Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
January 2025
Daily life for humans and other animals requires switching between periods of threat- and reward-oriented behavior. We investigated neural activity associated with spontaneous switching, in a naturalistic task, between foraging for rewards and seeking information about potential threats with 7T fMRI in healthy humans. Switching was driven by estimates of likelihood of threat and reward.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Use of functional MRI in awake non-human primate (NHPs) has recently increased. Scanning animals while awake makes data collection possible in the absence of anesthetic modulation and with an extended range of possible experimental designs. Robust awake NHP imaging however is challenging due to the strong artifacts caused by time-varying off-resonance changes introduced by the animal's body motion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: causes opportunistic respiratory infections and is associated with declining lung function in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF). Risk factors for carrying remain unclear.
Methods: We conducted a retrospective study of patients yielding ⩾1 respiratory isolate at the Oxford University Hospitals Trust between 2014 and 2019 and a cohort study of carriage in CF patients attending annual review in 2018.
There has been increasing interest in using neuroimaging measures to predict psychiatric disorders. However, predictions usually rely on large brain networks and large disorder heterogeneity. Thus, they lack both anatomical and behavioural specificity, preventing the advancement of targeted interventions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe decision that it is worth doing something rather than nothing is a core yet understudied feature of voluntary behaviour. Here we study "willingness to act", the probability of making a response given the context. Human volunteers encountered opportunities to make effortful actions in order to receive rewards, while watching a movie inside a 7 T MRI scanner.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
May 2020
Decisions about when to act are critical for survival in humans as in animals, but how a desire is translated into the decision that an action is worth taking at any particular point in time is incompletely understood. Here we show that a simple model developed to explain when animals decide it is worth taking an action also explains a significant portion of the variance in timing observed when humans take voluntary actions. The model focuses on the current environment's potential for reward, the timing of the individual's own recent actions, and the outcomes of those actions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Cystic fibrosis manifests as a multisystem disease, despite this female fertility is relatively preserved with levels approaching that of the non-cystic fibrosis population. We reviewed pregnancies in cystic fibrosis patients over a 10-year period from a UK adult cystic fibrosis centre by considering maternal and fetal outcomes.
Methods: We conducted a retrospective case-note review of pregnancies during 2003-2013 using respiratory and obstetric records.
Study Design: Prospective repeated-measures longitudinal study.
Objectives: To determine if an 8-week course of an oral anabolic steroid can positively effect body composition or pulmonary function in healthy individuals with chronic tetraplegia.
Setting: United States.
Bronchiolitis obliterans and its clinical correlate bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS) are a major cause of morbidity and mortality following lung transplantation. Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) may be a contributing factor for the development of BOS. Since 2002, all recipients of lung and heart-lung transplantation at our institution have been routinely investigated for GERD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA significant genetic influence in osteoarthritis has been observed in the combination of Heberden's nodes and generalized osteoarthritis. We examined whether mutation in the gene encoding the major cartilage matrix protein type II collagen was responsible by comparing allele frequencies at the locus (COL2A1) in a group of 61 patients with nodal GOA with a control population and by analysing the COL2A1 genotypes of 21 affected sibling pairs. There were no significant allele differences but a slightly increased tendency over chance alone for affected siblings to have inherited the same COL2A1 alleles from their parents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDominantly inherited osteogenesis imperfecta is consistently linked to the two loci encoding the alpha 1 and alpha 2 subunits of collagen 1, the predominant bone collagen. We have performed several prenatal diagnoses based on identification of the segregating allele at the concordant locus in chorionic villus samples both in families where the linkage can be independently shown and in those where it cannot. Especially in the latter category, calculation of the final risk must incorporate an estimate of genetic heterogeneity within the OI population to give a prior probability of linkage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe basal metabolic rate (BMR) was determined in 14 pairs of monozygotic (MZ; 11 females, 3 males) and 12 pairs of dizygotic (DZ; 10 females, 2 males) twins, with mean ages of 22.7 and 26 years. Zygosity was confirmed using DNA fingerprinting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmplification of a variable region 3' to the human type II collagen gene (COL2A1) has permitted segregation analysis in a three generation Stickler syndrome pedigree. This family had previously proved uninformative for the known restriction fragment length dimorphisms. Amplification of the variable region revealed five distinguishable alleles, of which three were segregating in this family.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeventy-seven persons with a variety of heritable chondrodysplasias were screened for gross rearrangements of the structural gene encoding the major cartilage collagen, collagen II. None was found. Segregation of the locus (COL2A1) was studied in 19 pedigrees using three restriction site dimorphisms (shown by PvuII, HindIII, and BamHI) and a length polymorphism as linkage markers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLinkage markers at or close to the genes encoding the three major fibrillar collagens were used to analyze the segregation of these loci in six pedigrees with dominantly inherited Marfan syndrome. Four pedigrees were discordant at one of the Type I collagen loci (COL1A2), and, of these, two were discordant at the other Type I locus (COL1A1). The Marfan syndrome also segregated independently of the structural loci for Type II and Type III collagen in these two families.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF60 of 83 middle-aged white men had an XbaI restriction site polymorphism within the coding sequence of the apolipoprotein B gene. Subjects homozygous and heterozygous for the presence of an XbaI restriction site had mean serum triglyceride levels 36% higher (p = 0.02) than those in homozygotes without the restriction site; there was a less substantial difference (p = 0.
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