additional, Borges Pires, Gabriel, additional, and Fagundes Moser da Silva, Fabiano, additional
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- 2022
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10. Avaliação da função vesical antes e após transplante renal em pacientes sem doença urológica
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Silva, Daniel Carlos Uliano Moser da, 1980, D'Ancona, Carlos Arturo Levi, 1952, Nahas, William Carlos, Reis, Leonardo Oliveira, Universidade Estadual de Campinas. Faculdade de Ciências Médicas, Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ciências Médicas, and UNIVERSIDADE ESTADUAL DE CAMPINAS
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Urodynamics ,Transplante de rim ,Bladder ,Bladder function ,Bexiga ,Renal transplantation ,Urodinâmica ,Bexiga - Fisiologia - Abstract
Orientador: Carlos Arturo Levi D'Ancona Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Ciências Médicas Resumo: Objetvos: Avaliar com realização do estudo urodinâmico, a recuperação da função vesical em pacientes com doença renal crônica sem causa urológica de base com longos períodos de oligúria / anúria, submetidos a transplante renal. Pacientes e Métodos: De abril de 2009 a junho de 2010, 30 pacientes apresentando oligúria / anúria, foram prospectivamente avaliados com estudo urodinâmico. Este foi realizado imediatamente antes e seis meses após o transplante renal. Os critérios de inclusão foram: idade > 18 anos, doença renal crônica sem causa urológica envolvida na sua etiologia, tempo de diálise superior a 12 meses, nome em lista de transplante com doador falecido. Foram excluídos pacientes com alteração no ultrassom de vias urinárias, uretrocistografia miccional e urianálise e com diurese residual de 24 horas superior a 1000ml. Resultados: Observou-se completa recuperação da função vesical após o retorno da diurese, no sexto mês pós-transplante, independente de haver ou não disfuncionalização vesical. As variações nos parâmetros urodinâmicos foram: primeira sensação de enchimento vesical: 88,8 para 168,7ml (p = 0,0005); primeiro desejo miccional: 137,2 para 251,1ml (p 18 years-old, end-stage renal disease secondary to non-urological disease, renal substitutive therapy longer than 12 months, waiting for deceased donor organ. Exclusion criteria was: abnormal urinary tract ultrasound, voiding cystourethrography or urinalyses and 24 hours residual diuresis higher than 1000ml. Results: Complete recovery of bladder function was observed after return of diuresis, on the sixth month post transplantation, independently of the presence of bladder defunctionalization. Urodynamics parameters changes from baseline to six months were: first sensation of bladder filling: 88.8 to 168.7ml (p = 0.0005); first desire to void: 137.2 to 251.1ml (p
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- 2021
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11. Asymptomatic Male with Grade 3 Left Varicocele and Two Children with Low Testosterone Levels Desiring Vasectomy
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Daniel Suslik Zylbersztejn and Rodrigo Uliano Moser Da Silva
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Serum testosterone ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Varicocele ,Vasectomy ,Urology ,Testosterone (patch) ,medicine.disease ,Asymptomatic ,Low testosterone levels ,Family planning ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Testicular Hormones - Abstract
When the desire for family planning through vasectomy is associated with an asymptomatic clinical varicocele (grade 2 or 3) and low total serum testosterone levels, it is recommended that the surgeon report the possible postsurgical clinical consequences, in addition to inherent risks of vasectomy. In this way, the physician needs to be able to discuss the surgical treatment best suited to the patient’s clinical needs.
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- 2019
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12. Relatório do projeto mini praça / Mini park project report
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Bezerra, Natália Martins, Jesus, Gustavo Marques de, Silva, Keibor Antonio Moser da, and Fróio, Paulo Vinícius
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Mini praça. Tijolo ecológico. Área de interação. Projeto de física I - Abstract
Os acadêmicos do curso de Engenharia Civil da UNEMAT campus de Tangará da Serra perceberam a necessidade da criação de um espaço de convivência nos períodos entre aulas e assim uniram a necessidade ao projeto de Física Geral I proposto pelo professor Elias Antunes. Surgindo então ideias sobre uma mini praça, com bancos e sombra como opção alternativa a cantina do campus para acadêmicos de todos os cursos conversarem e descansarem nos intervalos. Além disso, o projeto contribui para a formação de todos os integrantes como engenheiros, pois proporciona participação dos mesmos em todas as etapas da obra, preparando-os para a vida profissional. O projeto despertou interesse em uma obra que gerasse o menor impacto possível no meio ambiente justificando a escolha dos materiais como o tijolo ecológico e a forma de execução. A mini praça será um espaço de interação que beneficiará todos os acadêmicos da UNEMAT campus Tangará da Serra a longo prazo.
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- 2018
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13. Step by step male to female transsexual surgery
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Silva, Rodrigo Uliano Moser da, primary, Abreu, Fernando Jahn da Silva, additional, Silva, Gabriel M. V. Da, additional, Santos, João Vitor Quadra Vieira dos, additional, Batezini, Nelson Sivonei da Silva, additional, Silva Neto, Brasil, additional, and Rosito, Tiago Elias, additional
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- 2018
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14. Maternal PTSD and corresponding neural activity mediate effects of child exposure to violence on child PTSD symptoms
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Schecheter, DS, Moser, DA, Aue, T, Gex-Fabry, M, Pointet, VC, Cordero, MI, Suardi, F, Manini, M, Vital, M, Sancho Rossignol, A, Rothenberg, M, Dayer, AG, Ansermet, F, Rusconi Serpa, S, Schecheter, DS, Moser, DA, Aue, T, Gex-Fabry, M, Pointet, VC, Cordero, MI, Suardi, F, Manini, M, Vital, M, Sancho Rossignol, A, Rothenberg, M, Dayer, AG, Ansermet, F, and Rusconi Serpa, S
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to examine the relationship of maternal interpersonal violence-related posttraumatic stress disorder (IPV-PTSD), associated neural activity in response to mother-child relational stimuli, and child psychopathology indicators at child ages 12-42 months and one year later. The study tested the hypothesis that decreased maternal neural activity in regions that subserve emotion regulation would be associated with child symptoms associated with emotional dysregulation at both time points. Functional magnetic resonance imaging of 42 mothers with or without violence-exposure and associated IPV-PTSD were assessed. Their child's life-events and symptoms/behaviors indicative of high-risk subsequent PTSD diagnosis on a maternal-report questionnaire were measured one year later. Maternal IPV-PTSD severity was significantly associated with decreased ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) activation in response to mother-child relational stimuli. Maternal IPV-PTSD severity and decreased vmPFC activation were then significantly associated with a child attachment disturbance at 12-42 months and symptoms/behaviors one year later, that were correlated with emotional dysregulation and risk for child PTSD. Maternal IPV-PTSD and child exposure to IPV were both predictive of child PTSD symptoms with maternal IPV-PTSD likely mediating the effects of child IPV exposure on child PTSD symptoms. These findings suggest that maternal IPV-PTSD severity and associated decreased vmPFC activity in response to mother-child relational stimuli are predictors of child psychopathology by age 12-42 months and one-year later. Significant findings in this paper may well be useful in understanding how maternal top-down cortico-limbic dysregulation promotes intergenerational transmission of IPV and related psychopathology and, thus should be targeted in treatment.
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- 2017
15. Effects of interpersonal violence-related post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) on mother and child diurnal cortisol rhythm and cortisol reactivity to a laboratory stressor involving separation
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Cordero Campaña, MI, Moser, DA, Manini, A, Suardi, F, Sancho Rossignol, A, Torrisi, R, Rossier, MF, Ansermet, F, Dayer, AG, Rusconi Serpa, S, Schechter, DS, Cordero Campaña, MI, Moser, DA, Manini, A, Suardi, F, Sancho Rossignol, A, Torrisi, R, Rossier, MF, Ansermet, F, Dayer, AG, Rusconi Serpa, S, and Schechter, DS
- Abstract
Women who have experienced interpersonal violence (IPV) are at a higher risk to develop posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), with dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and impaired social behavior. Previously, we had reported impaired maternal sensitivity and increased difficulty in identifying emotions (i.e. alexithymia) among IPV-PTSD mothers. One of the aims of the present study was to examine maternal IPV-PTSD salivary cortisol levels diurnally and reactive to their child’s distress in relation to maternal alexithymia. Given that mother-child interaction during infancy and early childhood has important long-term consequences on the stress response system, toddlers’ cortisol levels were assessed during the day and in response to a laboratory stressor. Mothers collected their own and their 12-48 month-old toddlers’ salivary samples at home three times: 30 min after waking up, between 2-3 pm and at bedtime. Moreover, mother-child dyads articipated in a 120-min laboratory session, consisting of 3 phases: baseline, stress situation (involving mother-child separation and exposure to novelty) and a 60-min regulation phase. Compared to non-PTSD controls, IPV-PTSD mothers -but not their toddlers-, had lower morning cortisol and higher bedtime cortisol levels. As expected, IPV-PTSD mothers and their children showed blunted cortisol reactivity to the laboratory stressor. Maternal cortisol levels were negatively correlated to difficulty in identifying emotions. Our data highlights PTSDIPV-related alterations in the HPA system and its relevance to maternal behavior. Toddlers of IPV-PTSD mothers also showed an altered pattern of cortisol reactivity to stress that potentially may predispose them to later psychological disorders.
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- 2017
16. The association of serotonin receptor 3A methylation with maternal violence exposure, neural activity, and child aggression
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Schechter, DS, Moser, DA, Pointet, T, Stenz, L, Paoloni-Giacobino, A, Adouan, W, Manini, A, Suardi, F, Vital, M, Sancho Rossignol, A, Cordero Campaña, MI, Rothenbgerg, M, Ansermet, F, Rusconi Serpa, S, Dayer, AG, Schechter, DS, Moser, DA, Pointet, T, Stenz, L, Paoloni-Giacobino, A, Adouan, W, Manini, A, Suardi, F, Vital, M, Sancho Rossignol, A, Cordero Campaña, MI, Rothenbgerg, M, Ansermet, F, Rusconi Serpa, S, and Dayer, AG
- Abstract
Background: Methylation of the serotonin 3A receptor gene (HTR3A) has been linked to child maltreatment and adult psychopathology. The present study examined whether HTR3A methylation might be associated with mothers' lifetime exposure to interpersonal violence (IPV), IPV-related psychopathology, child disturbance of attachment, and maternal neural activity. Methods: Number of maternal lifetime IPV exposures and measures of maternal psychopathology including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), major depression and aggressive behavior (AgB), and a measure of child attachment disturbance known as “secure base distortion” (SBD) were assessed in a sample of 35 mothers and children aged 12–42 months. Brain fMRI activation was assessed in mothers using 30-s silent film excerpts depicting menacing adult male-female interactions versus prosocial and neutral interactions. Group and continuous analyses were performed to test for associations between clinical and fMRI variables with DNA methylation. Results: Maternal IPV exposure-frequency was associated with maternal PTSD; and maternal IPV-PTSD was in turn associated with child SBD. Methylation status of several CpG sites in the HTR3A gene was associated with maternal IPV and IPV-PTSD severity, AgB and child SBD, in particular, self-endangering behavior. Methylation status at a specific CpG site (CpG2_III) was associated with decreased medial prefrontal cortical (mPFC) activity in response to film-stimuli of adult male-female interactions evocative of violence as compared to prosocial and neutral interactions. Conclusions: Methylation status of the HTR3A gene in mothers is linked to maternal IPV-related psychopathology, trauma-induced brain activation patterns, and child attachment disturbance in the form of SBD during a sensitive period in the development of self-regulation.
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- 2017
17. Comparação entre o LDL - colesterol obtido pela fórmula de Friedewald e a dosagem sérica por método enzimático - doi: 10.5102/ucs.v10i2.1561
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Moser da Silva, Fabiano Fagundes, Andrade, Tania Cristina, and Programa de Iniciação Científica UniCEUB/DF
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Aterosclerose ,Dosagem direta ,Método Homogêneo ,Dislipidemia ,Colesterol ruim ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,lcsh:R ,lcsh:Medicine ,lcsh:RA1-1270 - Abstract
Os estudos recentes mostram uma correlação entre o aumento de LDL-C com o risco de aterosclerose. A maioria dos portadores de dislipidemias não apresenta sinais ou sintomas decorrentes diretamente da alteração lipídica, assim, seu diagnóstico é quase que exclusivamente determinado pelos lipídios plasmáticos. A dosagem do LDL-C plasmático se resume em duas formas, o método enzimático direto e o indireto que é calculado de acordo com a fórmula de Friedewald. Foram analisadas 104 amostras. E verificou-se que a estimativa do LDL-C tende a mostrar resultados mais elevados, extremamente significantes (p
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- 2012
18. Signet-Ring Cell Gastric Carcinoma Metastatic to Bladder
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Karla Cristina Censi, Rodrigo Uliano Moser da Silva, Cano Casarotto, Sheila Piccoli Garcia, Gustavo Neves de Araujo, Catiucia Carneiro Lopes Hommerding, Brasil Silva Neto, Fernanda, and Eduardo Sprinz
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Signet ring cell ,business.industry ,Stomach ,Gastric carcinoma ,Disease ,urologic and male genital diseases ,medicine.disease ,Bioinformatics ,Metastasis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Carcinoma ,medicine ,Etiology ,Basal cell ,business - Abstract
Bladder Signet-Ring Cell Carcinoma (SRCC) is extremely rare. It is most often primary, but metastatic disease is described in a few cases in literature. Herein we describe a case of primary SRCC of the stomach with metastasis to the bladder that did not have the chance to receive treatment and passed away due to tumor aggressiveness. We also reviewed the literature and discussed the etiology, prognosis and treatment of bladder SRCC.
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- 2015
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19. Methylation of NR3C1 is related to maternal PTSD, parenting stress and maternal medial prefrontal cortical activity in response to child separation among mothers with histories of violence exposure.
- Author
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Schechter, DS, Moser, DA, Paoloni-Giacobino, A, Stenz, L, Gex-Fabry, M, Aue, T, Adouan, W, Cordero, MI, Suardi, F, Manini, A, Sancho Rossignol, A, Merminod, G, Ansermet, F, Dayer, AG, Rusconi Serpa, S, Schechter, DS, Moser, DA, Paoloni-Giacobino, A, Stenz, L, Gex-Fabry, M, Aue, T, Adouan, W, Cordero, MI, Suardi, F, Manini, A, Sancho Rossignol, A, Merminod, G, Ansermet, F, Dayer, AG, and Rusconi Serpa, S
- Abstract
Prior research has shown that mothers with Interpersonal violence-related posttraumatic stress disorder (IPV-PTSD) report greater difficulty in parenting their toddlers. Relative to their frequent early exposure to violence and maltreatment, these mothers display dysregulation of their hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis (HPA-axis), characterized by hypocortisolism. Considering methylation of the promoter region of the glucocorticoid receptor gene NR3C1 as a marker for HPA-axis functioning, with less methylation likely being associated with less circulating cortisol, the present study tested the hypothesis that the degree of methylation of this gene would be negatively correlated with maternal IPV-PTSD severity and parenting stress, and positively correlated with medial prefrontal cortical (mPFC) activity in response to video-stimuli of stressful versus non-stressful mother-child interactions. Following a mental health assessment, 45 mothers and their children (ages 12-42 months) participated in a behavioral protocol involving free-play and laboratory stressors such as mother-child separation. Maternal DNA was extracted from saliva. Interactive behavior was rated on the CARE-Index. During subsequent fMRI scanning, mothers were shown films of free-play and separation drawn from this protocol. Maternal PTSD severity and parenting stress were negatively correlated with the mean percentage of methylation of NR3C1. Maternal mPFC activity in response to video-stimuli of mother-child separation versus play correlated positively to NR3C1 methylation, and negatively to maternal IPV-PTSD and parenting stress. Among interactive behavior variables, child cooperativeness in play was positively correlated with NR3C1 methylation. Thus, the present study is the first published report to our knowledge, suggesting convergence of behavioral, epigenetic, and neuroimaging data that form a psychobiological signature of parenting-risk in the context of early life stress and PTSD.
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- 2015
20. The relation of general socio-emotional processing to parenting specific behavior: a study of mothers with and without posttraumatic stress disorder
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Moser, DA, Aue, T, Suardi, F, Manini, A, Sancho Rossignol, A, Cordero, MI, Merminod, G, Ansermet, F, Rusconi Serpa, S, Favez, N, Schechter, DS, Moser, DA, Aue, T, Suardi, F, Manini, A, Sancho Rossignol, A, Cordero, MI, Merminod, G, Ansermet, F, Rusconi Serpa, S, Favez, N, and Schechter, DS
- Abstract
Socio-emotional information processing during everyday human interactions has been assumed to translate to social-emotional information processing when parenting a child. Yet, few studies have examined whether this is indeed the case. This study aimed to improve on this by connecting the functional neuroimaging data when seeing socio-emotional interactions that are not parenting specific to observed maternal sensitivity. The current study considered 45 mothers of small children (12–42 months of age). It included healthy controls (HC) and mothers with interpersonal violence-related posttraumatic stress disorder (IPV-PTSD), as well as mothers without PTSD, both with and without IPV exposure. We found that anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) activity correlated negatively with observed maternal sensitivity when mothers watched videos of menacing vs. prosocial adult male–female interactions. This relationship was independent of whether mothers were HC or had IPV-PTSD. We also found dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) activity to be correlated negatively with maternal sensitivity when mothers watched any kind of arousing adult interactions. With regards to ACC and vmPFC activity, we interpret our results to mean that the ease of general emotional information integration translates to parenting-specific behavior. Our dlPFC activity findings support the idea that the efficiency of top-down control of socio-emotional processing in non-parenting specific contexts may be predictive of parenting behavior.
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- 2015
21. BDNF Methylation and Maternal Brain Activity in a Violence-Related Sample
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Moser, DA, Paoloni-Giacobino, A, Stenz, L, Adouan, W, Manini, A, Suardi, F, Cordero Campaña, MI, Vital, M, Sancho Rossignol, A, Rusconi-Serpa, S, Ansermet, F, Dayer, AG, Schechter, DS, Moser, DA, Paoloni-Giacobino, A, Stenz, L, Adouan, W, Manini, A, Suardi, F, Cordero Campaña, MI, Vital, M, Sancho Rossignol, A, Rusconi-Serpa, S, Ansermet, F, Dayer, AG, and Schechter, DS
- Abstract
It is known that increased circulating glucocorticoids in the wake of excessive, chronic, repetitive stress increases anxiety and impairs Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF) signaling. Recent studies of BDNF gene methylation in relation to maternal care have linked high BDNF methylation levels in the blood of adults to lower quality of received maternal care measured via self-report. Yet the specific mechanisms by which these phenomena occur remain to be established. The present study examines the link between methylation of the BDNF gene promoter region and patterns of neural activity that are associated with maternal response to stressful versus non-stressful child stimuli within a sample that includes mothers with interpersonal violence-related PTSD (IPV-PTSD). 46 mothers underwent fMRI. The contrast of neural activity when watching children-including their own-was then correlated to BDNF methylation. Consistent with the existing literature, the present study found that maternal BDNF methylation was associated with higher levels of maternal anxiety and greater childhood exposure to domestic violence. fMRI results showed a positive correlation of BDNF methylation with maternal brain activity in the anterior cingulate (ACC), and ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC), regions generally credited with a regulatory function toward brain areas that are generating emotions. Furthermore we found a negative correlation of BDNF methylation with the activity of the right hippocampus. Since our stimuli focus on stressful parenting conditions, these data suggest that the correlation between vmPFC/ACC activity and BDNF methylation may be linked to mothers who are at a disadvantage with respect to emotion regulation when facing stressful parenting situations. Overall, this study provides evidence that epigenetic signatures of stress-related genes can be linked to functional brain regions regulating parenting stress, thus advancing our understanding of mothers at risk for s
- Published
- 2015
22. Comparação entre o LDL - colesterol obtido pela fórmula de Friedewald e a dosagem sérica por método enzimático - doi: 10.5102/ucs.v10i2.1561
- Author
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Fabiano Fagundes Moser da Silva and Tania Cristina Andrade
- Abstract
Os estudos recentes mostram uma correlacao entre o aumento de LDL-C com o risco de aterosclerose. A maioria dos portadores de dislipidemias nao apresenta sinais ou sintomas decorrentes diretamente da alteracao lipidica, assim, seu diagnostico e quase que exclusivamente determinado pelos lipidios plasmaticos. A dosagem do LDL-C plasmatico se resume em duas formas, o metodo enzimatico direto e o indireto que e calculado de acordo com a formula de Friedewald. Foram analisadas 104 amostras. E verificou-se que a estimativa do LDL-C tende a mostrar resultados mais elevados, extremamente significantes (p
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- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Evaluating the effects of photovoltaic module heating during electroluminescence inspection
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Koester Lukas, Vallarella Emanuel, Louwen Atse, Lindig Sascha, and Moser David
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pv inspection ,operation and maintenance ,electroluminescence ,snow melting ,Renewable energy sources ,TJ807-830 - Abstract
The application of electroluminescence imaging of photovoltaic modules increased in the last years, due to the reliable and detailed identification of degradation and failures. In future plants the time-consuming connection of power supplies could be overcome by use of inverters with bi-directional functionality, allowing backpowering of connected module strings directly. Temperature influences the open-circuit voltage of photovoltaic modules and must therefore be considered during backpowering. This work investigates the heating due to backpowering of photovoltaic modules of different types during electroluminescence inspection. The temperature increase until saturation is estimated by energy balance calculations and experimentally verified to be around 20 °C, with resulting voltage drops of up to 3 V. Further, these changes have an effect on the recorded luminescence intensity: a decrease of the electroluminescence signal intensity between beginning of backpowering and reaching saturation temperature is shown. For application of the results to a real-world scenario, the electroluminescence window of an electroluminescence-ready inverter is introduced, giving the boundaries of current and voltage that can be supplied. Combined with a simulation of the dark current–voltage curves of a connected photovoltaic module string, the electroluminescence inspection possibilities are visualized. Finally, the applicability of this heating phenomenon for snow melting is discussed.
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- 2023
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24. The impact of brief psychotherapy centred on parenthood on the anxio-depressive symptoms of mothers during the perinatal period
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Moayedoddin, A, primary, Moser, DA, additional, and Nanzer, N, additional
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- 2013
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25. Avaliação da função vesical antes e após transplante renal em pacientes sem doença urológica
- Author
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Carlos Uliano Moser da Silva, Daniel, primary
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- View/download PDF
26. Análise de métodos de avaliação pré-operatória na cirurgia de sling transobturatório retrouretral não-ajustável após cirurgia prostática
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Carlos Uliano Moser da Silva, Daniel, primary
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27. NoMoS: An R × B drift momentum spectrometer for beta decay studies
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Moser Daniel, Abele Hartmut, Bosina Joachim, Fillunger Harald, Soldner Torsten, Wang Xiangzun, Zmeskal Johann, and Konrad Gertrud
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
The beta decay of the free neutron provides several probes to test the Standard Model of particle physics as well as to search for extensions thereof. Hence, multiple experiments investigating the decay have already been performed, are under way or are being prepared. These measure the mean lifetime, angular correlation coefficients or various spectra of the charged decay products (proton and electron). NoMoS, the neutron decay products mo___mentum spectrometer, presents a novel method of momentum spectroscopy: it utilizes the R ×B drift effect to disperse charged particles dependent on their momentum in an uniformly curved magnetic field. This spectrometer is designed to precisely measure momentum spectra and angular correlation coefficients in free neutron beta decay to test the Standard Model and to search for new physics beyond. With NoMoS, we aim to measure inter alia the electron-antineutrino correlation coefficient a and the Fierz interference term b with an ultimate precision of Δa/a < 0.3% and Δb < 10−3 respectively. In this paper, we present the measurement principles, discuss measurement uncertainties and systematics, and give a status update.
- Published
- 2019
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28. Design of the magnet system of the neutron decay facility PERC
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Wang Xiangzun, Ziener Carmen, Abele Hartmut, Bodmaier Stefan, Dubbers Dirk, Erhart Jaqueline, Hollering Alexander, Jericha Erwin, Klenke Jens, Fillunger Harald, Heil Werner, Klauser Christine, Konrad Gertrud, Lamparth Max, Lauer Thorsten, Klopf Michael, Maix Reinhard, Märkisch Bastian, Mach Wilfried, Mest Holger, Moser Daniel, Pethoukov Alexander, Raffelt Lukas, Rebrova Nataliya, Roick Christoph, Saul Heiko, Schmidt Ulrich, Soldner Torsten, Virot Romain, and Zimmer Oliver
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
The PERC (Proton and Electron Radiation Channel) facility is currently under construction at the research reactor FRM II, Garching. It will serve as an intense and clean source of electrons and protons from neutron beta decay for precision studies. It aims to contribute to the determination of the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa quark-mixing element Vud from neutron decay data and to search for new physics via new effective couplings. PERC's central component is a 12 m long superconducting magnet system. It hosts an 8 m long decay region in a uniform field. An additional high-field region selects the phase space of electrons and protons which can reach the detectors and largely improves systematic uncertainties. We discuss the design of the magnet system and the resulting properties of the magnetic field.
- Published
- 2019
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29. Step by step male to female transsexual surgery
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Fernando Jahn da Silva Abreu, Brasil Silva Neto, Nelson Sivonei da Silva Batezini, Gabriel M. V. Da Silva, Tiago Elias Rosito, Rodrigo Uliano Moser da Silva, and João Vitor Quadra Vieira dos Santos
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Orgasm ,lcsh:RC870-923 ,Surgical Flaps ,Introitus ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Sex Reassignment Surgery ,medicine ,Humans ,media_common ,Sex reassignment surgery (male-to-female) ,business.industry ,lcsh:Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,Surgery ,Transsexual ,Sexual intercourse ,Treatment Outcome ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Vaginoplasty ,Female ,business ,Transsexualism ,Video Section - Abstract
Introduction After the diagnosis of transsexualism is confirmed therapy commences with psychotherapeutic preparation for the conversion, and after conversion, long-term patient rehabilitation is maintained for at least two years. The indication for surgery is chronic discomfort caused by discord with the patient's natural gender, intense dislike of developing secondary sex characteristics and the onset of puberty. The surgical conversion of transsexuals is the main step in the complex care of these problematic patients (1). This surgery was first described by Benjamin H, using a flap of inverted penile skin (2) and is considered the gold standard since then. Male-to-female transsexual surgical techniques are well defined and give good cosmetic and functional results. Sex reassignment surgery promotes the improvement of psychological aspects and social relationships as shown in the World Health Organization Quality of Life Assessment applied in the patients submitted to this procedure (3). Techniques include the creation of a normal appearing female introitus, a vaginoplasty allowing sexual intercourse and the capability of clitoral orgasm (4). Various methods for neovaginoplasty have been described and can be classified into five categories, i.e. pedicled intestinal transplants, penile skin grafts, penile skin flaps, non-genital skin flaps and non-genital skin grafts (5). In our Hospital, we use penile and scrotal skin flaps. Until now, 174 procedures have been performed by our team using this technique with high rates of satisfaction (3). Patients and methods We present a step-by-step male to female transsexual surgery. Conclusion Surgical gender reassignment of male transsexuals resulted in replicas of female genitalia which enabled coitus with orgasm (1). With this video we show step by step that a surgery using penile skin flaps is able to be performed with good cosmetic results.
30. Treatment of scleromyxedema with IVIg
- Author
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Moser David W and Griffin Thomas A
- Subjects
Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 ,Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,RC925-935 - Published
- 2012
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31. Design of dual ligands using excessive pharmacophore query alignment
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Moser Daniel, Wisniewska Joanna, Hahn Steffen, la Buscató Estel, Klingler Franca-Maria, Achenbach Janosch, Hofmann Bettina, Steinhilber Dieter, and Proschak Ewgenij
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Published
- 2012
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32. Step by step male to female transsexual surgery
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Rodrigo Uliano Moser da Silva, Fernando Jahn da Silva Abreu, Gabriel M. V. Da Silva, João Vitor Quadra Vieira dos Santos, Nelson Sivonei da Silva Batezini, Brasil Silva Neto, and Tiago Elias Rosito
- Subjects
Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,RC870-923 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Introduction After the diagnosis of transsexualism is confirmed therapy commences with psychotherapeutic preparation for the conversion, and after conversion, long-term patient rehabilitation is maintained for at least two years. The indication for surgery is chronic discomfort caused by discord with the patient's natural gender, intense dislike of developing secondary sex characteristics and the onset of puberty. The surgical conversion of transsexuals is the main step in the complex care of these problematic patients (1). This surgery was first described by Benjamin H, using a flap of inverted penile skin (2) and is considered the gold standard since then. Male-to-female transsexual surgical techniques are well defined and give good cosmetic and functional results. Sex reassignment surgery promotes the improvement of psychological aspects and social relationships as shown in the World Health Organization Quality of Life Assessment applied in the patients submitted to this procedure (3). Techniques include the creation of a normal appearing female introitus, a vaginoplasty allowing sexual intercourse and the capability of clitoral orgasm (4). Various methods for neovaginoplasty have been described and can be classified into five categories, i.e. pedicled intestinal transplants, penile skin grafts, penile skin flaps, non-genital skin flaps and non-genital skin grafts (5). In our Hospital, we use penile and scrotal skin flaps. Until now, 174 procedures have been performed by our team using this technique with high rates of satisfaction (3). Patients and methods We present a step-by-step male to female transsexual surgery. Conclusion Surgical gender reassignment of male transsexuals resulted in replicas of female genitalia which enabled coitus with orgasm (1). With this video we show step by step that a surgery using penile skin flaps is able to be performed with good cosmetic results.
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33. A biomarker of brain arousal mediates the intergenerational link between maternal and child post-traumatic stress disorder.
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Deiber MP, Pointet Perizzolo VC, Moser DA, Vital M, Rusconi Serpa S, Ros T, and Schechter DS
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Child, Male, Adult, Arousal physiology, Longitudinal Studies, Mother-Child Relations, Biomarkers, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic physiopathology, Electroencephalography, Mothers, Child of Impaired Parents, Brain physiopathology
- Abstract
This study examined whether there is a biological basis in the child's resting brain activity for the intergenerational link between maternal interpersonal violence-related posttraumatic stress disorder (IPV-PTSD) and child subclinical symptoms. We used high-density EEG recordings to investigate the resting brain activity in a sample of 57 children, 34 from mothers with IPV-PTSD, and 23 from mothers without PTSD. These children were part of a prospective, longitudinal study focusing on the offspring of mothers with and without IPV-PTSD, reporting how the severity of a mother's IPV-PTSD can impact her child's emotional regulation and risk for developing mental illness. However, we had not yet looked into potential EEG biomarkers during resting state that might mediate and/or moderate effects of maternal IPV-PTSD severity on child mental health, and in particular the risk for PTSD. The alpha band spectral power as well as the aperiodic exponent of the power spectrum (PLE; power-law exponent) were examined as mediators of maternal IPV-PTSD and child PTSD. While there was no difference in alpha spectral power between the two groups, PLE was significantly reduced in children of mothers with IPV-PTSD compared to control children, indicating cortical hyper-arousal. Interestingly, child PLE was negatively correlated with the severity of maternal IPV-PTSD, suggesting an intergenerational interaction. This interpretation was reinforced by a negative correlation between child PLE and child PTSD symptoms. Finally, causal analyses using structural equation modelling indicated that child PLE mediated the relationship between maternal PTSD severity and child PTSD. Our observations suggest that maternal IPV-PTSD has an intergenerational impact on the child neurobehavioral development through a correlated abnormal marker of brain arousal (i.e. child PLE). These findings are potentially relevant to psychotherapy research and to the development of more effective psycho-neurobehavioral therapies (i.e. neurofeedback) among affected individuals., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest none., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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34. Biological aging markers in blood and brain tissue indicate age acceleration in alcohol use disorder.
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Zillich L, Cetin M, Hummel EM, Poisel E, Fries GR, Frank J, Streit F, Foo JC, Sirignano L, Friske MM, Lenz B, Hoffmann S, Adorjan K, Kiefer F, Bakalkin G, Hansson AC, Lohoff FW, Kärkkäinen O, Kok E, Karhunen PJ, Sutherland GT, Walss-Bass C, Spanagel R, Rietschel M, Moser DA, and Witt SH
- Abstract
Background: Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is associated with increased mortality and morbidity risk. A reason for this could be accelerated biological aging, which is strongly influenced by disease processes such as inflammation. As recent studies of AUD show changes in DNA methylation and gene expression in neuroinflammation-related pathways in the brain, biological aging represents a potentially important construct for understanding the adverse effects of substance use disorders. Epigenetic clocks have shown accelerated aging in blood samples from individuals with AUD. However, no systematic evaluation of biological age measures in AUD across different tissues and brain regions has been undertaken., Methods: As markers of biological aging (BioAge markers), we assessed Levine's and Horvath's epigenetic clocks, DNA methylation telomere length (DNAmTL), telomere length (TL), and mitochondrial DNA copy number (mtDNAcn) in postmortem brain samples from Brodmann Area 9 (BA9), caudate nucleus, and ventral striatum (N = 63-94), and in whole blood samples (N = 179) of individuals with and without AUD. To evaluate the association between AUD status and BioAge markers, we performed linear regression analyses while adjusting for covariates., Results: The majority of BioAge markers were significantly associated with chronological age in all samples. Levine's epigenetic clock and DNAmTL were indicative of accelerated biological aging in AUD in BA9 and whole blood samples, while Horvath's showed the opposite effect in BA9. No significant association of AUD with TL and mtDNAcn was detected. Measured TL and DNAmTL showed only small correlations in blood and none in brain., Conclusions: The present study is the first to simultaneously investigate epigenetic clocks, telomere length, and mtDNAcn in postmortem brain and whole blood samples in individuals with AUD. We found evidence for accelerated biological aging in AUD in blood and brain, as measured by Levine's epigenetic clock, and DNAmTL. Additional studies of different tissues from the same individuals are needed to draw valid conclusions about the congruence of biological aging in blood and brain., (© 2024 The Authors. Alcohol: Clinical and Experimental Research published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Research Society on Alcohol.)
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- 2024
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35. Within-network brain connectivity during a social optimism task is related to personal optimism and optimism for in-group members.
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Moser DA, Dricu M, Kotikalapudi R, Doucet GE, and Aue T
- Subjects
- Humans, Optimism, Cognition, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Brain Mapping methods, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain pathology
- Abstract
Optimism bias is the tendency to believe desirable events are more likely to happen than undesirable ones. People often display optimistic biases for themselves (personal optimism), but also for members of groups they like or identify with (social optimism). However, the neural bases of and connections between these two concepts are poorly understood. The present study hence used both questionnaires and a social optimism task performed during magnetic resonance imaging to investigate how network connectivity associates with personal and social optimism biases. Using sparse canonical correlation analysis, we found that a behavioral dimension that included both in-group optimism bias and personal optimism bias was positively associated with a dimension of network connectivity. This dimension comprised two networks with positive weights (dorsal precuneus-related default mode network and dorsal sensorimotor network), and three with negative weights (including parts of the salience and central executive networks). Our findings indicate that connectivity in networks adjacent to the temporoparietal junction favors propagation of both personal and social optimism biases. Meanwhile, low connectivity in more frontal networks associated with more complex cognition may also further such propagation., (© 2023 The Authors. Human Brain Mapping published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2023
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36. Treatment-associated mRNA co-expression changes in monocytes of patients with posttraumatic stress disorder.
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Kumsta R, Zang JCS, Hummel EM, Müller S, Moser DA, Herpertz S, and Kessler H
- Abstract
PTSD is a prevalent mental disorder that results from exposure to extreme and stressful life events and comes at high costs for both the individual and society. Therapeutic treatment presents the best way to deal with PTSD-the mechanisms underlying change after treatment, however, remain poorly understood. While stress and immune associated gene expression changes have been associated with PTSD development, studies investigating treatment effects at the molecular level so far tended to focus on DNA methylation. Here we use gene-network analysis on whole-transcriptome RNA-Seq data isolated from CD14
+ monocytes of female PTSD patients ( N = 51) to study pre-treatment signatures of therapy response and therapy-related changes at the level of gene expression. Patients who exhibited significant symptom improvement after therapy showed higher baseline expression in two modules involved in inflammatory processes (including notable examples IL1R2 and FKBP5 ) and blood coagulation. After therapy, expression of an inflammatory module was increased, and expression of a wound healing module was decreased. This supports findings reporting an association between PTSD and dysregulations of the inflammatory and the hemostatic system and mark both as potentially treatment sensitive., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Kumsta, Zang, Hummel, Müller, Moser, Herpertz and Kessler.)- Published
- 2023
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37. MicroRNA-Related Polymorphism and Their Association with Fibromyalgia.
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Berg F, Moser DA, Hagena V, Streit F, Mosch B, Kumsta R, Herpertz S, and Diers M
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Gene Expression Regulation, Polymorphism, Genetic, Phenotype, Fibromyalgia genetics, MicroRNAs genetics, MicroRNAs metabolism
- Abstract
MicroRNAs are tissue-specific expressed short RNAs that serve post-transcriptional gene regulation. A specific microRNA can bind to mRNAs of different genes and thereby suppress their protein production. In the context of the complex phenotype of fibromyalgia, we used the Axiom miRNA Target Site Genotyping Array to search genome-wide for DNA variations in microRNA genes, their regulatory regions, and in the 3'UTR of protein-coding genes. To identify disease-relevant DNA polymorphisms, a cohort of 176 female fibromyalgia patients was studied in comparison to a cohort of 162 healthy women. The association between 48,329 markers and fibromyalgia was investigated using logistic regression adjusted for population stratification. Results show that 29 markers had p -values < 1 × 10
-3 , and the strongest association was observed for rs758459 ( p -value of 0.0001), located in the Neurogenin 1 gene which is targeted by hsa-miR-130a-3p. Furthermore, variant rs2295963 is predicted to affect binding of hsa-miR-1-3p. Both microRNAs were previously reported to be differentially expressed in fibromyalgia patients. Despite its limited statistical power, this study reports two microRNA-related polymorphisms which may play a functional role in the pathogenesis of fibromyalgia. For a better understanding of the disease pattern, further functional analyses on the biological significance of microRNAs and microRNA-related polymorphisms are required.- Published
- 2023
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38. Interactive teaching enhances students' physiological arousal during online learning.
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Gellisch M, Morosan-Puopolo G, Wolf OT, Moser DA, Zaehres H, and Brand-Saberi B
- Subjects
- Humans, Learning, Curriculum, Arousal, Teaching, Education, Distance methods, Students, Medical
- Abstract
The pure transfer of face-to-face teaching to a digital learning environment can be accompanied by a significant reduction in the physiological arousal of students, which in turn can be associated with passivity during the learning process, often linked to insufficient levels of concentration and engagement in the course work. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate whether students' psychobiological stress responses can be enhanced in the context of anatomical online learning and how increased physiological parameters correlate with characteristics of learning experiences in a digital learning environment. Healthy first-year medical students (n = 104) experienced a regular practical course in Microscopic Anatomy either in face-to-face learning, in passive online learning or in an interaction-enhanced version of online learning. Compared to passive online learning, students engaged in the interaction-enhanced version of online learning displayed a significantly reduced Heart Rate Variability (P 0.001, partial η
2 = 0.381) along with a strong increase in salivary cortisol (P 0.001, partial η2 = 0.179) and salivary alpha-amylase activity (P 0.001, partial η2 = 0.195). These results demonstrated that the physiological arousal of students engaged in online learning can be enhanced via interactive teaching methods and pointed towards clear correlations between higher physiological responses and elementary criteria of learning experience such as engagement and attention., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
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39. On the complex and dimensional relationship of maternal posttraumatic stress disorder during early childhood and child outcomes at school-age.
- Author
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Moser DA, Graf S, Glaus J, Urben S, Jouabli S, Pointet Perrizolo V, Suardi F, Robinson J, Rusconi Serpa S, Plessen KJ, and Schechter DS
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Child, Preschool, Child, Prospective Studies, Mothers psychology, Violence psychology, Parents, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic diagnosis, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic psychology
- Abstract
Background: Several studies have shown associations between maternal interpersonal violence-related posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), child mental health problems, and impaired socioemotional development. However, the existing literature lacks evidence linking constellations of risk factors such as maternal interpersonal-violence-related PTSD, psychopathology, and interactive behavior with toddlers and outcome measures at school-age., Methods: This study involved a prospective, longitudinal investigation of 62 mothers and examined the relationship between maternal variables measured when children were in early childhood (mean age 27 months), and child outcomes when children were school-age (age mean = 83.2 months) while retaining a focus on the context of maternal PTSD. To identify and weigh associated dimensions comparatively, we employed sparse canonical correlation analysis (sCCA) aimed at associating dimensions of a dataset of 20 maternal variables in early childhood with that of more than 20 child outcome variables (i.e., child psychopathology, life-events, and socioemotional skills) at school-age., Results: Phase 1 variables with the highest weights were those of maternal psychopathology: PTSD, depressive and dissociative symptoms, and self-report of parental stress. The highest weighted Phase 2 child outcome measures were those of child psychopathology: PTSD, anxiety, and depressive symptoms as well as peer bullying and victimization., Conclusions: sCCA revealed that trauma-related concepts in mothers were significantly and reliably associated with child psychopathology and other indicators of risk for intergenerational transmission of violence and victimization. The results highlight the dimensional and multifaceted nature-both for mothers as well as children-of the intergenerational transmission of violence and associated psychopathology.
- Published
- 2023
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40. Mitochondrial DNA as a marker for treatment-response in post-traumatic stress disorder.
- Author
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Hummel EM, Piovesan K, Berg F, Herpertz S, Kessler H, Kumsta R, and Moser DA
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Mitochondria genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic genetics, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic therapy
- Abstract
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a serious mental health condition thought to be mediated by a dysregulated stress response system. Stress, especially chronic stress, affects mitochondrial activity and their efficiency in duplicating their genomes. Human cells contain numerous mitochondria that harbor multiple copies of their own genome, which consist of a mixture of wild type and variant mtDNA - a condition known as mitochondrial heteroplasmy. Number of mitochondrial genomes in a cell and the degree of heteroplasmy may serve as an indicator of mitochondrial allostatic load. Changes in mtDNA copy number and the proportion of variant mtDNA may be related to mental disorders and symptom severity, suggesting an involvement of mitochondrial dysfunction also in PTSD. Therefore, we examined number and composition of mitochondrial DNA before and after six weeks of inpatient psychotherapy treatment in a cohort of 60 female PTSD patients. We extracted DNA from isolated monocytes before and after inpatient treatment and quantified cellular mtDNA using multiplex qPCR. We hypothesized that treatment would lead to changes in cellular mtDNA levels and that change in mtDNA level would be associated with PTSD symptom severity and treatment response. It could be shown that mtDNA copy number and the ratio of variant mtDNA decreased during therapy, however, this change did not correlate with treatment response. Our results suggest that inpatient treatment can reduce signs of mitochondrial allostatic load, which could have beneficial effects on mental health. The quantification of mtDNA and the determination of cellular heteroplasmy could represent valuable biomarkers for the molecular characterization of mental disorders in the future., Competing Interests: Conflicts of interest All authors declare that they have no conflicts of interests., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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41. Predictive modeling of optimism bias using gray matter cortical thickness.
- Author
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Kotikalapudi R, Moser DA, Dricu M, Spisak T, and Aue T
- Subjects
- Humans, Gyrus Cinguli diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Bias, Gray Matter diagnostic imaging, Optimism psychology
- Abstract
People have been shown to be optimistically biased when their future outcome expectancies are assessed. In fact, we display optimism bias (OB) toward our own success when compared to a rival individual's (personal OB [POB]). Similarly, success expectancies for social groups we like reliably exceed those we mention for a rival group (social OB [SOB]). Recent findings suggest the existence of neural underpinnings for OB. Mostly using structural/functional MRI, these findings rely on voxel-based mass-univariate analyses. While these results remain associative in nature, an open question abides whether MRI information can accurately predict OB. In this study, we hence used predictive modelling to forecast the two OBs. The biases were quantified using a validated soccer paradigm, where personal (self versus rival) and social (in-group versus out-group) forms of OB were extracted at the participant level. Later, using gray matter cortical thickness, we predicted POB and SOB via machine-learning. Our model explained 17% variance (R
2 = 0.17) in individual variability for POB (but not SOB). Key predictors involved the rostral-caudal anterior cingulate cortex, pars orbitalis and entorhinal cortex-areas that have been associated with OB before. We need such predictive models on a larger scale, to help us better understand positive psychology and individual well-being., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
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42. Optimism bias and its relation to scenario valence, gender, sociality, and insecure attachment.
- Author
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Dricu M, Moser DA, and Aue T
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Female, Bias, Anxiety, Social Behavior, Optimism, Motivation
- Abstract
Optimism bias refers to the tendency to display unjustified high/low expectations of future positive/negative events. This study asked 202 participants to estimate the likelihood of 96 different events. We investigated optimism biases for both oneself and the general population, and how these biases are influenced by gender, valence of the event, sociality of the event, as well as attachment anxiety and attachment avoidance. We found that sociality interacted with gender, with the difference in optimism bias for social vs. alone events being larger among women than among men. Attachment anxiety mainly reduced the optimism bias among men deliberating over future alone situations, while attachment avoidance primarily reduced optimism bias among female respondents deliberating over future social interactions. These results may have implications for the well-being and motivation of differently attached men and women and ultimately inspire psychotherapy interventions., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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43. The relationship of maternal and child methylation of the glucocorticoid receptor NR3C1 during early childhood and subsequent child psychopathology at school-age in the context of maternal interpersonal violence-related post-traumatic stress disorder.
- Author
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Cordero MI, Stenz L, Moser DA, Rusconi Serpa S, Paoloni-Giacobino A, and Schechter DS
- Abstract
Introduction: Interpersonal violent (IPV) experiences when they begin in childhood and continue in various forms during adulthood often lead to chronic post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) that is associated in multiple studies with hypocortisolism and lower percentage of methylation of the promoter region of the gene coding for the glucocorticoid receptor (NR3C1). This prospective, longitudinal study examined the relationship of NR3C1 methylation among mothers with IPV-related PTSD and their toddlers and then looked at the relationship of maternal NR3C1 methylation and child psychopathology at school age., Methods: Forty-eight mothers were evaluated for life-events history and post-traumatic stress disorder via structured clinical interview when their children were ages 12-42 months (mean age 26.7 months, SD 8.8). Their children's psychopathology in terms of internalizing symptoms and externalizing behaviors was evaluated using the Child Behavior Checklist at ages 5-9 years (mean age 7 years, SD 1.1). Percentage of methylation for the NR3C1 gene promoter region was assessed from DNA extracted from maternal and child saliva using bisulfite pyrosequencing. Data analysis involved parametric and non-parametric correlations and multiple linear and logistic regression modeling., Results: Logistic regression models using child NR3C1 methylation as the dependent variable and maternal NR3C1 methylation and PTSD group status as predictors, as well as the interaction indicated that all three of these significantly predicted child NR3C1 methylation. These findings remained significant when controlling for child age, sex and maternal child abuse history. Overall, maternal NR3C1 methylation when children were toddlers was negatively and significantly associated with child externalizing behavior severity at school age., Discussion: We found that correlations between mothers and their children of NR3C1 methylation levels overall and at all individual CpG sites of interest were significant only in the IPV-PTSD group. The latter findings support that NR3C1 methylation in mothers positively and statistically significantly correlates with NR3C1 methylation in their children only in presence of IPV-PTSD in the mothers. This maternal epigenetic signature with respect to this glucocorticoid receptor is significantly associated with child behavior that may well pose a risk for intergenerational transmission of violence and related psychopathology., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Cordero, Stenz, Moser, Rusconi Serpa, Paoloni-Giacobino and Schechter.)
- Published
- 2022
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44. Whole-brain white matter correlates of personality profiles predictive of subjective well-being.
- Author
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Kotikalapudi R, Dricu M, Moser DA, and Aue T
- Subjects
- Brain, Humans, Personality physiology, Personality Disorders, White Matter diagnostic imaging, White Matter physiology
- Abstract
We investigated the white matter correlates of personality profiles predictive of subjective well-being. Using principal component analysis to first determine the possible personality profiles onto which core personality measures would load, we subsequently searched for whole-brain white matter correlations with these profiles. We found three personality profiles that correlated with the integrity of white matter tracts. The correlates of an "optimistic" personality profile suggest (a) an intricate network for self-referential processing that helps regulate negative affect and maintain a positive outlook on life, (b) a sustained capacity for visually tracking rewards in the environment and (c) a motor readiness to act upon the conviction that desired rewards are imminent. The correlates of a "short-term approach behavior" profile was indicative of minimal loss of integrity in white matter tracts supportive of lifting certain behavioral barriers, possibly allowing individuals to act more outgoing and carefree in approaching people and rewards. Lastly, a "long-term approach behavior" profile's association with white matter tracts suggests lowered sensitivity to transient updates of stimulus-based associations of rewards and setbacks, thus facilitating the successful long-term pursuit of goals. Together, our findings yield convincing evidence that subjective well-being has its manifestations in the brain., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Brain Structure and Optimism Bias: A Voxel-Based Morphometry Approach.
- Author
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Kotikalapudi R, Dricu M, Moser DA, and Aue T
- Abstract
Individuals often anticipate an unrealistically favorable future for themselves (personal optimism bias) or others (social optimism bias). While such biases are well established, little is known about their neuroanatomy. In this study, participants engaged in a soccer task and estimated the likelihood of successful passes in personal and social scenarios. Voxel-based morphometry revealed that personal optimism bias varied as a positive function of gray matter volume (GMV) in the putamen, frontal pole, hippocampus, temporal pole, inferior temporal gyrus, visual association areas, and mid-superior temporal gyrus. Social optimism bias correlated positively with GMV in the temporoparietal junction and negatively with GMV in the inferior temporal gyrus and pre-supplementary motor areas. Together, these findings suggest that parts of our optimistic outlook are biologically rooted. Moreover, while the two biases looked similar at the behavioral level, they were related to distinct gray matter structures, proposing that their underlying mechanisms are not identical.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Families With Violence Exposure and the Intergenerational Transmission of Somatization.
- Author
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Glaus J, Moser DA, Rusconi Serpa S, Jouabli S, Turri F, Plessen KJ, and Schechter DS
- Abstract
Introduction: Adults who have histories of childhood trauma have been noted to display greater somatization, dissociative symptoms and affect dysregulation. What happens in the parent-child relationship when those traumatized children become parents? A potential link to somatization in the child has been suggested by several prior studies. Children who have early attachment disturbances had more physical complaints if their mothers displayed less maternal sensitivity during observed parent-child interactions. Yet, the intergenerational link between maternal and child somatization has not been sufficiently explored in a longitudinal study in order to understand the potential impact of maternal trauma history and related psychopathology on subsequent child somatization and psychopathology., Methods: This paper examined prospective, longitudinal data of 64 mother-toddler dyads (mean age = 2.4 years, SD = 0.7) who were later studied when children had a mean age of 7 years. Mothers with and without histories of interpersonal violence (IPV; physical/sexual abuse and/or family violence exposure) were included. Mothers with IPV histories were oversampled. Linear and Poisson regression models were used to test the associations between maternal IPV-related post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) with maternal somatization severity when children were toddlers, and between maternal somatization and maternal interactive behaviors with child somatization by maternal report and clinician-rated assessment at school-age., Results: Maternal PTSD severity was significantly associated with increased maternal somatization severity ( p = 0.031). Maternal somatization severity during the child's early childhood predicted both maternal report of child somatization ( p = 0.011) as well as child thought problems ( p = 0.007) when children were school-aged. No association was found between maternal somatization and child-reported psychopathology. The study did not find that maternal alexithymia, caregiving behaviors or child exposure to violence contributed significantly to the model examining the association between maternal and child somatization., Conclusion: The results are in line with the hypothesis of intergenerational transmission of somatization in the context of IPV and related maternal PTSD during formative early development. We interpret this as an expression of psychological distress from mother to child, as maternal trauma and pathology affect the caregiving environment and, thus, the parent-child relationship. The authors conclude with a discussion of implications for parent-infant and early childhood intervention., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Glaus, Moser, Rusconi Serpa, Jouabli, Turri, Plessen and Schechter.)
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- 2022
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47. Impact of mothers' IPV-PTSD on their capacity to predict their child's emotional comprehension and its relationship to their child's psychopathology.
- Author
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Pointet Perizzolo VC, Glaus J, Stein CR, Willheim E, Vital M, Arnautovic E, Kaleka K, Rusconi Serpa S, Pons F, Moser DA, and Schechter DS
- Subjects
- Child, Female, Humans, Psychopathology, Self-Control, Surveys and Questionnaires, Comprehension, Emotions physiology, Intimate Partner Violence psychology, Mother-Child Relations psychology, Mothers psychology, Mothers statistics & numerical data, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic psychology
- Abstract
Background: Previous studies demonstrated that when the violence-exposed child becomes a mother and interacts with her own child during early sensitive periods for social-emotional development, she may have difficulties providing sensitive responsiveness to the child's emotional communication. Such difficulties place the child's development of emotional comprehension (EC) and related self-regulation at risk. The aim of this study was to examine how mothers' interpersonal violence-related posttraumatic disorder (IPV-PTSD) would affect their children's EC and their own ability to predict their children's EC. We also investigated how mothers' predictive ability would correlate with child psychopathology., Methods: Sixty-one mother-child dyads (36 with IPV-PTSD) participated in this study. Children's (mean age = 7.0 years, SD = 1.1) EC was assessed with the Test of Emotion Comprehension (child TEC) and their psychopathology as reported by the mother was assessed with the Child Behaviour Checklist (CBCL) and as evaluated by a clinician using selected modules of the Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia (K-SADS). Mothers were measured for IPV-PTSD with the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS) and for their capacity to predict their child's emotional comprehension (mother-responding-as-child TEC; mTEC)., Results: We found no significant between-group differences in children's level of EC. Maternal PTSD was associated with lower scores on the mTEC, however. Reduced maternal scores on the mTEC were significantly associated with maternal report of increased aggressive child behaviour and with depression symptoms on the K-SADS. Further, scores on the mTEC interacted with maternal report of child aggression on child oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) symptoms on the K-SADS., Conclusion: These findings support that improving maternal emotional comprehension may help reduce child risk for psychiatric morbidity in this population., Competing Interests: No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s)., (© 2022 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.)
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- 2022
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48. Multivariate patterns of brain-behavior associations across the adult lifespan.
- Author
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Doucet GE, Hamlin N, West A, Kruse JA, Moser DA, and Wilson TW
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Brain Mapping, Canonical Correlation Analysis, Cognition physiology, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Nerve Net physiology, Young Adult, Aging physiology, Behavior physiology, Brain physiology
- Abstract
The nature of brain-behavior covariations with increasing age is poorly understood. In the current study, we used a multivariate approach to investigate the covariation between behavioral-health variables and brain features across adulthood. We recruited healthy adults aged 20-73 years-old (29 younger, mean age = 25.6 years; 30 older, mean age = 62.5 years), and collected structural and functional MRI (s/fMRI) during a resting-state and three tasks. From the sMRI, we extracted cortical thickness and subcortical volumes; from the fMRI, we extracted activation peaks and functional network connectivity (FNC) for each task. We conducted canonical correlation analyses between behavioral-health variables and the sMRI, or the fMRI variables, across all participants. We found significant covariations for both types of neuroimaging phenotypes ( ps = 0.0004) across all individuals, with cognitive capacity and age being the largest opposite contributors. We further identified different variables contributing to the models across phenotypes and age groups. Particularly, we found behavior was associated with different neuroimaging patterns between the younger and older groups. Higher cognitive capacity was supported by activation and FNC within the executive networks in the younger adults, while it was supported by the visual networks' FNC in the older adults. This study highlights how the brain-behavior covariations vary across adulthood and provides further support that cognitive performance relies on regional recruitment that differs between older and younger individuals.
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- 2022
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49. Enhanced sensitivity to optimistic cues is manifested in brain structure: a voxel-based morphometry study.
- Author
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Aue T, Dricu M, Singh L, Moser DA, and Kotikalapudi R
- Subjects
- Attention, Gray Matter diagnostic imaging, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Optimism, Brain diagnostic imaging, Cues
- Abstract
Recent research shows that congruent outcomes are more rapidly (and incongruent less rapidly) detected when individuals receive optimistic rather than pessimistic cues, an effect that was termed optimism robustness. In the current voxel-based morphometry study, we examined whether optimism robustness has a counterpart in the brain structure. The participants' task was to detect two different letters (symbolizing monetary gain or loss) in a visual search matrix. Prior to each onset of the search matrix, two different verbal cues informed our participants about a high probability to gain (optimistic expectancy) or lose (pessimistic expectancy) money. The target presented was either congruent or incongruent with these induced expectancies. Optimism robustness revealed in the participants' reaction times correlated positively with gray matter volume (GMV) in brain regions involved in selective attention (medial visual association area, intraparietal sulcus), emphasizing the strong intertwinement of optimistic expectancies and attention deployment. In addition, GMV in the primary visual cortex diminished with increasing optimism robustness, in line with the interpretation of optimism robustness arising from a global, context-oriented perception. Future studies should address the malleability of these structural correlates of optimism robustness. Our results may assist in the identification of treatment targets in depression., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press.)
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- 2021
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50. Linked patterns of biological and environmental covariation with brain structure in adolescence: a population-based longitudinal study.
- Author
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Modabbernia A, Reichenberg A, Ing A, Moser DA, Doucet GE, Artiges E, Banaschewski T, Barker GJ, Becker A, Bokde ALW, Quinlan EB, Desrivières S, Flor H, Fröhner JH, Garavan H, Gowland P, Grigis A, Grimmer Y, Heinz A, Insensee C, Ittermann B, Martinot JL, Martinot MP, Millenet S, Nees F, Orfanos DP, Paus T, Penttilä J, Poustka L, Smolka MN, Stringaris A, van Noort BM, Walter H, Whelan R, Schumann G, and Frangou S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Brain diagnostic imaging, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Young Adult, Canonical Correlation Analysis, Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- Abstract
Adolescence is a period of major brain reorganization shaped by biologically timed and by environmental factors. We sought to discover linked patterns of covariation between brain structural development and a wide array of these factors by leveraging data from the IMAGEN study, a longitudinal population-based cohort of adolescents. Brain structural measures and a comprehensive array of non-imaging features (relating to demographic, anthropometric, and psychosocial characteristics) were available on 1476 IMAGEN participants aged 14 years and from a subsample reassessed at age 19 years (n = 714). We applied sparse canonical correlation analyses (sCCA) to the cross-sectional and longitudinal data to extract modes with maximum covariation between neuroimaging and non-imaging measures. Separate sCCAs for cortical thickness, cortical surface area and subcortical volumes confirmed that each imaging phenotype was correlated with non-imaging features (sCCA r range: 0.30-0.65, all P
FDR < 0.001). Total intracranial volume and global measures of cortical thickness and surface area had the highest canonical cross-loadings (|ρ| = 0.31-0.61). Age, physical growth and sex had the highest association with adolescent brain structure (|ρ| = 0.24-0.62); at baseline, further significant positive associations were noted for cognitive measures while negative associations were observed at both time points for prenatal parental smoking, life events, and negative affect and substance use in youth (|ρ| = 0.10-0.23). Sex, physical growth and age are the dominant influences on adolescent brain development. We highlight the persistent negative influences of prenatal parental smoking and youth substance use as they are modifiable and of relevance for public health initiatives., (© 2020. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2021
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