Publications by authors named "Matt Jones"

Electrographic recording of brain activity through either surface electrodes (electroencephalography, EEG) or implanted electrodes (electrocorticography, ECOG) are valuable research tools in neuroscience across many disciplines, including epilepsy, sleep science and more. Research techniques to perform recordings in rodents are wide-ranging and often require custom parts that may not be readily available. Moreover, the information required to connect individual components is often limited and can therefore be challenging to implement.

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Target 15 of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework recognizes the importance of the private sector monitoring, assessing and disclosing biodiversity-related risks, dependencies and impacts. Many businesses and financial institutions are progressing with science-based assessments, targets and disclosures and integrating into strategy, risk management and capital allocation decisions. Developments will continue in response to investor expectations, emerging corporate sustainability reporting regulations in Europe, China and elsewhere and evolving global sustainability reporting standards.

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  • Advanced Practice Physiotherapists (APPs) increasingly use MRI to diagnose lumbosacral radiculopathy (LSR) and rule out other spinal issues, but there's limited data on how their assessments correlate with MRI findings.
  • The study analyzed the diagnostic and treatment plan differences pre- and post-MRI for 482 patients, revealing significant correlations between APP diagnoses and MRI results.
  • Findings indicate a weak but statistically significant correlation between pre- and post-MRI treatment plans, suggesting APP diagnoses align somewhat with MRI outcomes, though the impact on treatment may vary.
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  • Chronopsychiatry focuses on the connection between circadian rhythms and mental health, highlighting their clinical importance.
  • This approach encourages understanding mental disorders through time-sensitive frameworks, instead of just static models.
  • It promotes chronotherapeutic strategies, which are treatments that take into account the timing of interventions for better mental health outcomes.
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Mutations in SYNGAP1 are a common genetic cause of intellectual disability (ID) and a risk factor for autism. SYNGAP1 encodes a synaptic GTPase-activating protein (GAP) that has both signaling and scaffolding roles. Most pathogenic variants of SYNGAP1 are predicted to result in haploinsufficiency.

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Head-fixation of mice enables high-resolution monitoring of neuronal activity coupled with precise control of environmental stimuli. Virtual reality can be used to emulate the visual experience of movement during head fixation, but a low inertia floating real-world environment (mobile homecage, MHC) has the potential to engage more sensory modalities and provide a richer experimental environment for complex behavioral tasks. However, it is not known whether mice react to this adapted environment in a similar manner to real environments, or whether the MHC can be used to implement validated, maze-based behavioral tasks.

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The ability to interpret face-emotion displays is critical for the development of adaptive social interactions. Using a novel variant of a computational model and fMRI data, we examined behavioral and neural associations between two metrics of face-emotion labeling (sensitivity and bias) and age in youth. Youth and adults (n = 44, M age = 20.

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Immune checkpoint therapy (ICT) causes durable tumour responses in a subgroup of patients, but it is not well known how T cell receptor beta (TCRβ) repertoire dynamics contribute to the therapeutic response. Using murine models that exclude variation in host genetics, environmental factors and tumour mutation burden, limiting variation between animals to naturally diverse TCRβ repertoires, we applied TCRseq, single cell RNAseq and flow cytometry to study TCRβ repertoire dynamics in ICT responders and non-responders. Increased oligoclonal expansion of TCRβ clonotypes was observed in responding tumours.

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Aims: The primary aim of this study was to report the radiological outcomes of patients with a dorsally displaced distal radius fracture who were randomized to a moulded cast or surgical fixation with wires following manipulation and closed reduction of their fracture. The secondary aim was to correlate radiological outcomes with patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) in the year following injury.

Methods: Participants were recruited as part of DRAFFT2, a UK multicentre clinical trial.

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Bowers et al. express skepticism about deep neural networks (DNNs) as models of human vision due to DNNs' failures to account for results from psychological research. We argue that to fairly assess DNNs, we must first train them on more human-like tasks which we hypothesize will induce more human-like behaviors and representations.

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Background: Mood disorders commonly onset during adolescence and young adulthood and are conceptually and empirically related to reinforcement learning abnormalities. However, the nature of abnormalities associated with acute symptom severity versus lifetime diagnosis remains unclear, and prior research has often failed to disentangle working memory from reward processes.

Methods: The present sample (N = 220) included adolescents and young adults with a lifetime history of unipolar disorders (n = 127), bipolar disorders (n = 28), or no history of psychopathology (n = 62), and varying severity of mood symptoms.

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Introduction: Millions of people worldwide take medications such as L-DOPA that increase dopamine to treat Parkinson's disease. Yet, we do not fully understand how L-DOPA affects sleep and memory. Our earlier research in Parkinson's disease revealed that the timing of L-DOPA relative to sleep affects dopamine's impact on long-term memory.

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  • The study examines how biases in interpreting ambiguous social cues, like facial emotions, can be addressed through interpretation bias training (IBT) in youths with anxiety and irritability.
  • A sample of 71 youths aged 8-22 participated, with findings indicating that age and symptoms of anxiety or irritability influenced how well participants learned to categorize emotions during training.
  • The results suggest that younger individuals with higher negative affectivity showed slower learning rates, while older individuals demonstrated better discrimination of facial emotions, highlighting the importance of age and symptoms in learning processes.
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Beliefs that the US 2020 Presidential election was fraudulent are prevalent despite substantial contradictory evidence. Why are such beliefs often resistant to counter-evidence? Is this resistance rational, and thus subject to evidence-based arguments, or fundamentally irrational? Here we surveyed 1,642 Americans during the 2020 vote count, testing fraud belief updates given hypothetical election outcomes. Participants' fraud beliefs increased when their preferred candidate lost and decreased when he won, and both effects scaled with partisan preferences, demonstrating partisan asymmetry (desirability effects).

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Stygofauna are aquatic fauna that have evolved to live underground. The impacts of anthropogenic climate change, extraction and pollution on groundwater pose major threats to groundwater health, prompting the need for efficient and reliable means to detect and monitor stygofaunal communities. Conventional survey techniques for these species rely on morphological identification and can be biased, labour-intensive and often indeterminate to lower taxonomic levels.

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According to the theory of derived attention, organisms attend to cues with strong associations. Prior work has shown that - combined with a Rescorla-Wagner style learning mechanism - derived attention explains phenomena such as learned predictiveness, inattention to blocked cues, and value-based salience. We introduce a Bayesian derived attention model that explains a wider array of results than previous models and gives further insight into the principle of derived attention.

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  • Computer simulation games are being utilized in agriculture to help farmers, particularly in addressing issues like sheep lameness, by creating a game where players identify lame sheep in a simulated flock.
  • Researchers conducted an online study with UK sheep farmers to evaluate the game's effectiveness, using both quantitative and qualitative methods to analyze players' scores, farming experience, and feedback.
  • Results showed no correlation between farmers' game performance and their actual experience with lameness; however, participants expressed that while the game lacked realism, it was enjoyable and held potential for improvement.
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Short-term memory enables incorporation of recent experience into subsequent decision-making. This processing recruits both the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus, where neurons encode task cues, rules, and outcomes. However, precisely which information is carried when, and by which neurons, remains unclear.

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Introduction: The earliest stages of alpha-synucleinopathies are accompanied by non-specific prodromal symptoms such as diminished sense of smell, constipation and depression, as well as more specific prodromal conditions including REM Sleep Behaviour Disorder (RBD). While the majority of RBD patients will develop an alpha-synucleinopathy, one of the greatest clinical challenges is determining whether and when individual patients will phenoconvert. Clinical evaluation of a patient presenting with RBD should therefore include robust and objective assessments of known alpha-synucleinopathy prodromes.

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Light-sheet microscopes must compromise among field of view, optical sectioning, resolution, and detection efficiency. High-numerical-aperture (NA) detection objective lenses provide higher resolution, but their narrow depth of field inefficiently captures the fluorescence signal generated throughout the thickness of the illumination light sheet when imaging large volumes. Here, we present ExD-SPIM (extended depth-of-field selective-plane illumination microscopy), an improved light-sheet microscopy strategy that solves this limitation by extending the depth of field (DOF) of high-NA detection objectives to match the thickness of the illumination light sheet.

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  • Changes in sleep during middle to late life are linked to an increased risk of Alzheimer's disease, highlighting the need for accurate measurement tools to study these sleep changes over time.
  • A systematic review analyzed 52 studies on non-invasive sleep-measuring devices, with findings showing that devices generally overestimate total sleep time and sleep efficiency while struggling to accurately measure slow wave sleep, except for one specific headband device.
  • The review emphasizes the high risk of bias in the studies due to issues like closed algorithms and incomplete data, but it identifies promising devices for future research on sleep and Alzheimer's disease risk.
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  • - Exposure therapy helps reduce fear by allowing individuals to face their fears in a safe environment, but often, fear can return after the therapy session ends due to various mechanisms.
  • - Three main reasons for the return of fear include changes in the environment (renewal), the natural passage of time (spontaneous recovery), and encountering the original fear-inducing stimulus again (reinstatement).
  • - To make exposure therapy more effective, researchers are using mathematical models to understand these mechanisms better and suggest ways to strengthen the therapy's effects by minimizing the return of fear.
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