Publications by authors named "James T Kennedy"

Article Synopsis
  • The text discusses the importance of measuring the stability of individual differences in research, particularly using functional MRI (fMRI) for understanding behaviors and disorders.
  • Recent findings indicate that the reliability and stability of fMRI measures in adults may be lacking, and little is known about these measures in children.
  • In a study using the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) dataset, it was found that both short-term and long-term reliability of task-fMRI in children were "poor," significantly affected by motion during scanning, which could impede the ability to analyze brain-behavior relationships effectively.
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Article Synopsis
  • Temporal stability of individual differences in neurocognition is crucial for understanding relationships with real-world behaviors like substance abuse and mental health issues.
  • The study assessed neurocognitive changes in a diverse group of adolescents over two years, finding significant performance improvements with age, particularly in tasks related to pattern recognition and crystallized cognition.
  • While certain measures showed good stability, the findings suggest that some observed changes might be influenced by practice effects or differences in testing conditions, highlighting the need for careful interpretation of longitudinal data in neurocognitive development.
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Response inhibition (RI) and error monitoring (EM) are important processes of adaptive goal-directed behavior, and neural correlates of these processes are being increasingly used as transdiagnostic biomarkers of risk for a range of neuropsychiatric disorders. Potential utility of these purported biomarkers relies on the assumption that individual differences in brain activation are reproducible over time; however, available data on test-retest reliability (TRR) of task-fMRI are very mixed. This study examined TRR of RI and EM-related activations using a stop signal task in young adults ( = 56, including 27 pairs of monozygotic (MZ) twins) in order to identify brain regions with high TRR and familial influences (as indicated by MZ twin correlations) and to examine factors potentially affecting reliability.

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Neural correlates of decision making under risk are being increasingly utilized as biomarkers of risk for substance abuse and other psychiatric disorders, treatment outcomes, and brain development. This research relies on the basic assumption that fMRI measures of decision making represent stable, trait-like individual differences. However, reliability needs to be established for each individual construct.

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An increased propensity for risk taking is a hallmark of adolescent behavior with significant health and social consequences. Here, we elucidated cortical and subcortical regions associated with risky and risk-averse decisions and outcome evaluation using the Balloon Analog Risk Task in a large sample of adolescents (n = 256, 56% female, age 14 ± 0.6), including the level of risk as a parametric modulator.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study explores how high pressure processing (HPP) affects the degradation of nucleotides in haddock and herring, which is important for assessing fish freshness.
  • After applying HPP at different pressure levels, ATP, ADP, and AMP levels decreased in both fish, while inosine (Ino) levels increased significantly.
  • Hx levels were notably reduced in herring but not in haddock, indicating different responses to pressure treatment in these fish species.
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Background: Previous research has demonstrated significant relationships between obesity and brain structure. Both phenotypes are heritable, but it is not known whether they are influenced by common genetic factors. We investigated the genetic etiology of the relationship between individual variability in brain morphology and BMIz using structural MRI in adolescent twins.

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Adolescent obesity is associated with an increased chance of developing serious health risks later in life. Identifying the neurobiological and personality factors related to increases in adiposity is important to understanding what drives maladaptive consummatory and exercise behaviors that result in obesity. Previous research has largely focused on adults with few findings published on interactions among adiposity, brain structure, and personality.

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The formation of ATP breakdown products in chicken M. pectoralis major post-slaughter is reported. The concentrations of metabolites were followed in chicken breast throughout the carcass processing post-slaughter and during chilled storage.

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Chloromethane (CH(3)Cl), a gaseous natural product released as a secondary metabolite by many woodrotting fungi of the family Hymenochaetaceae, has been shown to act as a methyl donor for biosynthesis of methyl esters of benzoic and furoic acid in the primary metabolism of Phellinus pomaceus. The broad-specificity methylating system could esterify a wide range of aromatic and aliphatic acids. In addition to CH(3)Cl, both bromo- and iodomethanes acted as methyl donors.

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