950 results on '"Young, Alexandra"'
Search Results
2. Towards cascading genetic risk in Alzheimers disease.
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Altmann, Andre, Aksman, Leon, Oxtoby, Neil, Young, Alexandra, Alexander, Daniel, Barkhof, Frederik, Shoai, Maryam, Hardy, John, and Schott, Jonathan
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APOE ,Alzheimer’s disease ,biomarker ,longitudinal progression ,polygenic risk ,Humans ,Alzheimer Disease ,Male ,Female ,Aged ,tau Proteins ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Disease Progression ,Biomarkers ,Aged ,80 and over ,Apolipoproteins E ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Multifactorial Inheritance ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,Middle Aged ,Cohort Studies - Abstract
Alzheimers disease typically progresses in stages, which have been defined by the presence of disease-specific biomarkers: amyloid (A), tau (T) and neurodegeneration (N). This progression of biomarkers has been condensed into the ATN framework, in which each of the biomarkers can be either positive (+) or negative (-). Over the past decades, genome-wide association studies have implicated ∼90 different loci involved with the development of late-onset Alzheimers disease. Here, we investigate whether genetic risk for Alzheimers disease contributes equally to the progression in different disease stages or whether it exhibits a stage-dependent effect. Amyloid (A) and tau (T) status was defined using a combination of available PET and CSF biomarkers in the Alzheimers Disease Neuroimaging Initiative cohort. In 312 participants with biomarker-confirmed A-T- status, we used Cox proportional hazards models to estimate the contribution of APOE and polygenic risk scores (beyond APOE) to convert to A+T- status (65 conversions). Furthermore, we repeated the analysis in 290 participants with A+T- status and investigated the genetic contribution to conversion to A+T+ (45 conversions). Both survival analyses were adjusted for age, sex and years of education. For progression from A-T- to A+T-, APOE-e4 burden showed a significant effect [hazard ratio (HR) = 2.88; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.70-4.89; P < 0.001], whereas polygenic risk did not (HR = 1.09; 95% CI: 0.84-1.42; P = 0.53). Conversely, for the transition from A+T- to A+T+, the contribution of APOE-e4 burden was reduced (HR = 1.62; 95% CI: 1.05-2.51; P = 0.031), whereas the polygenic risk showed an increased contribution (HR = 1.73; 95% CI: 1.27-2.36; P < 0.001). The marginal APOE effect was driven by e4 homozygotes (HR = 2.58; 95% CI: 1.05-6.35; P = 0.039) as opposed to e4 heterozygotes (HR = 1.74; 95% CI: 0.87-3.49; P = 0.12). The genetic risk for late-onset Alzheimers disease unfolds in a disease stage-dependent fashion. A better understanding of the interplay between disease stage and genetic risk can lead to a more mechanistic understanding of the transition between ATN stages and a better understanding of the molecular processes leading to Alzheimers disease, in addition to opening therapeutic windows for targeted interventions.
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- 2024
3. Longitudinal inference of multiscale markers in psychosis: from hippocampal centrality to functional outcome
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Totzek, Jana F., Chakravarty, M. Mallar, Joober, Ridha, Malla, Ashok, Shah, Jai L., Raucher-Chéné, Delphine, Young, Alexandra L., Hernaus, Dennis, Lepage, Martin, and Lavigne, Katie M.
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- 2024
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4. McCrow-Young, Alexandra
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McCrow-Young, Alexandra and McCrow-Young, Alexandra
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- 2017
5. YOUNG, Alexandra Leigh. Idol Gossip
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Bongiorno, Elissa
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Idol Gossip (Novel) -- Young, Alexandra Leigh ,Books -- Book reviews ,Education ,Library and information science ,Publishing industry - Abstract
YOUNG, Alexandra Leigh. Idol Gossip. 352p. Candlewick/Walker. Sept. 2021. Tr $18.99. ISBN 9781536213645. Gr 7-10--Young's YA debut is an entertaining romp through the world of K-pop. Seventeen-year-old Chinese American Alice [...]
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- 2021
6. PRODUCTOS SUPERIORES, S.A. secures contract for Supply of a accordion as a donation for the young Alexandra de Gracia in the province of Los Santos
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Contract agreement ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Panama based PRODUCTOS SUPERIORES, S.A. has secured contract from MINISTERIO DE LA PRESIDENCIA/Direccion de Asistencia Social for Supply of a accordion as a donation for the young Alexandra de Gracia [...]
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- 2022
7. Disease progression modelling reveals heterogeneity in trajectories of Lewy-type α-synuclein pathology
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Mastenbroek, Sophie E., Vogel, Jacob W., Collij, Lyduine E., Serrano, Geidy E., Tremblay, Cécilia, Young, Alexandra L., Arce, Richard A., Shill, Holly A., Driver-Dunckley, Erika D., Mehta, Shyamal H., Belden, Christine M., Atri, Alireza, Choudhury, Parichita, Barkhof, Frederik, Adler, Charles H., Ossenkoppele, Rik, Beach, Thomas G., and Hansson, Oskar
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- 2024
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8. Data-driven modelling of neurodegenerative disease progression: thinking outside the black box
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Young, Alexandra L., Oxtoby, Neil P., Garbarino, Sara, Fox, Nick C., Barkhof, Frederik, Schott, Jonathan M., and Alexander, Daniel C.
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- 2024
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9. Optimising Chest X-Rays for Image Analysis by Identifying and Removing Confounding Factors
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Aslani, Shahab, Lilaonitkul, Watjana, Gnanananthan, Vaishnavi, Raj, Divya, Rangelov, Bojidar, Young, Alexandra L, Hu, Yipeng, Taylor, Paul, Alexander, Daniel C, and Jacob, Joseph
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
During the COVID-19 pandemic, the sheer volume of imaging performed in an emergency setting for COVID-19 diagnosis has resulted in a wide variability of clinical CXR acquisitions. This variation is seen in the CXR projections used, image annotations added and in the inspiratory effort and degree of rotation of clinical images. The image analysis community has attempted to ease the burden on overstretched radiology departments during the pandemic by developing automated COVID-19 diagnostic algorithms, the input for which has been CXR imaging. Large publicly available CXR datasets have been leveraged to improve deep learning algorithms for COVID-19 diagnosis. Yet the variable quality of clinically-acquired CXRs within publicly available datasets could have a profound effect on algorithm performance. COVID-19 diagnosis may be inferred by an algorithm from non-anatomical features on an image such as image labels. These imaging shortcuts may be dataset-specific and limit the generalisability of AI systems. Understanding and correcting key potential biases in CXR images is therefore an essential first step prior to CXR image analysis. In this study, we propose a simple and effective step-wise approach to pre-processing a COVID-19 chest X-ray dataset to remove undesired biases. We perform ablation studies to show the impact of each individual step. The results suggest that using our proposed pipeline could increase accuracy of the baseline COVID-19 detection algorithm by up to 13%.
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- 2022
10. Efficient and Scalable GaInAs Thermophotovoltaic Devices
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Tervo, Eric J., France, Ryan M., Friedman, Daniel J., Arulanandam, Madhan K., King, Richard R., Narayan, Tarun C., Luciano, Cecilia, Nizamian, Dustin P., Johnson, Benjamin A., Young, Alexandra R., Kuritzky, Leah Y., Perl, Emmett E., Limpinsel, Moritz, Kayes, Brendan M., Ponec, Andrew J., Bierman, David M., Briggs, Justin A., and Steiner, Myles A.
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Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
Thermophotovoltaics are promising solid-state energy converters for a variety of applications such as grid-scale energy storage, concentrating solar-thermal power, and waste heat recovery. Here, we report the design, fabrication, and testing of large area (0.8 cm$^2$), scalable, single junction 0.74-eV GaInAs thermophotovoltaic devices reaching an efficiency of 38.8$\pm$2.0% and an electrical power density of 3.78 W/cm$^2$ at an emitter temperature of 1850{\deg}C. Reaching such a high emitter temperature and power density without sacrificing efficiency is a direct result of combining good spectral management with a highly optimized cell architecture, excellent material quality, and very low series resistance. Importantly, fabrication of 12 high-performing devices on a two-inch wafer is shown to be repeatable, and the cell design can be readily transferred to commercial epitaxy on even larger wafers. Further improvements in efficiency can be obtained by using a multijunction architecture, and early results for a two-junction 0.84-eV GaInPAs / 0.74-eV GaInAs device illustrate this promise., Comment: 27 pages, 15 figures
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- 2022
11. Uncovering spatiotemporal patterns of atrophy in progressive supranuclear palsy using unsupervised machine learning.
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Scotton, William J, Shand, Cameron, Todd, Emily, Bocchetta, Martina, Cash, David M, VandeVrede, Lawren, Heuer, Hilary, PROSPECT Consortium, 4RTNI Consortium, Young, Alexandra L, Oxtoby, Neil, Alexander, Daniel C, Rowe, James B, Morris, Huw R, Boxer, Adam L, Rohrer, Jonathan D, and Wijeratne, Peter A
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PROSPECT Consortium ,4RTNI Consortium ,Subtype and Stage Inference ,biomarkers ,disease progression ,machine learning ,progressive supranuclear palsy ,Clinical Research ,Rare Diseases ,Neurosciences ,Biomedical Imaging ,Brain Disorders ,Neurodegenerative ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Neurological - Abstract
To better understand the pathological and phenotypic heterogeneity of progressive supranuclear palsy and the links between the two, we applied a novel unsupervised machine learning algorithm (Subtype and Stage Inference) to the largest MRI data set to date of people with clinically diagnosed progressive supranuclear palsy (including progressive supranuclear palsy-Richardson and variant progressive supranuclear palsy syndromes). Our cohort is comprised of 426 progressive supranuclear palsy cases, of which 367 had at least one follow-up scan, and 290 controls. Of the progressive supranuclear palsy cases, 357 were clinically diagnosed with progressive supranuclear palsy-Richardson, 52 with a progressive supranuclear palsy-cortical variant (progressive supranuclear palsy-frontal, progressive supranuclear palsy-speech/language, or progressive supranuclear palsy-corticobasal), and 17 with a progressive supranuclear palsy-subcortical variant (progressive supranuclear palsy-parkinsonism or progressive supranuclear palsy-progressive gait freezing). Subtype and Stage Inference was applied to volumetric MRI features extracted from baseline structural (T1-weighted) MRI scans and then used to subtype and stage follow-up scans. The subtypes and stages at follow-up were used to validate the longitudinal consistency of subtype and stage assignments. We further compared the clinical phenotypes of each subtype to gain insight into the relationship between progressive supranuclear palsy pathology, atrophy patterns, and clinical presentation. The data supported two subtypes, each with a distinct progression of atrophy: a 'subcortical' subtype, in which early atrophy was most prominent in the brainstem, ventral diencephalon, superior cerebellar peduncles, and the dentate nucleus, and a 'cortical' subtype, in which there was early atrophy in the frontal lobes and the insula alongside brainstem atrophy. There was a strong association between clinical diagnosis and the Subtype and Stage Inference subtype with 82% of progressive supranuclear palsy-subcortical cases and 81% of progressive supranuclear palsy-Richardson cases assigned to the subcortical subtype and 82% of progressive supranuclear palsy-cortical cases assigned to the cortical subtype. The increasing stage was associated with worsening clinical scores, whilst the 'subcortical' subtype was associated with worse clinical severity scores compared to the 'cortical subtype' (progressive supranuclear palsy rating scale and Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale). Validation experiments showed that subtype assignment was longitudinally stable (95% of scans were assigned to the same subtype at follow-up) and individual staging was longitudinally consistent with 90% remaining at the same stage or progressing to a later stage at follow-up. In summary, we applied Subtype and Stage Inference to structural MRI data and empirically identified two distinct subtypes of spatiotemporal atrophy in progressive supranuclear palsy. These image-based subtypes were differentially enriched for progressive supranuclear palsy clinical syndromes and showed different clinical characteristics. Being able to accurately subtype and stage progressive supranuclear palsy patients at baseline has important implications for screening patients on entry to clinical trials, as well as tracking disease progression.
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- 2023
12. Implementation outcomes of a digital, trauma-informed care, educational intervention targeting health professionals in a paediatric burns setting: A mixed methods process evaluation
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Simons, Megan, Harvey, Gillian, McMillan, Lucinda, Ryan, Elizabeth G., De Young, Alexandra G., McPhail, Steven M., Kularatna, Sanjeewa, Senanayake, Sameera, Kimble, Roy, and Tyack, Zephanie
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- 2024
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13. Barriers and co-designed strategies for the implementation of negative pressure wound therapy in acute pediatric burn care in Australia: A mixed method study
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Holbert, Maleea D., Duff, Jed, Wood, Fiona, Holland, Andrew J.A., Teague, Warwick, Frear, Cody, Crellin, Dianne, Phillips, Natalie, Storey, Kristen, Martin, Lisa, Singer, Yvonne, Dimanopoulos, Tanesha A., Cuttle, Leila, Vagenas, Dimitrios, McPhail, Steven, Calleja, Pauline, De Young, Alexandra, Kimble, Roy M., and Griffin, Bronwyn R.
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- 2024
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14. Author Correction: Delineating COVID-19 subgroups using routine clinical data identifies distinct in-hospital outcomes
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Rangelov, Bojidar, Young, Alexandra, Lilaonitkul, Watjana, Aslani, Shahab, Taylor, Paul, Guðmundsson, Eyjólfur, Yang, Qianye, Hu, Yipeng, Hurst, John R., Hawkes, David J., and Jacob, Joseph
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- 2023
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15. Delineating COVID-19 subgroups using routine clinical data identifies distinct in-hospital outcomes
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Rangelov, Bojidar, Young, Alexandra, Lilaonitkul, Watjana, Aslani, Shahab, Taylor, Paul, Guðmundsson, Eyjólfur, Yang, Qianye, Hu, Yipeng, Hurst, John R., Hawkes, David J., and Jacob, Joseph
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- 2023
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16. Co-design of a paediatric post-trauma electronic psychosocial screen
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Griffin, Bronwyn R., Trenoweth, Kate, Dimanopoulos, Tanesha A., De Young, Alexandra C., Cobham, Vanessa E., Williams, Hayley, and Kimble, Roy
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- 2024
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17. Optimising Chest X-Rays for Image Analysis by Identifying and Removing Confounding Factors
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NCCID Collaborative, Aslani, Shahab, Lilaonitkul, Watjana, Gnanananthan, Vaishnavi, Raj, Divya, Rangelov, Bojidar, Young, Alexandra L., Hu, Yipeng, Taylor, Paul, Alexander, Daniel C., Jacob, Joseph, Angrisani, Leopoldo, Series Editor, Arteaga, Marco, Series Editor, Panigrahi, Bijaya Ketan, Series Editor, Chakraborty, Samarjit, Series Editor, Chen, Jiming, Series Editor, Chen, Shanben, Series Editor, Chen, Tan Kay, Series Editor, Dillmann, Rüdiger, Series Editor, Duan, Haibin, Series Editor, Ferrari, Gianluigi, Series Editor, Ferre, Manuel, Series Editor, Hirche, Sandra, Series Editor, Jabbari, Faryar, Series Editor, Jia, Limin, Series Editor, Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Khamis, Alaa, Series Editor, Kroeger, Torsten, Series Editor, Li, Yong, Series Editor, Liang, Qilian, Series Editor, Martín, Ferran, Series Editor, Ming, Tan Cher, Series Editor, Minker, Wolfgang, Series Editor, Misra, Pradeep, Series Editor, Möller, Sebastian, Series Editor, Mukhopadhyay, Subhas, Series Editor, Ning, Cun-Zheng, Series Editor, Nishida, Toyoaki, Series Editor, Pascucci, Federica, Series Editor, Qin, Yong, Series Editor, Seng, Gan Woon, Series Editor, Speidel, Joachim, Series Editor, Veiga, Germano, Series Editor, Wu, Haitao, Series Editor, Zamboni, Walter, Series Editor, Zhang, Junjie James, Series Editor, Su, Ruidan, editor, Zhang, Yudong, editor, Liu, Han, editor, and F Frangi, Alejandro, editor
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- 2023
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18. Subtype and Stage Inference with Timescales
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for the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, Young, Alexandra L., Aksman, Leon M., Alexander, Daniel C., Wijeratne, Peter A., Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Frangi, Alejandro, editor, de Bruijne, Marleen, editor, Wassermann, Demian, editor, and Navab, Nassir, editor
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- 2023
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19. The Alzheimer's Disease Prediction Of Longitudinal Evolution (TADPOLE) Challenge: Results after 1 Year Follow-up
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Marinescu, Razvan V., Oxtoby, Neil P., Young, Alexandra L., Bron, Esther E., Toga, Arthur W., Weiner, Michael W., Barkhof, Frederik, Fox, Nick C., Eshaghi, Arman, Toni, Tina, Salaterski, Marcin, Lunina, Veronika, Ansart, Manon, Durrleman, Stanley, Lu, Pascal, Iddi, Samuel, Li, Dan, Thompson, Wesley K., Donohue, Michael C., Nahon, Aviv, Levy, Yarden, Halbersberg, Dan, Cohen, Mariya, Liao, Huiling, Li, Tengfei, Yu, Kaixian, Zhu, Hongtu, Tamez-Pena, Jose G., Ismail, Aya, Wood, Timothy, Bravo, Hector Corrada, Nguyen, Minh, Sun, Nanbo, Feng, Jiashi, Yeo, B. T. Thomas, Chen, Gang, Qi, Ke, Chen, Shiyang, Qiu, Deqiang, Buciuman, Ionut, Kelner, Alex, Pop, Raluca, Rimocea, Denisa, Ghazi, Mostafa M., Nielsen, Mads, Ourselin, Sebastien, Sorensen, Lauge, Venkatraghavan, Vikram, Liu, Keli, Rabe, Christina, Manser, Paul, Hill, Steven M., Howlett, James, Huang, Zhiyue, Kiddle, Steven, Mukherjee, Sach, Rouanet, Anais, Taschler, Bernd, Tom, Brian D. M., White, Simon R., Faux, Noel, Sedai, Suman, Oriol, Javier de Velasco, Clemente, Edgar E. V., Estrada, Karol, Aksman, Leon, Altmann, Andre, Stonnington, Cynthia M., Wang, Yalin, Wu, Jianfeng, Devadas, Vivek, Fourrier, Clementine, Raket, Lars Lau, Sotiras, Aristeidis, Erus, Guray, Doshi, Jimit, Davatzikos, Christos, Vogel, Jacob, Doyle, Andrew, Tam, Angela, Diaz-Papkovich, Alex, Jammeh, Emmanuel, Koval, Igor, Moore, Paul, Lyons, Terry J., Gallacher, John, Tohka, Jussi, Ciszek, Robert, Jedynak, Bruno, Pandya, Kruti, Bilgel, Murat, Engels, William, Cole, Joseph, Golland, Polina, Klein, Stefan, and Alexander, Daniel C.
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Quantitative Biology - Populations and Evolution ,Statistics - Applications - Abstract
We present the findings of "The Alzheimer's Disease Prediction Of Longitudinal Evolution" (TADPOLE) Challenge, which compared the performance of 92 algorithms from 33 international teams at predicting the future trajectory of 219 individuals at risk of Alzheimer's disease. Challenge participants were required to make a prediction, for each month of a 5-year future time period, of three key outcomes: clinical diagnosis, Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale Cognitive Subdomain (ADAS-Cog13), and total volume of the ventricles. The methods used by challenge participants included multivariate linear regression, machine learning methods such as support vector machines and deep neural networks, as well as disease progression models. No single submission was best at predicting all three outcomes. For clinical diagnosis and ventricle volume prediction, the best algorithms strongly outperform simple baselines in predictive ability. However, for ADAS-Cog13 no single submitted prediction method was significantly better than random guesswork. Two ensemble methods based on taking the mean and median over all predictions, obtained top scores on almost all tasks. Better than average performance at diagnosis prediction was generally associated with the additional inclusion of features from cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). On the other hand, better performance at ventricle volume prediction was associated with inclusion of summary statistics, such as the slope or maxima/minima of biomarkers. TADPOLE's unique results suggest that current prediction algorithms provide sufficient accuracy to exploit biomarkers related to clinical diagnosis and ventricle volume, for cohort refinement in clinical trials for Alzheimer's disease. However, results call into question the usage of cognitive test scores for patient selection and as a primary endpoint in clinical trials., Comment: Presents final results of the TADPOLE competition. 60 pages, 7 tables, 14 figures
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- 2020
20. TADPOLE Challenge: Accurate Alzheimer's disease prediction through crowdsourced forecasting of future data
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Marinescu, Razvan V., Oxtoby, Neil P., Young, Alexandra L., Bron, Esther E., Toga, Arthur W., Weiner, Michael W., Barkhof, Frederik, Fox, Nick C., Golland, Polina, Klein, Stefan, and Alexander, Daniel C.
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Quantitative Biology - Populations and Evolution ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing ,Statistics - Applications - Abstract
The TADPOLE Challenge compares the performance of algorithms at predicting the future evolution of individuals at risk of Alzheimer's disease. TADPOLE Challenge participants train their models and algorithms on historical data from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) study. Participants are then required to make forecasts of three key outcomes for ADNI-3 rollover participants: clinical diagnosis, ADAS-Cog 13, and total volume of the ventricles -- which are then compared with future measurements. Strong points of the challenge are that the test data did not exist at the time of forecasting (it was acquired afterwards), and that it focuses on the challenging problem of cohort selection for clinical trials by identifying fast progressors. The submission phase of TADPOLE was open until 15 November 2017; since then data has been acquired until April 2019 from 219 subjects with 223 clinical visits and 150 Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scans, which was used for the evaluation of the participants' predictions. Thirty-three teams participated with a total of 92 submissions. No single submission was best at predicting all three outcomes. For diagnosis prediction, the best forecast (team Frog), which was based on gradient boosting, obtained a multiclass area under the receiver-operating curve (MAUC) of 0.931, while for ventricle prediction the best forecast (team EMC1), which was based on disease progression modelling and spline regression, obtained mean absolute error of 0.41% of total intracranial volume (ICV). For ADAS-Cog 13, no forecast was considerably better than the benchmark mixed effects model (BenchmarkME), provided to participants before the submission deadline. Further analysis can help understand which input features and algorithms are most suitable for Alzheimer's disease prediction and for aiding patient stratification in clinical trials., Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, 4 tables. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1805.03909
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- 2020
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21. Four distinct trajectories of tau deposition identified in Alzheimer’s disease
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Vogel, Jacob W, Young, Alexandra L, Oxtoby, Neil P, Smith, Ruben, Ossenkoppele, Rik, Strandberg, Olof T, La Joie, Renaud, Aksman, Leon M, Grothe, Michel J, Iturria-Medina, Yasser, Pontecorvo, Michael J, Devous, Michael D, Rabinovici, Gil D, Alexander, Daniel C, Lyoo, Chul Hyoung, Evans, Alan C, and Hansson, Oskar
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,Brain Disorders ,Alzheimer's Disease including Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (AD/ADRD) ,Neurodegenerative ,Aging ,Alzheimer's Disease ,Clinical Research ,Dementia ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Neurological ,Aged ,Alzheimer Disease ,Carbolines ,Cerebral Cortex ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Neuroimaging ,Phenotype ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Radiopharmaceuticals ,Spatio-Temporal Analysis ,tau Proteins ,Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Immunology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by the spread of tau pathology throughout the cerebral cortex. This spreading pattern was thought to be fairly consistent across individuals, although recent work has demonstrated substantial variability in the population with AD. Using tau-positron emission tomography scans from 1,612 individuals, we identified 4 distinct spatiotemporal trajectories of tau pathology, ranging in prevalence from 18 to 33%. We replicated previously described limbic-predominant and medial temporal lobe-sparing patterns, while also discovering posterior and lateral temporal patterns resembling atypical clinical variants of AD. These 'subtypes' were stable during longitudinal follow-up and were replicated in a separate sample using a different radiotracer. The subtypes presented with distinct demographic and cognitive profiles and differing longitudinal outcomes. Additionally, network diffusion models implied that pathology originates and spreads through distinct corticolimbic networks in the different subtypes. Together, our results suggest that variation in tau pathology is common and systematic, perhaps warranting a re-examination of the notion of 'typical AD' and a revisiting of tau pathological staging.
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- 2021
22. A city transformed? : gendering the strategies and experience of urban change in Medellín
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Young, Alexandra
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This thesis contributes a feminist analysis of the urban transformation of Medellín, Colombia. By looking to the everyday experiences and practices in the city and assessing the gender logics that have informed and shaped their urban development strategy, I evaluate the celebrated urban transformation and highlight paradoxes within it. In a city that is globally recognised for its innovative strategies of development and reduction in levels of violence primarily from the 'turning point' in 2003, I pay attention to the gender inequalities and gender-based violence that continue to challenge local government and activists alike. The interdisciplinary research is situated within broader scholarship highlighting the gendered everyday of urban space and violence. Feminist scholars have shown how gender is mediated through underpinning political structures of patriarchy and neoliberalism, and how it is situated embodied and experienced in the everyday. I consider each of these dimensions within the city's institutions and beyond, exploring how gender has informed the policies, planning and successes of the urban transformation, alongside the lived (gendered) experience of the urban landscape. Focusing upon the connected themes of culture, space, and security, I show where and how each fit within a gendered understanding of the city and its policies for change. Drawing upon extensive ethnographic fieldwork and detailed interviews with activists, government officials and residents I provide a multi-layered account of the urban space and those who shape it. As such this thesis contributes an understanding of the contradictions and fractures that exist between, and underpin, the award-winning policy and the lived experience of the city. By paying attention to the gendered limitations of the urban transformation I show how such changes continue to fall short in truly 'transforming' - a process that requires challenging the systems of power including, but not limited to, unequal gender relations.
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- 2020
23. A qualitative study of Internet use comparing the experiences of people with physical disabilities and early onset dementia
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Young, Alexandra L.
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362.1968 ,HV Social pathology. Social and public welfare - Abstract
People living with Early Onset Dementia and/or physical disabilities face distinct challenges in accessing increasingly digitised services and information. Relatively little is known about how either of these groups access and use the internet on a day-to-day basis, or their plans to negotiate changes in access. Early Onset Dementia, also called young onset or working age dementia, refers to a diagnosis of dementia given before the age of 65. People in this group usually have considerably different lifestyles and responsibilities compared to people who are diagnosed in their 80s. For example, people with Early Onset Dementia are likely to have more experience of computers and working online. Even so, they and their families may have difficulties in accessing appropriate information and services. Another sizeable group for whom assistive online access may be highly relevant is people living with physical disabilities. People in this group may be dependent on assistive technologies and interventions to access technology and the internet. However, despite the difficulties that both of these groups are likely to face, relatively little research has been done about any of their day-to-day activities’. This thesis collects and compares the experiences of two groups of participants through both the literature and qualitative research: Group 1, people living with physical disabilities; and Group 2, people living with Early Onset Dementia and their family members. A comprehensive literature search was conducted into internet use and service access by members of these two groups, and data were collected in semi-structured interviews and online questionnaires. Group 1 comprised of 15 interviews with people living with physical disabilities across Nottinghamshire who were recruited with the assistance of Nottinghamshire County Council (NCC). In addition to the interviews, 29 online questionnaires were completed by people with physical disabilities living across the UK. The data were analysed using an iterative coding approach to draw out the main themes and inform the approach used with Group 2. Group 2 also used an online questionnaire, which had 19 participants, and semi-structured interviews to collect data. The interviews used a number of different online recruitment methods to recruit 10 people living with Early Onset Dementia and eight family members from across England. The data were also analysed using an iterative coding approach, followed by thematic analysis informed by the analysis and results of Group 1. These themes were then compared to posts from the Alzheimer’s Society Talking Point forum by using word frequency analysis and word searches within the dataset. The experiences of the two groups were then compared to draw out the similarities and differences between the two, with the main combined themes centring on online access, support, online information, and digital legacies. All these themes indicated similarities in how people with Early Onset Dementia, their family members, and people living with physical disabilities use the internet and online resources to find information and support. There were also differences between the groups, especially between the group of people diagnosed with Early Onset Dementia and people with physical disabilities. The former group had far more limited involvement in searching for health-related information than the people with physical disabilities, or indeed their family members The themes also highlight the need for further research on both of these groups regarding the appropriateness of a ‘digital first’ approach to local authority services and the nature of support needed by these groups to retain online independence. As online access is not yet universal, it is premature for local authorities to plan a programme of digitisation and assume that service users will be in a position to cope with this change. These themes also underline the need for more up-to-date and appropriate post-diagnostic information, and guidance on which sites or services are safe or trustworthy. Significantly, the findings also draw attention to the need to prompt conversations about changing access needs and the nature of digital legacy, both between family members and between service users and professionals. This includes not just what people think a digital legacy is, but also plans they may want to put in place for online accounts and digital assets, and when this should occur. Further research is needed with larger cohorts of both people with Early Onset Dementia and people with physical disabilities who are active online to understand the changing patterns of internet use and dependence. This will help to ensure that people with Early Onset Dementia or physical disabilities can receive appropriate and accessible online services and support.
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- 2020
24. Screening for PTSD and functional impairment in trauma-exposed young children: evaluation of alternative CBCL-PTSD subscales
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Bartels, Lasse, Haag, Ann-Christin, Keller, Fabia, Storch, Eric A., De Young, Alexandra, Salloum, Alison, and Landolt, Markus A.
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- 2022
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25. DIVE: A spatiotemporal progression model of brain pathology in neurodegenerative disorders
- Author
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Marinescu, Razvan V., Eshaghi, Arman, Lorenzi, Marco, Young, Alexandra L., Oxtoby, Neil P., Garbarino, Sara, Crutch, Sebastian J., and Alexander, Daniel C.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition ,Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods ,Statistics - Machine Learning - Abstract
Here we present DIVE: Data-driven Inference of Vertexwise Evolution. DIVE is an image-based disease progression model with single-vertex resolution, designed to reconstruct long-term patterns of brain pathology from short-term longitudinal data sets. DIVE clusters vertex-wise biomarker measurements on the cortical surface that have similar temporal dynamics across a patient population, and concurrently estimates an average trajectory of vertex measurements in each cluster. DIVE uniquely outputs a parcellation of the cortex into areas with common progression patterns, leading to a new signature for individual diseases. DIVE further estimates the disease stage and progression speed for every visit of every subject, potentially enhancing stratification for clinical trials or management. On simulated data, DIVE can recover ground truth clusters and their underlying trajectory, provided the average trajectories are sufficiently different between clusters. We demonstrate DIVE on data from two cohorts: the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) and the Dementia Research Centre (DRC), UK, containing patients with Posterior Cortical Atrophy (PCA) as well as typical Alzheimer's disease (tAD). DIVE finds similar spatial patterns of atrophy for tAD subjects in the two independent datasets (ADNI and DRC), and further reveals distinct patterns of pathology in different diseases (tAD vs PCA) and for distinct types of biomarker data: cortical thickness from Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) vs amyloid load from Positron Emission Tomography (PET). Finally, DIVE can be used to estimate a fine-grained spatial distribution of pathology in the brain using any kind of voxelwise or vertexwise measures including Jacobian compression maps, fractional anisotropy (FA) maps from diffusion imaging or other PET measures. DIVE source code is available online: https://github.com/mrazvan22/dive, Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables, 1 algorithm
- Published
- 2019
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26. Disease Knowledge Transfer across Neurodegenerative Diseases
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Marinescu, Razvan V., Lorenzi, Marco, Blumberg, Stefano B., Young, Alexandra L., Morell, Pere P., Oxtoby, Neil P., Eshaghi, Arman, Yong, Keir X., Crutch, Sebastian J., Golland, Polina, and Alexander, Daniel C.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods ,Statistics - Machine Learning - Abstract
We introduce Disease Knowledge Transfer (DKT), a novel technique for transferring biomarker information between related neurodegenerative diseases. DKT infers robust multimodal biomarker trajectories in rare neurodegenerative diseases even when only limited, unimodal data is available, by transferring information from larger multimodal datasets from common neurodegenerative diseases. DKT is a joint-disease generative model of biomarker progressions, which exploits biomarker relationships that are shared across diseases. Our proposed method allows, for the first time, the estimation of plausible, multimodal biomarker trajectories in Posterior Cortical Atrophy (PCA), a rare neurodegenerative disease where only unimodal MRI data is available. For this we train DKT on a combined dataset containing subjects with two distinct diseases and sizes of data available: 1) a larger, multimodal typical AD (tAD) dataset from the TADPOLE Challenge, and 2) a smaller unimodal Posterior Cortical Atrophy (PCA) dataset from the Dementia Research Centre (DRC), for which only a limited number of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scans are available. Although validation is challenging due to lack of data in PCA, we validate DKT on synthetic data and two patient datasets (TADPOLE and PCA cohorts), showing it can estimate the ground truth parameters in the simulation and predict unseen biomarkers on the two patient datasets. While we demonstrated DKT on Alzheimer's variants, we note DKT is generalisable to other forms of related neurodegenerative diseases. Source code for DKT is available online: https://github.com/mrazvan22/dkt., Comment: accepted at MICCAI 2019, 13 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables
- Published
- 2019
27. Disease Progression Modeling in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
- Author
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Young, Alexandra L, Bragman, Felix JS, Rangelov, Bojidar, Han, MeiLan K, Galbán, Craig J, Lynch, David A, Hawkes, David J, Alexander, Daniel C, Hurst, John R, Crapo, James D, Silverman, Edwin K, Make, Barry J, Regan, Elizabeth A, Beaty, Terri, Begum, Ferdouse, Castaldi, Peter J, Cho, Michael, DeMeo, Dawn L, Boueiz, Adel R, Foreman, Marilyn G, Halper-Stromberg, Eitan, Hayden, Lystra P, Hersh, Craig P, Hetmanski, Jacqueline, Hobbs, Brian D, Hokanson, John E, Laird, Nan, Lange, Christoph, Lutz, Sharon M, McDonald, Merry-Lynn, Parker, Margaret M, Qiao, Dandi, Wan, Emily S, Won, Sungho, Sakornsakolpat, Phuwanat, Prokopenko, Dmitry, Al Qaisi, Mustafa, Coxson, Harvey O, Gray, Teresa, Hoffman, Eric A, Humphries, Stephen, Jacobson, Francine L, Judy, Philip F, Kazerooni, Ella A, Kluiber, Alex, Newell, John D, Ross, James C, Estepar, Raul San Jose, Schroeder, Joyce, Sieren, Jered, Stinson, Douglas, Stoel, Berend C, Tschirren, Juerg, Van Beek, Edwin, van Ginneken, Bram, van Rikxoort, Eva, Washko, George, Wilson, Carla G, Jensen, Robert, Everett, Douglas, Crooks, Jim, Moore, Camille, Strand, Matt, Hughes, John, Kinney, Gregory, Pratte, Katherine, Young, Kendra A, Bhatt, Surya, Bon, Jessica, Martinez, Carlos, Murray, Susan, Soler, Xavier, Bowler, Russell P, Kechris, Katerina, Banaei-Kashani, Farnoush, Curtis, Jeffrey L, Martinez, Carlos H, Pernicano, Perry G, Hanania, Nicola, Alapat, Philip, Atik, Mustafa, Bandi, Venkata, Boriek, Aladin, Guntupalli, Kalpatha, Guy, Elizabeth, Nachiappan, Arun, Parulekar, Amit, Barr, R Graham, Austin, John, D’Souza, Belinda, Pearson, Gregory DN, Rozenshtein, Anna, Thomashow, Byron, MacIntyre, Neil, McAdams, H Page, Washington, Lacey, McEvoy, Charlene, and Tashjian, Joseph
- Subjects
Biomedical Imaging ,Lung ,Clinical Research ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Aetiology ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Respiratory ,Aged ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Models ,Theoretical ,Pulmonary Disease ,Chronic Obstructive ,Tomography ,X-Ray Computed ,clustering ,CT imaging ,emphysema ,bronchitis ,chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ,COPDGene Investigators ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Respiratory System - Abstract
Rationale: The decades-long progression of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) renders identifying different trajectories of disease progression challenging.Objectives: To identify subtypes of patients with COPD with distinct longitudinal progression patterns using a novel machine-learning tool called "Subtype and Stage Inference" (SuStaIn) and to evaluate the utility of SuStaIn for patient stratification in COPD.Methods: We applied SuStaIn to cross-sectional computed tomography imaging markers in 3,698 Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) 1-4 patients and 3,479 controls from the COPDGene (COPD Genetic Epidemiology) study to identify subtypes of patients with COPD. We confirmed the identified subtypes and progression patterns using ECLIPSE (Evaluation of COPD Longitudinally to Identify Predictive Surrogate Endpoints) data. We assessed the utility of SuStaIn for patient stratification by comparing SuStaIn subtypes and stages at baseline with longitudinal follow-up data.Measurements and Main Results: We identified two trajectories of disease progression in COPD: a "Tissue→Airway" subtype (n = 2,354, 70.4%), in which small airway dysfunction and emphysema precede large airway wall abnormalities, and an "Airway→Tissue" subtype (n = 988, 29.6%), in which large airway wall abnormalities precede emphysema and small airway dysfunction. Subtypes were reproducible in ECLIPSE. Baseline stage in both subtypes correlated with future FEV1/FVC decline (r = -0.16 [P
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- 2020
28. Transferability of Alzheimer's disease progression subtypes to an independent population cohort
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Chen, Hanyi, Young, Alexandra, Oxtoby, Neil P., Barkhof, Frederik, Alexander, Daniel C., and Altmann, Andre
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- 2023
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29. Self-management by older people living with cancer and multi-morbidity: a qualitative study
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Corbett, Teresa, Lee, Kellyn, Cummings, Amanda, Calman, Lynn, Farrington, Naomi, Lewis, Lucy, Young, Alexandra, Richardson, Alison, Foster, Claire, and Bridges, Jackie
- Published
- 2022
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30. TADPOLE Challenge: Prediction of Longitudinal Evolution in Alzheimer's Disease
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Marinescu, Razvan V., Oxtoby, Neil P., Young, Alexandra L., Bron, Esther E., Toga, Arthur W., Weiner, Michael W., Barkhof, Frederik, Fox, Nick C., Klein, Stefan, Alexander, Daniel C., and Consortium, the EuroPOND
- Subjects
Quantitative Biology - Populations and Evolution ,Statistics - Applications - Abstract
The Alzheimer's Disease Prediction Of Longitudinal Evolution (TADPOLE) Challenge compares the performance of algorithms at predicting future evolution of individuals at risk of Alzheimer's disease. TADPOLE Challenge participants train their models and algorithms on historical data from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) study or any other datasets to which they have access. Participants are then required to make monthly forecasts over a period of 5 years from January 2018, of three key outcomes for ADNI-3 rollover participants: clinical diagnosis, Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale Cognitive Subdomain (ADAS-Cog13), and total volume of the ventricles. These individual forecasts are later compared with the corresponding future measurements in ADNI-3 (obtained after the TADPOLE submission deadline). The first submission phase of TADPOLE was open for prize-eligible submissions between 15 June and 15 November 2017. The submission system remains open via the website: https://tadpole.grand-challenge.org, although since 15 November 2017 submissions are not eligible for the first round of prizes. This paper describes the design of the TADPOLE Challenge., Comment: For more details on TADPOLE Challenge, see https://tadpole.grand-challenge.org/ This paper outlines the design of the TADPOLE Challenge. Paper contains 8 pages, 2 figures, 5 tables
- Published
- 2018
31. Longitudinal neuroanatomical and cognitive progression of posterior cortical atrophy.
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Firth, Nicholas C, Primativo, Silvia, Marinescu, Razvan-Valentin, Shakespeare, Timothy J, Suarez-Gonzalez, Aida, Lehmann, Manja, Carton, Amelia, Ocal, Dilek, Pavisic, Ivanna, Paterson, Ross W, Slattery, Catherine F, Foulkes, Alexander JM, Ridha, Basil H, Gil-Néciga, Eulogio, Oxtoby, Neil P, Young, Alexandra L, Modat, Marc, Cardoso, M Jorge, Ourselin, Sebastien, Ryan, Natalie S, Miller, Bruce L, Rabinovici, Gil D, Warrington, Elizabeth K, Rossor, Martin N, Fox, Nick C, Warren, Jason D, Alexander, Daniel C, Schott, Jonathan M, Yong, Keir XX, and Crutch, Sebastian J
- Subjects
Cerebral Cortex ,Humans ,Alzheimer Disease ,Disease Progression ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Case-Control Studies ,Longitudinal Studies ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Models ,Neurological ,Middle Aged ,Female ,Male ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Alzheimer’s disease ,brain atrophy ,dementia ,memory ,structural MRI ,Alzheimer's disease ,Models ,Neurological ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences - Abstract
Posterior cortical atrophy is a clinico-radiological syndrome characterized by progressive decline in visual processing and atrophy of posterior brain regions. With the majority of cases attributable to Alzheimer's disease and recent evidence for genetic risk factors specifically related to posterior cortical atrophy, the syndrome can provide important insights into selective vulnerability and phenotypic diversity. The present study describes the first major longitudinal investigation of posterior cortical atrophy disease progression. Three hundred and sixty-one individuals (117 posterior cortical atrophy, 106 typical Alzheimer's disease, 138 controls) fulfilling consensus criteria for posterior cortical atrophy-pure and typical Alzheimer's disease were recruited from three centres in the UK, Spain and USA. Participants underwent up to six annual assessments involving MRI scans and neuropsychological testing. We constructed longitudinal trajectories of regional brain volumes within posterior cortical atrophy and typical Alzheimer's disease using differential equation models. We compared and contrasted the order in which regional brain volumes become abnormal within posterior cortical atrophy and typical Alzheimer's disease using event-based models. We also examined trajectories of cognitive decline and the order in which different cognitive tests show abnormality using the same models. Temporally aligned trajectories for eight regions of interest revealed distinct (P < 0.002) patterns of progression in posterior cortical atrophy and typical Alzheimer's disease. Patients with posterior cortical atrophy showed early occipital and parietal atrophy, with subsequent higher rates of temporal atrophy and ventricular expansion leading to tissue loss of comparable extent later. Hippocampal, entorhinal and frontal regions underwent a lower rate of change and never approached the extent of posterior cortical involvement. Patients with typical Alzheimer's disease showed early hippocampal atrophy, with subsequent higher rates of temporal atrophy and ventricular expansion. Cognitive models showed tests sensitive to visuospatial dysfunction declined earlier in posterior cortical atrophy than typical Alzheimer's disease whilst tests sensitive to working memory impairment declined earlier in typical Alzheimer's disease than posterior cortical atrophy. These findings indicate that posterior cortical atrophy and typical Alzheimer's disease have distinct sites of onset and different profiles of spatial and temporal progression. The ordering of disease events both motivates investigation of biological factors underpinning phenotypic heterogeneity, and informs the selection of measures for clinical trials in posterior cortical atrophy.
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- 2019
32. How Tesla Planted the Seeds for Its Own Potential Downfall
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Bennhold, Katrin, Hvistendahl, Mara, Novetsky, Rikki, Zadie, Mooj, Bonja, Rachelle, Chow, Lisa, Young, Alexandra Leigh, Lozano, Marion, Wong, Diane, Ittoop, Elisheba, Lanman, Sophia, and Wood, Chris
- Subjects
News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Listen and follow The DailyApple Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon Music When Elon Musk set up Tesla’s factory in China, he made a bet that brought him cheap parts and [...]
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- 2024
33. Uncovering the heterogeneity and temporal complexity of neurodegenerative diseases with Subtype and Stage Inference.
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Young, Alexandra L, Marinescu, Razvan V, Oxtoby, Neil P, Bocchetta, Martina, Yong, Keir, Firth, Nicholas C, Cash, David M, Thomas, David L, Dick, Katrina M, Cardoso, Jorge, van Swieten, John, Borroni, Barbara, Galimberti, Daniela, Masellis, Mario, Tartaglia, Maria Carmela, Rowe, James B, Graff, Caroline, Tagliavini, Fabrizio, Frisoni, Giovanni B, Laforce, Robert, Finger, Elizabeth, de Mendonça, Alexandre, Sorbi, Sandro, Warren, Jason D, Crutch, Sebastian, Fox, Nick C, Ourselin, Sebastien, Schott, Jonathan M, Rohrer, Jonathan D, Alexander, Daniel C, Genetic FTD Initiative (GENFI), and Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI)
- Subjects
Genetic FTD Initiative ,Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative ,Humans ,Alzheimer Disease ,Neurodegenerative Diseases ,Reproducibility of Results ,Genotype ,Phenotype ,Models ,Neurological ,Time Factors ,Frontotemporal Dementia ,Models ,Neurological ,Alzheimer's Disease ,Brain Disorders ,Genetics ,Aging ,Neurodegenerative ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,Dementia ,Alzheimer's Disease including Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias ,Neurosciences ,Rare Diseases ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,MD Multidisciplinary - Abstract
The heterogeneity of neurodegenerative diseases is a key confound to disease understanding and treatment development, as study cohorts typically include multiple phenotypes on distinct disease trajectories. Here we introduce a machine-learning technique-Subtype and Stage Inference (SuStaIn)-able to uncover data-driven disease phenotypes with distinct temporal progression patterns, from widely available cross-sectional patient studies. Results from imaging studies in two neurodegenerative diseases reveal subgroups and their distinct trajectories of regional neurodegeneration. In genetic frontotemporal dementia, SuStaIn identifies genotypes from imaging alone, validating its ability to identify subtypes; further the technique reveals within-genotype heterogeneity. In Alzheimer's disease, SuStaIn uncovers three subtypes, uniquely characterising their temporal complexity. SuStaIn provides fine-grained patient stratification, which substantially enhances the ability to predict conversion between diagnostic categories over standard models that ignore subtype (p = 7.18 × 10-4) or temporal stage (p = 3.96 × 10-5). SuStaIn offers new promise for enabling disease subtype discovery and precision medicine.
- Published
- 2018
34. Distinct spatiotemporal atrophy patterns in corticobasal syndrome are associated with different underlying pathologies
- Author
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Scotton, William J, primary, Shand, Cameron, additional, Todd, Emily, additional, Bocchetta, Martina, additional, Cash, David M, additional, VandeVrede, Lawren, additional, Heuer, Hilary W, additional, Young, Alexandra L, additional, Oxtoby, Neil P, additional, Alexander, Daniel C, additional, Rowe, James B, additional, Morris, Huw, additional, Boxer, Adam L, additional, Rohrer, Jonathan D, additional, and Wijeratne, Peter A, additional
- Published
- 2024
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35. Accuracy of delirium assessments in critically ill children: A prospective, observational study during routine care
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Paterson, Rebecca S., Kenardy, Justin A., Dow, Belinda L., De Young, Alexandra C., Pearson, Kylie, Aitken, Leanne M., and Long, Debbie A.
- Published
- 2021
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36. Mortality surrogates in combined pulmonary fibrosis and emphysema
- Author
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Longziekten, Zhao, An, Gudmundsson, Eyjolfur, Mogulkoc, Nesrin, van Moorsel, Coline, Corte, Tamera J, Vasudev, Pardeep, Romei, Chiara, Chapman, Robert, Wallis, Tim J M, Denneny, Emma, Goos, Tinne, Savas, Recep, Ahmed, Asia, Brereton, Christopher J, van Es, Hendrik W, Jo, Helen, De Liperi, Annalisa, Duncan, Mark, Pontoppidan, Katarina, De Sadeleer, Laurens J, van Beek, Frouke, Barnett, Joseph, Cross, Gary, Procter, Alex, Veltkamp, Marcel, Hopkins, Peter, Moodley, Yuben, Taliani, Alessandro, Taylor, Magali, Verleden, Stijn, Tavanti, Laura, Vermant, Marie, Nair, Arjun, Stewart, Iain, Janes, Sam M, Young, Alexandra L, Barber, David, Alexander, Daniel C, Porter, Joanna C, Wells, Athol U, Jones, Mark G, Wuyts, Wim A, Jacob, Joseph, Longziekten, Zhao, An, Gudmundsson, Eyjolfur, Mogulkoc, Nesrin, van Moorsel, Coline, Corte, Tamera J, Vasudev, Pardeep, Romei, Chiara, Chapman, Robert, Wallis, Tim J M, Denneny, Emma, Goos, Tinne, Savas, Recep, Ahmed, Asia, Brereton, Christopher J, van Es, Hendrik W, Jo, Helen, De Liperi, Annalisa, Duncan, Mark, Pontoppidan, Katarina, De Sadeleer, Laurens J, van Beek, Frouke, Barnett, Joseph, Cross, Gary, Procter, Alex, Veltkamp, Marcel, Hopkins, Peter, Moodley, Yuben, Taliani, Alessandro, Taylor, Magali, Verleden, Stijn, Tavanti, Laura, Vermant, Marie, Nair, Arjun, Stewart, Iain, Janes, Sam M, Young, Alexandra L, Barber, David, Alexander, Daniel C, Porter, Joanna C, Wells, Athol U, Jones, Mark G, Wuyts, Wim A, and Jacob, Joseph
- Published
- 2024
37. "I Thought It Was Better to Be Safe Than Sorry": Factors Influencing Parental Decisions on HPV and Other Adolescent Vaccinations for Students with Intellectual Disability and/or Autism in New South Wales, Australia.
- Author
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Carter, Allison, Klinner, Christiane, Young, Alexandra, Strnadová, Iva, Wong, Horas, Vujovich-Dunn, Cassandra, Newman, Christy E., Davies, Cristyn, Skinner, S. Rachel, Danchin, Margie, Hynes, Sarah, and Guy, Rebecca
- Subjects
HEALTH attitudes ,YOUNG adults ,HUMAN papillomavirus ,VACCINE hesitancy ,PARENT attitudes - Abstract
The uptake of human papilloma virus (HPV) and other adolescent vaccinations in special schools for young people with disability is significantly lower than in mainstream settings. This study explored the factors believed to influence parental decision making regarding vaccine uptake for students with intellectual disability and/or on the autism spectrum attending special schools in New South Wales, Australia, from the perspective of all stakeholders involved in the program. Focus groups and interviews were conducted with 40 participants, including parents, school staff, and immunisation providers. The thematic analysis identified two themes: (1) appreciating diverse parental attitudes towards vaccination and (2) educating parents and managing vaccination questions and concerns. While most parents were described as pro-vaccination, others were anti-vaccination or vaccination-hesitant, articulating a marked protectiveness regarding their child's health. Reasons for vaccine hesitancy included beliefs that vaccines cause autism, concerns that the vaccination may be traumatic for the child, vaccination fatigue following COVID-19, and assumptions that children with disability will not be sexually active. Special school staff regarded the vaccination information pack as inadequate for families, and nurses described limited educational impact resulting from minimal direct communication with parents. More effective communication strategies are needed to address vaccine hesitancy among parents with children with disability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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38. Multimodal subtypes identified in Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative participants by missing-data-enabled subtype and stage inference.
- Author
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Estarellas, Mar, Oxtoby, Neil P, Schott, Jonathan M, Alexander, Daniel C, and Young, Alexandra L
- Published
- 2024
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39. TADPOLE Challenge: Accurate Alzheimer’s Disease Prediction Through Crowdsourced Forecasting of Future Data
- Author
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Marinescu, Răzvan V., Oxtoby, Neil P., Young, Alexandra L., Bron, Esther E., Toga, Arthur W., Weiner, Michael W., Barkhof, Frederik, Fox, Nick C., Golland, Polina, Klein, Stefan, Alexander, Daniel C., Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Woeginger, Gerhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Rekik, Islem, editor, Adeli, Ehsan, editor, and Park, Sang Hyun, editor
- Published
- 2019
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40. Disease Knowledge Transfer Across Neurodegenerative Diseases
- Author
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Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, Marinescu, Răzvan V., Lorenzi, Marco, Blumberg, Stefano B., Young, Alexandra L., Planell-Morell, Pere, Oxtoby, Neil P., Eshaghi, Arman, Yong, Keir X., Crutch, Sebastian J., Golland, Polina, Alexander, Daniel C., Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Woeginger, Gerhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Shen, Dinggang, editor, Liu, Tianming, editor, Peters, Terry M., editor, Staib, Lawrence H., editor, Essert, Caroline, editor, Zhou, Sean, editor, Yap, Pew-Thian, editor, and Khan, Ali, editor
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. InSpect: INtegrated SPECTral Component Estimation and Mapping for Multi-contrast Microstructural MRI
- Author
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Slator, Paddy J., Hutter, Jana, Marinescu, Razvan V., Palombo, Marco, Young, Alexandra L., Jackson, Laurence H., Ho, Alison, Chappell, Lucy C., Rutherford, Mary, Hajnal, Joseph V., Alexander, Daniel C., Hutchison, David, Editorial Board Member, Kanade, Takeo, Editorial Board Member, Kittler, Josef, Editorial Board Member, Kleinberg, Jon M., Editorial Board Member, Mattern, Friedemann, Editorial Board Member, Mitchell, John C., Editorial Board Member, Naor, Moni, Editorial Board Member, Pandu Rangan, C., Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Terzopoulos, Demetri, Editorial Board Member, Tygar, Doug, Editorial Board Member, Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Chung, Albert C. S., editor, Gee, James C., editor, Yushkevich, Paul A., editor, and Bao, Siqi, editor
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Older people's experiences in acute care settings: Systematic review and synthesis of qualitative studies
- Author
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Bridges, Jackie, Collins, Pippa, Flatley, Mary, Hope, Joanna, and Young, Alexandra
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Patterned Dielectric Back Contact Design Space for Gaas Thermophotovoltaic Devices
- Author
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Arulanandam, Madhan Kumar, primary, Buencuerpo, Jeronimo, additional, Steiner, Myles, additional, Kuritzky, Leah Y., additional, Young, Alexandra R., additional, Tervo, Eric J., additional, Perl, Emmett E., additional, Kayes, Brendan M., additional, Briggs, Justin A., additional, and King, Richard R., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Clinical Setting Comparative Analysis of Uropathogens and Antibiotic Resistance: A Retrospective Study Spanning the Coronavirus Disease 2019 Pandemic
- Author
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Young, Alexandra M, primary, Tanaka, Mark M, additional, Yuwono, Christopher, additional, Wehrhahn, Michael C, additional, and Zhang, Li, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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45. Disease progression modelling reveals heterogeneity in trajectories of Lewy-type alpha-synuclein pathology
- Author
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Mastenbroek, Sophie E, primary, Vogel, Jacob W, additional, Collij, Lyduine E, additional, Serrano, Geidy E, additional, Tremblay, Cecilia, additional, Young, Alexandra L, additional, Arce, Richard A, additional, Shill, Holly A, additional, Driver-Dunckley, Erika D, additional, Mehta, Shyamal H, additional, Belden, Christine M, additional, Atri, Alireza, additional, Choudhury, Parichita, additional, Barkhof, Frederik, additional, Adler, Charles H, additional, Ossenkoppele, Rik, additional, Beach, Thomas G, additional, and Hansson, Oskar, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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46. Uncovering distinct spatial‐temporal trajectories of Lewy‐type α‐synuclein pathology: a Subtype and Stage Inference model analysis
- Author
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Mastenbroek, Sophie E, primary, Vogel, Jacob W, additional, Collij, Lyduine E., additional, Serrano, Geidy E, additional, Young, Alexandra L., additional, Barkhof, Frederik, additional, Ossenkoppele, Rik, additional, Beach, Thomas G, additional, and Hansson, Oskar, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Identifying multiple sclerosis subtypes using unsupervised machine learning and MRI data
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Eshaghi, Arman, Young, Alexandra L., Wijeratne, Peter A., Prados, Ferran, Arnold, Douglas L., Narayanan, Sridar, Guttmann, Charles R. G., Barkhof, Frederik, Alexander, Daniel C., Thompson, Alan J., Chard, Declan, and Ciccarelli, Olga
- Published
- 2021
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48. Author Correction: Identifying multiple sclerosis subtypes using unsupervised machine learning and MRI data
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Eshaghi, Arman, Young, Alexandra L., Wijeratne, Peter A., Prados, Ferran, Arnold, Douglas L., Narayanan, Sridar, Guttmann, Charles R. G., Barkhof, Frederik, Alexander, Daniel C., Thompson, Alan J., Chard, Declan, and Ciccarelli, Olga
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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49. Gold Bars, Wads of Cash and a Senator’s Indictment
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Tavernise, Sabrina, Harper, Sydney, Tan, Stella, Young, Alexandra Leigh, Krupke, Eric, Ploeg, Luke Vander, Diao, Lexie, Chow, Lisa, Lozano, Marion, Ittoop, Elisheba, and Wood, Chris
- Subjects
Political corruption ,Precious metals industry ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Listen and follow The DailyApple Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon Music In one of the most serious political corruption cases in recent history, federal prosecutors have accused a senior U.S. [...]
- Published
- 2023
50. Prion propagation estimated from brain diffusion MRI is subtype dependent in sporadic Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease
- Author
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Pascuzzo, Riccardo, Oxtoby, Neil P., Young, Alexandra L., Blevins, Janis, Castelli, Gianmarco, Garbarino, Sara, Cohen, Mark L., Schonberger, Lawrence B., Gambetti, Pierluigi, Appleby, Brian S., Alexander, Daniel C., and Bizzi, Alberto
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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