Publications by authors named "Samira Epp"

Article Synopsis
  • The human brain needs a lot of energy compared to other animals, and it's not clear why it needs so much.
  • Researchers found that certain areas of the brain that are important for thinking use up to 67% more energy than areas that help with basic movements.
  • The study suggests that increased signaling activity in energy-hungry brain regions is important for higher functions like reading and memory, which might explain how humans evolved to think more complexly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cerebrovascular diseases can impair blood circulation and oxygen extraction from the blood. The effective oxygen diffusivity (EOD) of the capillary bed is a potential biomarker of microvascular function that has gained increasing interest, both for clinical diagnosis and for elucidating oxygen transport mechanisms. Models of capillary oxygen transport link EOD to measurable oxygen extraction fraction (OEF) and cerebral blood flow (CBF).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The extent to which brain responses differ across varying cognitive demands is referred to as "neural differentiation," and greater neural differentiation has been associated with better cognitive performance in older adults. An emerging approach has examined within-person neural differentiation using moment-to-moment brain signal variability. A number of studies have found that brain signal variability differs by cognitive state; however, the factors that cause signal variability to rise or fall on a given task remain understudied.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Local moment-to-moment variability exists at every level of neural organization, but its driving forces remain opaque. Inspired by animal work demonstrating that local temporal variability may reflect synaptic input rather than locally-generated "noise," we used publicly-available high-temporal-resolution fMRI data (N = 100 adults; 33 males) to test in humans whether greater BOLD signal variability in local brain regions was associated with functional integration (estimated via spatiotemporal PCA dimensionality). Using a multivariate partial least squares analysis, we indeed found that individuals with higher local temporal variability had a more integrated (lower dimensional) network fingerprint.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF