775 results on '"Ville, D"'
Search Results
2. Structure-function coupling increases during interictal spikes in temporal lobe epilepsy: A graph signal processing study
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Rigoni, I., Rué Queralt, J., Glomb, K., Preti, M.G., Roehri, N., Tourbier, S., Spinelli, L., Seeck, M., Van De Ville, D., Hagmann, P., and Vulliémoz, S.
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- 2023
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3. Decoding cerebro-spinal signatures of human behavior: Application to motor sequence learning
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Kinany, N., Khatibi, A., Lungu, O., Finsterbusch, J., Büchel, C., Marchand-Pauvert, V., Van De Ville, D., Vahdat, S., and Doyon, J.
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- 2023
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4. Acute TNFα levels predict cognitive impairment 6–9 months after COVID-19 infection
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Nuber-Champier, A., Cionca, A., Breville, G., Voruz, P., de Alcântara, I. Jacot, Allali, G., Lalive, P.H., Benzakour, L., Lövblad, K.-O., Braillard, O., Nehme, M., Coen, M., Serratrice, J., Reny, J.-L., Pugin, J., Guessous, I., Landis, B.N., Griffa, A., De Ville, D. Van, Assal, F., and Péron, J.A.
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- 2023
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5. Le risque de décès chez l’enfant avec épilepsie : recommandations de prévention et de prise en charge de la Société française de neurologie pédiatrique (SFNP)
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Ville, D., Tampere, L., Napuri, S., and Hachon Le Camus, C.
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- 2021
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6. Resting-State Functional Connectivity in Stroke Patients After Upper Limb Robot-Assisted Therapy: A Pilot Study
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Kinany, N., Pierella, C., Pirondini, E., Coscia, M., Miehlbradt, J., Magnin, C., Nicolo, P., Van De Ville, D., Guggisberg, A., Micera, S., Guglielmelli, Eugenio, Series Editor, Masia, Lorenzo, editor, Micera, Silvestro, editor, Akay, Metin, editor, and Pons, José L., editor
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- 2019
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7. On the Potential of EEG Biomarkers to Inform Robot-Assisted Rehabilitation in Stroke Patients
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Pirondini, E., Pierella, C., Kinany, N., Coscia, M., Miehlbradt, J., Magnin, C., Nicolo, P., Guggisberg, A., Micera, S., Deouell, L., Van De Ville, D., Guglielmelli, Eugenio, Series Editor, Masia, Lorenzo, editor, Micera, Silvestro, editor, Akay, Metin, editor, and Pons, José L., editor
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- 2019
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8. TR(acking) individuals down: Exploring the effect of temporal resolution in resting-state fingerprinting
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Cassone, B, Saviola, F, Tambalo, S, Amico, E, Van De Ville, D, Jovicich, J, Cassone, B., Saviola, F., Tambalo, S., Amico, E., Van De Ville, D., Jovicich, J., Cassone, B, Saviola, F, Tambalo, S, Amico, E, Van De Ville, D, Jovicich, J, Cassone, B., Saviola, F., Tambalo, S., Amico, E., Van De Ville, D., and Jovicich, J.
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- 2023
9. No time for drifting: Comparing performance and applicability of signal detrending algorithms for real-time fMRI
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Kopel, R., Sladky, R., Laub, P., Koush, Y., Robineau, F., Hutton, C., Weiskopf, N., Vuilleumier, P., Van De Ville, D., and Scharnowski, F.
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- 2019
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10. Sparse image reconstruction on the sphere: implications of a new sampling theorem
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McEwen, J. D., Puy, G., Thiran, J. -Ph., Vandergheynst, P., Van De Ville, D., and Wiaux, Y.
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Computer Science - Information Theory ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the impact of sampling theorems on the fidelity of sparse image reconstruction on the sphere. We discuss how a reduction in the number of samples required to represent all information content of a band-limited signal acts to improve the fidelity of sparse image reconstruction, through both the dimensionality and sparsity of signals. To demonstrate this result we consider a simple inpainting problem on the sphere and consider images sparse in the magnitude of their gradient. We develop a framework for total variation (TV) inpainting on the sphere, including fast methods to render the inpainting problem computationally feasible at high-resolution. Recently a new sampling theorem on the sphere was developed, reducing the required number of samples by a factor of two for equiangular sampling schemes. Through numerical simulations we verify the enhanced fidelity of sparse image reconstruction due to the more efficient sampling of the sphere provided by the new sampling theorem., Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures
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- 2012
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11. Implications for compressed sensing of a new sampling theorem on the sphere
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McEwen, J. D., Puy, G., Thiran, J. -Ph., Vandergheynst, P., Van De Ville, D., and Wiaux, Y.
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Computer Science - Information Theory ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
A sampling theorem on the sphere has been developed recently, requiring half as many samples as alternative equiangular sampling theorems on the sphere. A reduction by a factor of two in the number of samples required to represent a band-limited signal on the sphere exactly has important implications for compressed sensing, both in terms of the dimensionality and sparsity of signals. We illustrate the impact of this property with an inpainting problem on the sphere, where we show the superior reconstruction performance when adopting the new sampling theorem compared to the alternative., Comment: 1 page, 2 figures, Signal Processing with Adaptive Sparse Structured Representations (SPARS) 2011
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- 2011
12. Sampling theorems and compressive sensing on the sphere
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McEwen, J. D., Puy, G., Thiran, J. -Ph., Vandergheynst, P., Van De Ville, D., and Wiaux, Y.
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Computer Science - Information Theory ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We discuss a novel sampling theorem on the sphere developed by McEwen & Wiaux recently through an association between the sphere and the torus. To represent a band-limited signal exactly, this new sampling theorem requires less than half the number of samples of other equiangular sampling theorems on the sphere, such as the canonical Driscoll & Healy sampling theorem. A reduction in the number of samples required to represent a band-limited signal on the sphere has important implications for compressive sensing, both in terms of the dimensionality and sparsity of signals. We illustrate the impact of this property with an inpainting problem on the sphere, where we show superior reconstruction performance when adopting the new sampling theorem., Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, Proceedings of Wavelets and Sparsity XIV, SPIE Optics and Photonics 2011
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- 2011
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13. Harmonic analysis of spherical sampling in diffusion MRI
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Daducci, A., McEwen, J. D., Van De Ville, D., Thiran, J. -Ph., and Wiaux, Y.
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Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods ,Physics - Medical Physics - Abstract
In the last decade diffusion MRI has become a powerful tool to non-invasively study white-matter integrity in the brain. Recently many research groups have focused their attention on multi-shell spherical acquisitions with the aim of effectively mapping the diffusion signal with a lower number of q-space samples, hence enabling a crucial reduction of acquisition time. One of the quantities commonly studied in this context is the so-called orientation distribution function (ODF). In this setting, the spherical harmonic (SH) transform has gained a great deal of popularity thanks to its ability to perform convolution operations efficiently and accurately, such as the Funk-Radon transform notably required for ODF computation from q-space data. However, if the q-space signal is described with an unsuitable angular resolution at any b-value probed, aliasing (or interpolation) artifacts are unavoidably created. So far this aspect has been tackled empirically and, to our knowledge, no study has addressed this problem in a quantitative approach. The aim of the present work is to study more theoretically the efficiency of multi-shell spherical sampling in diffusion MRI, in order to gain understanding in HYDI-like approaches, possibly paving the way to further optimization strategies., Comment: 1 page, 2 figures, 19th Annual Meeting of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
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- 2011
14. Sähköisten oirearvioiden käytettävyys
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Ville D Liu, Lasse Sellgren, Minna Kaila, and Tuomas Koskela
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Hoidonohjaus ,Käyttöliittymä ,Hoitotarpeen arviointi ,kvalitatiivinen tutkimus [http://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p11782] ,Terveydenhuoltojärjestelmät ,Hoidon kiireellisyys (triage) ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Kunnat uudistavat terveydenhuolto- ja sosiaalihuoltopalveluitaan ja luovat sähköisiä palveluita potilaiden omahoidon tueksi (Omaolo-projekti). Näihin kuuluvat 15 eri oireisiin keskittyvää sähköistä oirearviointityökalua. Täytetyn oirearvion tuloksena potilas saa arvion vastaavan oireen hoidon tarpeen kiireellisyydestä, ohjeet hoitopaikan valitsemisesta sekä tarvittaessa itsehoito-ohjeita. Tässä tutkimuksessa tutkitaan oirearvioiden käytettävyyttä potilaan ja tutkimusavustajan näkökulmasta. Tämä on monimenetelmä tutkimus, joka käytti Omaolo-projektin oirearvioiden validointi tutkimuksessa kerättyjä tietoja. Tiedot kerättiin 18:sta perusterveydenhuollon päivystyspisteistä ympäri Suomea. Käyttäjä vastasi oirearvion esittämiin kysymyksiin, minkä jälkeen hoidon tarpeen arviointiin perehtynyt sairaanhoitaja arvioi käyttäjän oireen hoidon tarpeen. Tutkimusavustaja seurasi käyttäjän oirearvion täyttämisen. 350:n yksittäisen potilaskäyttäjän, sairaanhoitajien ja tutkimusavustajien havainnot analysoitiin erillisten täytettyjen tutkimuslomakkeiden pohjalta. Teema-analyysin avulla luotiin tutkimusteemoja tutkimukseen osallistuneiden henkilöiden kirjatuista havainnoista. Analysointivaiheessa havainnot ryhmiteltiin teemoihin, mitä seurasi vastaavien koodien ja temaattisen yhteenvedon laatiminen. Oirearvioiden käytettävyys arvioitiin pääosin hyväksi. Haasteita käytettävyydessä myös ilmeni. Haasteita kuvaavia merkityksellisiä käsitteitä (koodeja) muodostettiin tutkimuslomakkeiden vapaan tekstin havainnoista. 59 kappaletta koodeja luokiteltiin kahteen pääteemaan - käyttäjäkohtaisiin syihin ja oirearviolähtöisiin syihin. Käyttäjäkohtaiset syyt jaettiin: a) haasteisiin sähköisen oirearvion ja sen kysymysten tulkinnassa, b) sähköisten työkalujen käyttövalmius ja c) potilaan kyky arvioida omaa terveydentilaansa. Oirearviolähtöiset syyt jaettiin: a) Oirearvioissa käytettävään terminologiaan ja kysymysasetteluun liittyvät tekijät ja b) visuaaliseen muotoiluun ja käyttäjän ohjeistukseen liittyvät tekijät. Oirearviot ovat suurimmalle osalle potilaista hyväksyttäviä, helppokäyttöisiä ja ymmärrettäviä. Tutkimuksessa tuli esiin teemoja, jotka saattavat heikentää oirearvioiden käytettävyyttä. Oirearvioiden käytettävyyttä parantamalla voidaan parantaa hoidon tarpeen arvioinnin prosessia sekä sen onnistumista. Käytettävyyteen liittyvät ongelmat voivat heikentää potilaan halukkuutta käyttää oirearvioita.
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- 2021
15. Use of mTOR inhibitors (rapalogs) for the treatment of skin changes in tuberous sclerosis complex
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Farges, D., Sigg, N., Ville, D., and Martin, L.
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- 2022
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16. Corrigendum to “Acute TNFα levels predict cognitive impairment 6–9 months after COVID-19 infection” [Psychoneuroendocrinology 153 (2023) 106104]
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Nuber-Champier, A., primary, Cionca, A., additional, Breville, G., additional, Voruz, P., additional, Jacot de Alcântara, I., additional, Allali, G., additional, Lalive, P.H., additional, Benzakour, L., additional, Lövblad, K.-O., additional, Braillard, O., additional, Nehme, M., additional, Coen, M., additional, Serratrice, J., additional, Reny, J.-L., additional, Pugin, J., additional, Guessous, I., additional, Landis, B.N., additional, Griffa, A., additional, Van De Ville, D., additional, Assal, F., additional, and Péron, J.A., additional
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- 2023
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17. Inter-hemispherical asymmetry in default-mode functional connectivity and BAIAP2 gene are associated with anger expression in ADHD adults
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Hasler, R., Preti, M.G., Meskaldji, D.E., Prados, J., Adouan, W., Rodriguez, C., Toma, S., Hiller, N., Ismaili, T., Hofmeister, J., Sinanaj, I., Baud, P., Haller, S., Giannakopoulos, P., Schwartz, S., Perroud, N., and Van De Ville, D.
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- 2017
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18. Resting-State Functional Connectivity in Stroke Patients After Upper Limb Robot-Assisted Therapy: A Pilot Study
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Kinany, N., primary, Pierella, C., additional, Pirondini, E., additional, Coscia, M., additional, Miehlbradt, J., additional, Magnin, C., additional, Nicolo, P., additional, Van De Ville, D., additional, Guggisberg, A., additional, and Micera, S., additional
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- 2018
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19. On the Potential of EEG Biomarkers to Inform Robot-Assisted Rehabilitation in Stroke Patients
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Pirondini, E., primary, Pierella, C., additional, Kinany, N., additional, Coscia, M., additional, Miehlbradt, J., additional, Magnin, C., additional, Nicolo, P., additional, Guggisberg, A., additional, Micera, S., additional, Deouell, L., additional, and Van De Ville, D., additional
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- 2018
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20. Angiome cutané révélant un syndrome neuro-cutané chez l’enfant
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Ville, D.
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- 2013
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21. Activity-dependent spinal cord neuromodulation rapidly restores trunk and leg motor functions after complete paralysis
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Rowald, A., Komi, S., Demesmaeker, R., Baaklini, E., Hernandez-Charpak, S.D., Paoles, E., Montanaro, H., Cassara, A., Becce, F., Lloyd, B., Newton, T., Ravier, J., Kinany, N., D'Ercole, M., Paley, A., Hankov, N., Varescon, C., McCracken, L., Vat, M., Caban, M., Watrin, A., Jacquet, C., Bole-Feysot, L., Harte, Cathal, Lorach, H., Galvez, A., Tschopp, M., Herrmann, N., Wacker, M., Geernaert, L., Fodor, I., Radevich, V., Keybus, K. Van Den, Eberle, G., Pralong, E., Roulet, M., Ledoux, J.B., Fornari, E., Mandija, S., Mattera, L., Martuzzi, R., Nazarian, B., Benkler, S., Callegari, S., Greiner, N., Fuhrer, B., Froeling, M., Buse, N., Denison, T., Buschman, R., Wende, C., Ganty, D., Bakker, Jurriaan, Delattre, V., Lambert, H., Minassian, K., Berg, C.A.T. van den, Kavounoudias, A., Micera, S., Ville, D. Van De, Barraud, Q., Kurt, E., Kuster, N., Neufeld, E., Capogrosso, M., Asboth, L., Wagner, F.B., Bloch, J., Courtine, G., Rowald, A., Komi, S., Demesmaeker, R., Baaklini, E., Hernandez-Charpak, S.D., Paoles, E., Montanaro, H., Cassara, A., Becce, F., Lloyd, B., Newton, T., Ravier, J., Kinany, N., D'Ercole, M., Paley, A., Hankov, N., Varescon, C., McCracken, L., Vat, M., Caban, M., Watrin, A., Jacquet, C., Bole-Feysot, L., Harte, Cathal, Lorach, H., Galvez, A., Tschopp, M., Herrmann, N., Wacker, M., Geernaert, L., Fodor, I., Radevich, V., Keybus, K. Van Den, Eberle, G., Pralong, E., Roulet, M., Ledoux, J.B., Fornari, E., Mandija, S., Mattera, L., Martuzzi, R., Nazarian, B., Benkler, S., Callegari, S., Greiner, N., Fuhrer, B., Froeling, M., Buse, N., Denison, T., Buschman, R., Wende, C., Ganty, D., Bakker, Jurriaan, Delattre, V., Lambert, H., Minassian, K., Berg, C.A.T. van den, Kavounoudias, A., Micera, S., Ville, D. Van De, Barraud, Q., Kurt, E., Kuster, N., Neufeld, E., Capogrosso, M., Asboth, L., Wagner, F.B., Bloch, J., and Courtine, G.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, Epidural electrical stimulation (EES) targeting the dorsal roots of lumbosacral segments restores walking in people with spinal cord injury (SCI). However, EES is delivered with multielectrode paddle leads that were originally designed to target the dorsal column of the spinal cord. Here, we hypothesized that an arrangement of electrodes targeting the ensemble of dorsal roots involved in leg and trunk movements would result in superior efficacy, restoring more diverse motor activities after the most severe SCI. To test this hypothesis, we established a computational framework that informed the optimal arrangement of electrodes on a new paddle lead and guided its neurosurgical positioning. We also developed software supporting the rapid configuration of activity-specific stimulation programs that reproduced the natural activation of motor neurons underlying each activity. We tested these neurotechnologies in three individuals with complete sensorimotor paralysis as part of an ongoing clinical trial ( www.clinicaltrials.gov identifier NCT02936453). Within a single day, activity-specific stimulation programs enabled these three individuals to stand, walk, cycle, swim and control trunk movements. Neurorehabilitation mediated sufficient improvement to restore these activities in community settings, opening a realistic path to support everyday mobility with EES in people with SCI.
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- 2022
22. KCNQ2 R144 variants cause neurodevelopmental disability with language impairment and autistic features without neonatal seizures through a gain-of-function mechanism
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Miceli, F., Millevert, C., Soldovieri, M.V., Mosca, I., Ambrosino, P., Carotenuto, L., Schrader, D., Lee, H.K., Riviello, J., Hong, W., Risen, S., Emrick, L., Amin, H., Ville, D. Van De, Edery, P., Bellescize, J. de, Michaud, V., Van-Gils, J., Goizet, C., Willemsen, M.H., Kleefstra, T., Møller, R.S., Bayat, A., Devinsky, O., Sands, T., Korenke, G.C., Kluger, G., Mefford, H.C., Brilstra, E., Lesca, G., Milh, M., Cooper, E.C., Taglialatela, M., Weckhuysen, S., Miceli, F., Millevert, C., Soldovieri, M.V., Mosca, I., Ambrosino, P., Carotenuto, L., Schrader, D., Lee, H.K., Riviello, J., Hong, W., Risen, S., Emrick, L., Amin, H., Ville, D. Van De, Edery, P., Bellescize, J. de, Michaud, V., Van-Gils, J., Goizet, C., Willemsen, M.H., Kleefstra, T., Møller, R.S., Bayat, A., Devinsky, O., Sands, T., Korenke, G.C., Kluger, G., Mefford, H.C., Brilstra, E., Lesca, G., Milh, M., Cooper, E.C., Taglialatela, M., and Weckhuysen, S.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 284811.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access), BACKGROUND: Prior studies have revealed remarkable phenotypic heterogeneity in KCNQ2-related disorders, correlated with effects on biophysical features of heterologously expressed channels. Here, we assessed phenotypes and functional properties associated with KCNQ2 missense variants R144W, R144Q, and R144G. We also explored in vitro blockade of channels carrying R144Q mutant subunits by amitriptyline. METHODS: Patients were identified using the RIKEE database and through clinical collaborators. Phenotypes were collected by a standardized questionnaire. Functional and pharmacological properties of variant subunits were analyzed by whole-cell patch-clamp recordings. FINDINGS: Detailed clinical information on fifteen patients (14 novel and 1 previously published) was analyzed. All patients had developmental delay with prominent language impairment. R144Q patients were more severely affected than R144W patients. Infantile to childhood onset epilepsy occurred in 40%, while 67% of sleep-EEGs showed sleep-activated epileptiform activity. Ten patients (67%) showed autistic features. Activation gating of homomeric Kv7.2 R144W/Q/G channels was left-shifted, suggesting gain-of-function effects. Amitriptyline blocked channels containing Kv7.2 and Kv7.2 R144Q subunits. INTERPRETATION: Patients carrying KCNQ2 R144 gain-of-function variants have developmental delay with prominent language impairment, autistic features, often accompanied by infantile- to childhood-onset epilepsy and EEG sleep-activated epileptiform activity. The absence of neonatal seizures is a robust and important clinical differentiator between KCNQ2 gain-of-function and loss-of-function variants. The Kv7.2/7.3 channel blocker amitriptyline might represent a targeted treatment. FUNDING: Supported by FWO, GSKE, KCNQ2-Cure, Jack Pribaz Foundation, European Joint Programme on Rare Disease 2020, the Italian Ministry for University and Research, the Italian Ministry of Health, the European Commission, the University
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- 2022
23. On the Spatial Distribution of Temporal Complexity in Resting State and Task Functional MRI
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Omidvarnia, A, Liegeois, R, Amico, E, Preti, MG, Zalesky, A, Van de Ville, D, Omidvarnia, A, Liegeois, R, Amico, E, Preti, MG, Zalesky, A, and Van de Ville, D
- Abstract
Measuring the temporal complexity of functional MRI (fMRI) time series is one approach to assess how brain activity changes over time. In fact, hemodynamic response of the brain is known to exhibit critical behaviour at the edge between order and disorder. In this study, we aimed to revisit the spatial distribution of temporal complexity in resting state and task fMRI of 100 unrelated subjects from the Human Connectome Project (HCP). First, we compared two common choices of complexity measures, i.e., Hurst exponent and multiscale entropy, and observed a high spatial similarity between them. Second, we considered four tasks in the HCP dataset (Language, Motor, Social, and Working Memory) and found high task-specific complexity, even when the task design was regressed out. For the significance thresholding of brain complexity maps, we used a statistical framework based on graph signal processing that incorporates the structural connectome to develop the null distributions of fMRI complexity. The results suggest that the frontoparietal, dorsal attention, visual, and default mode networks represent stronger complex behaviour than the rest of the brain, irrespective of the task engagement. In sum, the findings support the hypothesis of fMRI temporal complexity as a marker of cognition.
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- 2022
24. Towards individualized Medicine in Stroke – the TiMeS project: protocol of longitudinal, multi-modal, multi-domain study in stroke
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Fleury, L, primary, Koch, PJ, additional, Wessel, MJ, additional, Bonvin, C, additional, San Millan, D, additional, Constantin, C, additional, Vuadens, P, additional, Adolphsen, J, additional, Cadic-Melchior, AG, additional, Brügger, J, additional, Beanato, E, additional, Ceroni, M, additional, Menoud, P, additional, de Leon Rodriguez, D, additional, Zufferey, V, additional, Meyer, N, additional, Egger, P, additional, Harquel, S, additional, Popa, T, additional, Raffin, E, additional, Girard, G, additional, Thiran, JP, additional, Vaney, C, additional, Alvarez, V, additional, Turlan, J-L, additional, Mühl, A, additional, Leger, B, additional, Morishita, T, additional, Micera, S, additional, Blanke, O, additional, Van de Ville, D, additional, and Hummel, FC, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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25. Whole-exome sequencing improves the diagnosis yield in sporadic infantile spasm syndrome
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Dimassi, S., Labalme, A., Ville, D., Calender, A., Mignot, C., Boutry-Kryza, N., de Bellescize, J., Rivier-Ringenbach, C., Bourel-Ponchel, E., Cheillan, D., Simonet, T., Maincent, K., Rossi, M., Till, M., Mougou-Zerelli, S., Edery, P., Saad, A., Heron, D., des Portes, V., Sanlaville, D., and Lesca, G.
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- 2016
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26. Usability of online symptom checkers
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Lasse Sellgren, Tuomas Koskela, Ville D Liu, Minna Kaila, Tampere University, Kliininen lääketiede, Medicum, Lääketieteellinen tiedekunta, and Helsingin yliopisto
- Subjects
qualitative research [http://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p11782] ,Applied psychology ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,Primary health care ,R858-859.7 ,Symptom assessment ,Hoitotarpeen arviointi ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Tieteelliset artikkelit / Scientific papers ,Health Services Accessibility ,Terveydenhuoltojärjestelmät ,03 medical and health sciences ,User-Computer Interface ,0302 clinical medicine ,Concurrent Review ,3141 Terveystiede ,user experience ,Text messaging ,user interface design ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Competence (human resources) ,Qualitative Research ,business.industry ,Perspective (graphical) ,Usability ,Hoidonohjaus ,Triage ,Telemedicine ,3. Good health ,Self Care ,Käyttöliittymä ,Hoidon kiireellisyys (triage) ,3121 Sisätaudit ,ComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSING ,omaolo ,Health Services Research ,kvalitatiivinen tutkimus [http://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p11782] ,Thematic analysis ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,Symptom Assessment ,Psychology ,business ,triage - Abstract
Kunnat uudistavat terveydenhuolto- ja sosiaalihuoltopalveluitaan ja luovat sähköisiä palveluita potilaiden omahoidon tueksi (Omaolo-projekti). Näihin kuuluvat 15 eri oireisiin keskittyvää sähköistä oirearviointityökalua. Täytetyn oirearvion tuloksena potilas saa arvion vastaavan oireen hoidon tarpeen kiireellisyydestä, ohjeet hoitopaikan valitsemisesta sekä tarvittaessa itsehoito-ohjeita. Tässä tutkimuksessa tutkitaan oirearvioiden käytettävyyttä potilaan ja tutkimusavustajan näkökulmasta. Tämä on monimenetelmä tutkimus, joka käytti Omaolo-projektin oirearvioiden validointi tutkimuksessa kerättyjä tietoja. Tiedot kerättiin 18:sta perusterveydenhuollon päivystyspisteistä ympäri Suomea. Käyttäjä vastasi oirearvion esittämiin kysymyksiin, minkä jälkeen hoidon tarpeen arviointiin perehtynyt sairaanhoitaja arvioi käyttäjän oireen hoidon tarpeen. Tutkimusavustaja seurasi käyttäjän oirearvion täyttämisen. 350:n yksittäisen potilaskäyttäjän, sairaanhoitajien ja tutkimusavustajien havainnot analysoitiin erillisten täytettyjen tutkimuslomakkeiden pohjalta. Teema-analyysin avulla luotiin tutkimusteemoja tutkimukseen osallistuneiden henkilöiden kirjatuista havainnoista. Analysointivaiheessa havainnot ryhmiteltiin teemoihin, mitä seurasi vastaavien koodien ja temaattisen yhteenvedon laatiminen. Oirearvioiden käytettävyys arvioitiin pääosin hyväksi. Haasteita käytettävyydessä myös ilmeni. Haasteita kuvaavia merkityksellisiä käsitteitä (koodeja) muodostettiin tutkimuslomakkeiden vapaan tekstin havainnoista. 59 kappaletta koodeja luokiteltiin kahteen pääteemaan - käyttäjäkohtaisiin syihin ja oirearviolähtöisiin syihin. Käyttäjäkohtaiset syyt jaettiin: a) haasteisiin sähköisen oirearvion ja sen kysymysten tulkinnassa, b) sähköisten työkalujen käyttövalmius ja c) potilaan kyky arvioida omaa terveydentilaansa. Oirearviolähtöiset syyt jaettiin: a) Oirearvioissa käytettävään terminologiaan ja kysymysasetteluun liittyvät tekijät ja b) visuaaliseen muotoiluun ja käyttäjän ohjeistukseen liittyvät tekijät. Oirearviot ovat suurimmalle osalle potilaista hyväksyttäviä, helppokäyttöisiä ja ymmärrettäviä. Tutkimuksessa tuli esiin teemoja, jotka saattavat heikentää oirearvioiden käytettävyyttä. Oirearvioiden käytettävyyttä parantamalla voidaan parantaa hoidon tarpeen arvioinnin prosessia sekä sen onnistumista. Käytettävyyteen liittyvät ongelmat voivat heikentää potilaan halukkuutta käyttää oirearvioita., Municipalities are reforming their health and social care services and creating online services to support patient self-treatment and self-care (The Omaolo-project). These include 15 symptom checkers which provide triage. As a result of the completed individual symptom assessment, the patient receives an assessment of the need for treatment of the corresponding symptom, instructions for a treatment site and, if necessary, self-care instructions. This study examines the usability of symptom checkers from the perspective of the patient and the study assistant. This is a mixed methods study that used data collected in the Omaolo project’s validation of symptom checkers study. Data were collected from 18 primary health care emergency centers throughout Finland. The user answered the questions posed by the symptom checker, after which a nurse familiar with triage assessed the need for treatment of the symptom of the user. The study assistant monitored the completion of the study user's symptom checker. The findings of 350 patient users, nurses, and study assistants were analyzed based on separate completed research forms. Thematic analysis was used to create research themes from the recorded observations of the individuals followed by the preparation of a thematic summary. The usability of symptom checkers was mainly assessed as good. However, there were challenges in usability. Relevant concepts (codes) describing the challenges were formed from the free text observations of the research forms. 59 codes were classified under two main themes; user-related challenges and issues related to the symptom checkers. The user-related challenges were divided into a) difficulties in understanding the symptom checkers and their questions, b) poor competence to use online tools, and c) ability to assess one’s health. The issues related to the symptom checkers were divided into a) a need to clarify the terms and questions used in the symptom checker, and b) a need to improve the visual layout and provide better instructions for the user. Symptom checkers are acceptable, easy to use, and understandable to most patients. The study identified themes that may impair the availability of symptom checkers. Improving the availability of symptom checkers is likely to improve the process of triage as well as its success. In addition, usability issues can impair a patient's willingness to use symptom checkers.
- Published
- 2021
27. Dynamics of Functional Network Organization Through Graph Mixture Learning
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Pascal Frossard, Petric Maretic H, Anjali Tarun, Ricchi I, and Van De Ville D
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Generative model ,Elementary cognitive task ,Theoretical computer science ,Resting state fMRI ,Computer science ,Similarity (psychology) ,Laplacian matrix ,Mixture model ,Default mode network ,Task (project management) - Abstract
Understanding the organizational principles of human brain activity at the systems level remains a major challenge in network neuroscience. Here, we introduce a fully data-driven approach based on graph learning to extract meaningful repeating network patterns from regionally-averaged time-courses. We use the Graph Laplacian Mixture Model (GLMM), a generative model that treats functional data as a collection of signals expressed on multiple underlying graphs. By exploiting covariance between activity of brain regions, these graphs can be learned without resorting to structural information. To validate the proposed technique, we first apply it to task fMRI with a known experimental paradigm. The probability of each graph to occur at each time-point is found to be consistent with the task timing, while the spatial patterns associated to each epoch of the task are in line with previously established activation patterns using classical regression analysis. We further on apply the technique to resting state data, which leads to extracted graphs that correspond to well-known brain functional activation patterns. The GLMM allows to learn graphs entirely from the functional activity that, in practice, turn out to reveal high degrees of similarity to the structural connectome. We compared similarity of the default mode network estimated from different task data and comparing them to each other and to structure. Using different metrics, a similar distinction between high- and low-level cognitive tasks arises.Overall, this method allows us to infer relevant functional brain networks without the need of structural connectome information. Moreover, we find that these networks correspond better to structure compared to traditional methods.
- Published
- 2021
28. Brain structure-function coupling provides signatures for task decoding and individual fingerprinting
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Van De Ville D, Alessandra Griffa, Maria Giulia Preti, Raphaël Liégeois, and Enrico Amico
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Brain state ,Human Connectome Project ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Structure function ,Cognition ,Pattern recognition ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Brain function ,Signature (logic) ,Decoding methods ,Biomarker (cell) - Abstract
Brain signatures of functional activity have shown promising results in both decoding brain states, meaning distinguishing between different tasks, and fingerprinting, that is identifying individuals within a large group. Importantly, these brain signatures do not account for the underlying brain anatomy on which brain function takes place. Structure-function coupling based on graph signal processing (GSP) has recently revealed a meaningful spatial gradient from unimodal to transmodal regions, on average in healthy subjects during resting-state. Here, we explore the potential of GSP to introduce new imaging-based biomarkers to characterize tasks and individuals. We used multimodal magnetic resonance imaging of 100 unrelated healthy subjects from the Human Connectome Project both during rest and seven different tasks and adopted a support vector machine classification approach for both decoding and fingerprinting, with various cross-validation settings. We found that structurefunction coupling measures allow accurate classifications for both task decoding and fingerprinting. In particular, key information for fingerprinting is found in the more liberal portion of functional signals, that is the one decoupled from structure. A network mainly involving cortico-subcortical connections showed the strongest correlation with cognitive traits, assessed with partial least square analysis, corroborating its relevance for fingerprinting. By introducing a new perspective on GSP-based signal filtering and FC decomposition, these results show that brain structure-function coupling provides a new class of signatures of cognition and individual brain organization at rest and during tasks. Further, they provide insights on clarifying the role of low and high spatial frequencies of the structural connectome, leading to new understanding of where key structure-function information for characterizing individuals can be found across the structural connectome graph spectrum.Highlights-The relation of brain function with the underlying structural wiring is complex-We propose new structure-informed graph signal processing (GSP) of functional data-GSP-derived features allow accurate task decoding and individual fingerprinting-Functional connectivity from filtered data is more unique to subject and cognition-The role of structurally aligned and liberal graph frequencies is elucidated
- Published
- 2021
29. Post-stroke reorganization of transient brain activity characterizes deficits and recovery of cognitive functions
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Nawal Kinany, Van De Ville D, Joseph C. Griffis, Gordon L. Shulman, Le Sueur C, Elvira Pirondini, and Maurizio Corbetta
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education.field_of_study ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Brain activity and meditation ,business.industry ,Population ,Cognition ,medicine.disease ,White matter ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,education ,business ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Diaschisis ,Stroke ,Neuroscience ,Dynamic functional connectivity - Abstract
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has been widely employed to study stroke pathophysiology. In particular, analyses of fMRI signals at rest were directed at quantifying the impact of stroke on spatial features of brain networks. However, brain networks have intrinsic time features that were, so far, disregarded in these analyses. In consequence, standard fMRI analysis failed to capture temporal imbalance resulting from stroke lesions, hence restricting their ability to reveal the interdependent pathological changes in structural and temporal network features following stroke. Here, we longitudinally analyzed hemodynamic-informed transient activity in a large cohort of stroke patients (n = 103) to assess spatial and temporal changes of brain networks after stroke. While large-scale spatial patterns of these networks were preserved after stroke, their durations were altered, with stroke subjects exhibiting a varied pattern of longer and shorter network activations compared to healthy individuals. These temporal alterations were associated with white matter damage and were behavior-specific. Specifically, restoration of healthy brain dynamics paralleled recovery of cognitive functions, but was not significantly correlated to motor recovery. These findings underscore the critical importance of network temporal properties in dissecting the pathophysiology of brain changes after stroke, thus shedding new light on the clinical potential of time-resolved methods for fMRI analysis.Significance StatementUnderstanding the pathophysiology of a disorder is pivotal to design effective treatment. In this regard, recent advances in stroke research settled a new clinical concept: connectional diaschisis, which suggested that post-stroke impairments arise from both focal structural changes (tied to the injury) and widespread alterations in functional connectivity. fMRI time-resolved methods consider structural and temporal properties of brain networks as interdependent features. They are, thus, better suited to capture the intertwine between structural and functional changes. Here we leveraged a dynamic functional connectivity framework based on the clustering of hemodynamic-informed transients in a large and heterogeneous stroke population assessed longitudinally. We showed that lesions led to an unbalance in the brain dynamics that was associated with white matter fibers disruption and was restored as deficits recovered. Our work showed the potential of a time-resolved method to reveal clinically relevant dynamics of large-scale brain networks.
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- 2021
30. Sähköisten oirearvioiden käytettävyys
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Liu, Ville D, primary, Sellgren, Lasse, additional, Kaila, Minna, additional, and Koskela, Tuomas, additional
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Characterization and prediction of clinical pathways of vulnerability to psychosis through graph signal processing
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Sandini, C, Zöller, D, Schneider, M, Tarun, A, Armondo, M, Nelson, B, Amminger, PG, Yuen, HP, Markulev, C, Schäffer, MR, Mossaheb, N, Schlögelhofer, M, Smesny, S, Hickie, IB, Berger, GE, Chen, EY, De Haan, L, Nieman, DH, Nordentoft, M, Riecher-Rössler, A, Verma, S, Thompson, A, Yung, Alison, McGorry, PD, van de Ville, D, Eliez, S, Sandini, C, Zöller, D, Schneider, M, Tarun, A, Armondo, M, Nelson, B, Amminger, PG, Yuen, HP, Markulev, C, Schäffer, MR, Mossaheb, N, Schlögelhofer, M, Smesny, S, Hickie, IB, Berger, GE, Chen, EY, De Haan, L, Nieman, DH, Nordentoft, M, Riecher-Rössler, A, Verma, S, Thompson, A, Yung, Alison, McGorry, PD, van de Ville, D, and Eliez, S
- Abstract
There is a growing recognition that psychiatric symptoms have the potential to causally interact with one another. Particularly in the earliest stages of psychopathology dynamic interactions between symptoms could contribute heterogeneous and cross-diagnostic clinical evolutions. Current clinical approaches attempt to merge clinical manifestations that co-occur across subjects and could therefore significantly hinder our understanding of clinical pathways connecting individual symptoms. Network approaches have the potential to shed light on the complex dynamics of early psychopathology. In the present manuscript we attempt to address 2 main limitations that have in our opinion hindered the application of network approaches in the clinical setting. The first limitation is that network analyses have mostly been applied to cross-sectional data, yielding results that often lack the intuitive interpretability of simpler categorical or dimensional approaches. Here we propose an approach based on multi-layer network analysis that offers an intuitive low-dimensional characterization of longitudinal pathways involved in the evolution of psychopathology, while conserving high-dimensional information on the role of specific symptoms. The second limitation is that network analyses typically characterize symptom connectivity at the level of a population, whereas clinical practice deals with symptom severity at the level of the individual. Here we propose an approach based on graph signal processing that exploits knowledge of network interactions between symptoms to predict longitudinal clinical evolution at the level of the individual. We test our approaches in two independent samples of individuals with genetic and clinical vulnerability for developing psychosis
- Published
- 2021
32. Intra- and inter-hemispheric structural connectome in agenesis of the corpus callosum
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Shi, M, Freitas, L G A, Spencer-Smith, M M, Kebets, V, Anderson, V, McIlroy, A, Wood, Amanda G, Leventer, R J, Van De Ville, D, Siffredi, V, Shi, M, Freitas, L G A, Spencer-Smith, M M, Kebets, V, Anderson, V, McIlroy, A, Wood, Amanda G, Leventer, R J, Van De Ville, D, and Siffredi, V
- Published
- 2021
33. Revisiting brain rewiring and plasticity in children born without corpus callosum
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Siffredi, V, Preti, MG, Obertino, S, Leventer, RJ, Wood, Amanda, McIlroy, A, Anderson, V, Spencer-Smith, MM, Van De Ville, D, Siffredi, V, Preti, MG, Obertino, S, Leventer, RJ, Wood, Amanda, McIlroy, A, Anderson, V, Spencer-Smith, MM, and Van De Ville, D
- Published
- 2021
34. Large-scale functional network dynamics in human callosal agenesis: Increased subcortical involvement and preserved laterality
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Siffredi, V, Farouj, Y, Tarun, A, Anderson, V, Wood, AG, McIlroy, A, Leventer, RJ, Spencer-Smith, MM, Van De Ville, D, Siffredi, V, Farouj, Y, Tarun, A, Anderson, V, Wood, AG, McIlroy, A, Leventer, RJ, Spencer-Smith, MM, and Van De Ville, D
- Abstract
In the human brain, the corpus callosum is the major white-matter commissural tract enabling the transmission of sensory-motor, and higher level cognitive information between homotopic regions of the two cerebral hemispheres. Despite developmental absence (i.e., agenesis) of the corpus callosum (AgCC), functional connectivity is preserved, including interhemispheric connectivity. Subcortical structures have been hypothesised to provide alternative pathways to enable this preservation. To test this hypothesis, we used functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) recordings in children with AgCC and typically developing children, and a time-resolved approach to retrieve temporal characteristics of whole-brain functional networks. We observed an increased engagement of the cerebellum and amygdala/hippocampus networks in children with AgCC compared to typically developing children. There was little evidence that laterality of activation networks was affected in AgCC. Our findings support the hypothesis that subcortical structures play an essential role in the functional reconfiguration of the brain in the absence of a corpus callosum.
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- 2021
35. Temporal complexity of fMRI is reproducible and correlates with higher order cognition
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Omidvarnia, A, Zalesky, A, Mansour, SL, Van de Ville, D, Jackson, GD, Pedersen, M, Omidvarnia, A, Zalesky, A, Mansour, SL, Van de Ville, D, Jackson, GD, and Pedersen, M
- Abstract
It has been hypothesized that resting state networks (RSNs), extracted from resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rsfMRI), likely display unique temporal complexity fingerprints, quantified by their multiscale entropy patterns (McDonough and Nashiro, 2014). This is a hypothesis with a potential capacity for developing digital biomarkers of normal brain function, as well as pathological brain dysfunction. Nevertheless, a limitation of McDonough and Nashiro (2014) was that rsfMRI data from only 20 healthy individuals was used for the analysis. To validate this hypothesis in a larger cohort, we used rsfMRI datasets of 987 healthy young adults from the Human Connectome Project (HCP), aged 22-35, each with four 14.4-min rsfMRI recordings and parcellated into 379 brain regions. We quantified multiscale entropy of rsfMRI time series averaged at different cortical and sub-cortical regions. We performed effect-size analysis on the data in 8 RSNs. Given that the morphology of multiscale entropy is affected by the choice of its tolerance parameter (r) and embedding dimension (m), we repeated the analyses at multiple values of r and m including the values used in McDonough and Nashiro (2014). Our results reinforced high temporal complexity in the default mode and frontoparietal networks. Lowest temporal complexity was observed in the subcortical areas and limbic system. We investigated the effect of temporal resolution (determined by the repetition time TR) after downsampling of rsfMRI time series at two rates. At a low temporal resolution, we observed increased entropy and variance across datasets. Test-retest analysis showed that findings were likely reproducible across individuals over four rsfMRI runs, especially when the tolerance parameter r is equal to 0.5. The results confirmed that the relationship between functional brain connectivity strengths and rsfMRI temporal complexity changes over time scales. Finally, a non-random correlation was observed betwee
- Published
- 2021
36. The phenotypic spectrum of X-linked, infantile onset ALG13-related developmental and epileptic encephalopathy
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Datta, AN, Bahi-Buisson, N, Bienvenu, T, Buerki, SE, Gardiner, F, Cross, JH, Heron, B, Kaminska, A, Korff, CM, Lepine, A, Lesca, G, McTague, A, Mefford, HC, Mignot, C, Milh, M, Piton, A, Pressler, RM, Ruf, S, Sadleir, LG, de Saint Martin, A, Van Gassen, K, Verbeek, NE, Ville, D, Villeneuve, N, Zacher, P, Scheffer, IE, Lemke, JR, Datta, AN, Bahi-Buisson, N, Bienvenu, T, Buerki, SE, Gardiner, F, Cross, JH, Heron, B, Kaminska, A, Korff, CM, Lepine, A, Lesca, G, McTague, A, Mefford, HC, Mignot, C, Milh, M, Piton, A, Pressler, RM, Ruf, S, Sadleir, LG, de Saint Martin, A, Van Gassen, K, Verbeek, NE, Ville, D, Villeneuve, N, Zacher, P, Scheffer, IE, and Lemke, JR
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Asparagine-linked glycosylation 13 (ALG13) deficiencies have been repeatedly described in the literature with the clinical phenotype of a developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE). Most cases were females carrying the recurrent ALG13 de novo variant, p.(Asn107Ser), with normal transferrin electrophoresis. METHODS: We delineate the phenotypic spectrum of 38 individuals, 37 girls and one boy, 16 of them novel and 22 published, with the most common pathogenic ALG13 variant p.(Asn107Ser) and additionally report the phenotype of three individuals carrying other likely pathogenic ALG13 variants. RESULTS: The phenotypic spectrum often comprised pharmacoresistant epilepsy with epileptic spasms, mostly with onset within the first 6 months of life and with spasm persistence in one-half of the cases. Tonic seizures were the most prevalent additional seizure type. Electroencephalography showed hypsarrhythmia and at a later stage of the disease in one-third of all cases paroxysms of fast activity with electrodecrement. ALG13-related DEE was usually associated with severe to profound developmental delay; ambulation was acquired by one-third of the cases, whereas purposeful hand use was sparse or completely absent. Hand stereotypies and dyskinetic movements including dystonia or choreoathetosis were relatively frequent. Verbal communication skills were absent or poor, and eye contact and pursuit were often impaired. SIGNIFICANCE: X-linked ALG13-related DEE usually manifests as West syndrome with severe to profound developmental delay. It is predominantly caused by the recurrent de novo missense variant p.(Asn107Ser). Comprehensive functional studies will be able to prove or disprove an association with congenital disorder of glycosylation.
- Published
- 2021
37. Analytical footprints: compact representation of elementary singularities in wavelet bases
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Van De Ville, D., Forster-Heinlein, B., Unser, M., and Blu, T.
- Subjects
Signal processing -- Technology application ,Wavelet transforms -- Usage ,Simulation methods -- Usage ,Mathematical optimization -- Usage ,Digital signal processor ,Technology application ,Business ,Computers ,Electronics ,Electronics and electrical industries - Published
- 2010
38. Wavelet steerability and the higher-order Riesz transform
- Author
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Unser, M. and Van De Ville, D.
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Hilbert space -- Analysis ,Wavelet transforms -- Usage ,Image processing -- Analysis ,Business ,Computers ,Electronics ,Electronics and electrical industries - Published
- 2010
39. Self-regulation of inter-hemispheric visual cortex balance through real-time fMRI neurofeedback training
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Robineau, F., Rieger, S. W., Mermoud, C., Pichon, S., Koush, Y., Van De Ville, D., Vuilleumier, P., and Scharnowski, F.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Appraisal manipulation affects behaviour, physiology and brain representations - a video game study
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Tan, M.X., Fournier, R., Leitão, J., Van De Ville, D., and Vuilleumier, P.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Resting-State Brain Activity for Early Prediction Outcome in Postanoxic Patients in a Coma with Indeterminate Clinical Prognosis.
- Author
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Pugin, D, Hofmeister, J, Gasche, Y, Vulliemoz, S, Lövblad, K-O, Ville, D Van De, Haller, Sven, Pugin, D, Hofmeister, J, Gasche, Y, Vulliemoz, S, Lövblad, K-O, Ville, D Van De, and Haller, Sven
- Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Early outcome prediction of postanoxic patients in a coma after cardiac arrest proves challenging. Current prognostication relies on multimodal testing, using clinical examination, electrophysiologic testing, biomarkers, and structural MR imaging. While this multimodal prognostication is accurate for predicting poor outcome (ie, death), it is not sensitive enough to identify good outcome (ie, consciousness recovery), thus leaving many patients with indeterminate prognosis. We specifically assessed whether resting-state fMRI provides prognostic information, notably in postanoxic patients in a coma with indeterminate prognosis early after cardiac arrest, specifically for good outcome. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We used resting-state fMRI in a prospective study to compare whole-brain functional connectivity between patients with good and poor outcomes, implementing support vector machine learning. Then, we automatically predicted coma outcome using resting-state fMRI and also compared the prediction based on resting-state fMRI with the outcome prediction based on DWI. RESULTS: Of 17 eligible patients who completed the study procedure (among 351 patients screened), 9 regained consciousness and 8 remained comatose. We found higher functional connectivity in patients recovering consciousness, with greater changes occurring within and between the occipitoparietal and temporofrontal regions. Coma outcome prognostication based on resting-state fMRI machine learning was very accurate, notably for identifying patients with good outcome (accuracy, 94.4%; area under the receiver operating curve, 0.94). Outcome predictors using resting-state fMRI performed significantly better (P < .05) than DWI (accuracy, 60.0%; area under the receiver operating curve, 0.63). CONCLUSIONS: Indeterminate prognosis might lead to major clinical uncertainty and significant variations in life-sustaining treatments. Resting-state fMRI might bridge the gap left in early prognostic
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Brain networks subserving functional core processes of emotions identified with componential modelling
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Mohammadi, G, Van De Ville, D, Vuilleumier, P, Mohammadi, G, Van De Ville, D, and Vuilleumier, P
- Abstract
Emotions have powerful effects on the mind, body, and behavior. Although psychology theories emphasized multi-componential characteristics of emotions, little is known about the nature and neural architecture of such components in the brain. We used a multivariate data-driven approach to decompose a wide range of emotions into functional core processes and identify their neural organization. Twenty participants watched 40 emotional clips and rated 119 emotional moments in terms of 32 component features defined by a previously validated componential model. Results show how different emotions emerge from coordinated activity across a set of brain networks coding for component processes associated with valuation appraisal, hedonic experience, novelty, goal-relevance, approach/avoidance tendencies, and social concerns. Our study goes beyond previous research that focused on either categorical or dimensional emotions and highlighting how novel methodology combined with componential modelling may allow emotion neuroscience to move forward and unveil the functional architecture of human affective experiences.
- Published
- 2020
43. Characterization and Prediction of Clinical Pathways of Vulnerability to Psychosis through Graph Signal Processing
- Author
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Sandini, C, Zöller, D, Schneider, M, Tarun, A, Armando, M, Nelson, B, Mallawaarachchi, SR, Amminger, P, Farhall, J, Bolt, L, Yuen, HP, Markulev, C, Schäfer, M, Mossaheb, N, Schlögelhofer, M, Smesny, S, Hickie, I, Berger, GE, Chen, EYH, de Haan, L, Nieman, D, Nordentoft, M, Riecher-Rössler, A, Verma, S, Thompson, A, Yung, AR, Allott, K, McGorry, P, Van De Ville, D, Eliez, S, Sandini, C, Zöller, D, Schneider, M, Tarun, A, Armando, M, Nelson, B, Mallawaarachchi, SR, Amminger, P, Farhall, J, Bolt, L, Yuen, HP, Markulev, C, Schäfer, M, Mossaheb, N, Schlögelhofer, M, Smesny, S, Hickie, I, Berger, GE, Chen, EYH, de Haan, L, Nieman, D, Nordentoft, M, Riecher-Rössler, A, Verma, S, Thompson, A, Yung, AR, Allott, K, McGorry, P, Van De Ville, D, and Eliez, S
- Abstract
There is a growing recognition that psychiatric symptoms have the potential to causally interact with one another. Particularly in the earliest stages of psychopathology dynamic interactions between symptoms could contribute heterogeneous and cross-diagnostic clinical evolutions. Current clinical approaches attempt to merge clinical manifestations that co-occur across subjects and could therefore significantly hinder our understanding of clinical pathways connecting individual symptoms. Network approaches have the potential to shed light on the complex dynamics of early psychopathology. In the present manuscript we attempt to address 2 main limitations that have in our opinion hindered the application of network approaches in the clinical setting. The first limitation is that network analyses have mostly been applied to cross-sectional data, yielding results that often lack the intuitive interpretability of simpler categorical or dimensional approaches. Here we propose an approach based on multi-layer network analysis that offers an intuitive low-dimensional characterization of longitudinal pathways involved in the evolution of psychopathology, while conserving high-dimensional information on the role of specific symptoms. The second limitation is that network analyses typically characterize symptom connectivity at the level of a population, whereas clinical practice deals with symptom severity at the level of the individual. Here we propose an approach based on graph signal processing that exploits knowledge of network interactions between symptoms to predict longitudinal clinical evolution at the level of the individual. We test our approaches in two independent samples of individuals with genetic and clinical vulnerability for developing psychosis.
- Published
- 2020
44. Sparse coupled logistic regression to estimate co-activation and modulatory influences of brain regions
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Bolton, TAW, Urunuela, E, Tian, Y, Zalesky, A, Caballero-Gaudes, C, Van De Ville, D, Bolton, TAW, Urunuela, E, Tian, Y, Zalesky, A, Caballero-Gaudes, C, and Van De Ville, D
- Abstract
Accurate mapping of the functional interactions between remote brain areas with resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging requires the quantification of their underlying dynamics. In conventional methodological pipelines, a spatial scale of interest is first selected and dynamic analysis then proceeds at this hypothesised level of complexity. If large-scale functional networks or states are studied, more local regional rearrangements are then not described, potentially missing important neurobiological information. Here, we propose a novel mathematical framework that jointly estimates resting-state functional networks and spatially more localised cross-regional modulations. To do so, the changes in activity of each brain region are modelled by a logistic regression including co-activation coefficients (reflective of network assignment, as they highlight simultaneous activations across areas) and causal interplays (denoting finer regional cross-talks, when one region active at timetmodulates thettot + 1 transition likelihood of another area). A two-parameterℓ1regularisation scheme is used to make these two sets of coefficients sparse: one controls overall sparsity, while the other governs the trade-off between co-activations and causal interplays, enabling to properly fit the data despite the yet unknown balance between both types of couplings. Across a range of simulation settings, we show that the framework successfully retrieves the two types of cross-regional interactions at once. Performance across noise and sample size settings was globally on par with that of other existing methods, with the potential to reveal more precise information missed by alternative approaches. Preliminary application to experimental data revealed that in the resting brain, co-activations and causal modulations co-exist with a varying balance across regions. Our methodological pipeline offers a conceptually elegant alternative for the assessment of functional brain dynamics a
- Published
- 2020
45. Agenesis of the corpus callosum with interhemispheric cyst, associated with aberrant cortical sulci and without underlying cortical dysplasia
- Author
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Cagneaux, M., Lacalm, A., Huissoud, C., Allias, F., Ville, D., Massardier, J., and Guibaud, L.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Functional imaging in the work-up of childhood epilepsy
- Author
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Hertz-Pannier, L., Chiron, C., Véra, P., Van de Morteele, P. F., Kaminska, A., Bourgeois, M., Hollo, A., Ville, D., Cieuta, C., Dulac, O., Brunelle, F., and LeBihan, D.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. RMND1 mutations in two siblings: Severe renal hypoplasia but different levels of extrarenal abnormality severity: The ethics of decision making
- Author
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Broenen, E., Ranchin, B., Besmond, C., Freychet, C., Fouilhoux, A., Perouse de Montclos, T., Ville, D., and Bacchetta, J.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Resting-State Brain Activity for Early Prediction Outcome in Postanoxic Patients in a Coma with Indeterminate Clinical Prognosis
- Author
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Pugin, D., primary, Hofmeister, J., additional, Gasche, Y., additional, Vulliemoz, S., additional, Lövblad, K.-O., additional, Ville, D. Van De, additional, and Haller, S., additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Modulation of epileptic networks by transient interictal epileptic activity: A dynamic approach to simultaneous EEG-fMRI
- Author
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Iannotti, G.R., primary, Preti, M.G., additional, Grouiller, F., additional, Carboni, M., additional, De Stefano, P., additional, Pittau, F., additional, Momjian, S., additional, Carmichael, D., additional, Centeno, M., additional, Seeck, M., additional, Korff, C.M., additional, Schaller, K., additional, De Ville, D. Van, additional, and Vulliemoz, S., additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Decoding of emotional information in voice-sensitive cortices
- Author
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Ethofer, T, Van De Ville, D, Scherer, K, and Vuilleumier, P
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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