Publications by authors named "J Narayanaswamy"

A quirky truth is that the oldest biomarker findings are largely metabolic. These had minimal impact on contemporary thought and research and were largely ignored. They have been rediscovered and validated almost 100 years later, informing our understanding of neurobiology and medical comorbidity and spurring contemporary treatment discovery efforts.

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Objective: Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is associated with altered brain function related to processing of negative emotions. To investigate neural correlates of negative valence in OCD, we pooled fMRI data of 633 individuals with OCD and 453 healthy controls from 16 studies using different negatively-valenced tasks across the ENIGMA-OCD Working-Group.

Methods: Participant data were processed uniformly using HALFpipe, to extract voxelwise participant-level statistical images of one common first-level contrast: negative vs.

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Only a small number of studies have assessed structural differences between the two hemispheres during childhood and adolescence. However, the existing findings lack consistency or are restricted to a particular brain region, a specific brain feature, or a relatively narrow age range. Here, we investigated associations between brain asymmetry and age as well as sex in one of the largest pediatric samples to date (n = 4265), aged 1-18 years, scanned at 69 sites participating in the ENIGMA (Enhancing NeuroImaging Genetics through Meta-Analysis) consortium.

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Article Synopsis
  • Dysregulated prediction error-signalling may lead to auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia, with metrics like rMMN, RP, DN, and MMN helping to assess this relationship.* -
  • In a study involving 23 schizophrenia patients with auditory hallucinations and 23 healthy controls, significant differences were found in deviance detection and prediction error signaling, particularly with DN and MMN amplitudes being lower in the patients.* -
  • The results suggest that auditory hallucinations interfere with sensory adaptation and detection abilities, indicating that schizophrenia patients may not process auditory information effectively despite unimpaired short-term memory responses.*
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