Publications by authors named "A Labonte"

Importance: The brain enters distinct activation states to support differential cognitive and emotional processes, but little is known about how brain activation states differ in youths with clinical anxiety.

Objective: To characterize brain activation states during socioemotional processing (movie stimuli) and assess associations between state characteristics and movie features and anxiety symptoms.

Design, Setting, And Participants: The Healthy Brain Network is an ongoing cross-sectional study of individuals aged 5 to 21 years experiencing difficulties in school, of whom approximately 45% met criteria for a lifetime anxiety disorder diagnosis.

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Premise: Restoration of seminatural field margins can elevate pollinator activity. However, how they support wild plant gene flow through interactions between pollinators and spatiotemporal gradients in floral resources remains largely unknown.

Methods: Using a farm-scale experiment, we tested how mating outcomes (expected heterozygosity and paternity correlation) of the wild, self-incompatible plant Cyanus segetum transplanted into field margins (sown wildflower or grass-legume strips) were affected by the abundance of different pollinator functional groups (defined by species traits).

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Article Synopsis
  • - APOB, a protein found in cholesterol-rich lipoproteins, is connected to Alzheimer's disease (AD), with high levels of APOB-containing LDL linked to both early-onset and late-onset forms of the disease.
  • - Research conducted across four cohorts demonstrated that while brain APOB protein levels positively correlated with AD-related pathology and cognitive decline, APOB mRNA levels showed an inverse relationship.
  • - The study highlights the possible implications of APOB in AD, revealing associations with Tau pathology in early stages and Aβ deposition in advanced stages, suggesting its role in lipoprotein metabolism impacts AD progression.
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The cerebral cortex comprises discrete cortical areas that form during development. Accurate area parcellation in neuroimaging studies enhances statistical power and comparability across studies. The formation of cortical areas is influenced by intrinsic embryonic patterning as well as extrinsic inputs, particularly through postnatal exposure.

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Many psychiatric conditions have their roots in early development. Individual differences in prenatal brain function (which is influenced by a combination of genetic risk and the prenatal environment) likely interact with individual differences in postnatal experience, resulting in substantial variation in brain functional organization and development in infancy. Neuroimaging has been a powerful tool for understanding typical and atypical brain function and holds promise for uncovering the neurodevelopmental basis of psychiatric illness; however, its clinical utility has been relatively limited thus far.

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