Publications by authors named "L Delalande"

Article Synopsis
  • Prenatal experiences significantly shape cognitive and health outcomes later in life, influenced by complex interactions between parental genetics and environment.
  • Recent research has moved beyond just using birth weight as an indicator of fetal development, focusing instead on detailed brain structures like sulcal patterns that are established before birth and persist afterward.
  • The study found that factors like parental socioeconomic status and brain volume significantly impact sulcal patterns in the anterior cingulate cortex, highlighting how prenatal development can influence social inequalities across generations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: One in 7 children will need general anesthesia (GA) before the age of 3. Brain toxicity of anesthetics is controversial. Our objective was to clarify whether exposure of GA to the developing brain could lead to lasting behavioral and structural brain changes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Liquid crystalline (LC) oils offer the basis of stimuli-responsive LC-in-water emulsions. Although past studies have explored the properties of single-phase LC emulsions, few studies have focused on complex multicompartment emulsions containing co-existing isotropic and LC domains. In this paper, we report a study of multiphase emulsions using LCs and immiscible perfluoroalkanes dispersed in water or glycerol (the latter continuous phase is used to enable characterization).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A number of training interventions have been designed to improve executive functions and inhibitory control (IC) across the lifespan. Surprisingly, no study has investigated the structural neuroplasticity induced by IC training from childhood to late adolescence, a developmental period characterized by IC efficiency improvement and protracted maturation of prefrontal cortex (PFC) subregions involved in IC. The aim of the present study was to investigate the behavioral and structural changes induced by a 5-week computerized and adaptive IC training in school-aged children (10-year-olds) and in adolescents (16-year-olds).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A metal-organic molecular net composed of tannic acid (TA) and iron(iii) was constructed around the brome mosaic virus (BMV) particle to determine whether the added net could act as a transport barrier for water, and if the net could stabilize the virus in physically or chemically challenging environments. This new virus engineering strategy is expected to provide benefits both in the study and technological applications of viruses. For instance, a virus wrapped in a thin molecular layer could be extracted from solution either in air or vacuum, and its structure, composition and even internal dynamics could be interrogated by methods not compatible with a liquid environment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF