1,046 results match your criteria: "Barnard College.[Affiliation]"

Fighting Fire with Fire: Impact of Sugary Diets on Metabolically Deranged Mice.

Nutrients

December 2024

Department of Neuroscience & Behavior, Barnard College, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA.

There is controversy about the health risks of sugary diets. A recent study reported that chronic consumption of 11% sugar solutions improved glycemic control in lean mice. Based on this finding, we hypothesized that chronic consumption of the same 11% sugar solutions would also improve glycemic control in metabolically deranged mice.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Males in many species show courtship and mating preferences for certain females over others when given the choice. One of the most common targets of male mate choice in insects is female body size, with males preferring to court and mate with larger, higher-fecundity females and investing more resources in matings with those females. Although this preference is well-documented at the species level, less is known about how this preference varies within species and whether there is standing genetic variation for male mate choice within populations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: Animal models of nerve injury are important for studying nerve injury and repair, particularly for interventions that cannot be studied in humans. However, the vast majority of gait analysis in animals has been limited to univariate analysis even though gait data is highly multi-dimensional. As a result, little is known about how various spatiotemporal components of the gait relate to each other in the context of peripheral nerve injury and trauma.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Alkane monooxygenase (AlkB) is the dominant enzyme that catalyzes the oxidation of liquid alkanes in the environment. Two recent structural models derived from cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) reveal an unusual active site: a histidine-rich center that binds two iron ions without a bridging ligand. To ensure that potential photoreduction and radiation damage are not responsible for the absence of a bridging ligand in the cryo-EM structures, spectroscopic methods are needed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Among contributors to diffusible signaling are portal systems which join two capillary beds through connecting veins. Portal systems allow diffusible signals to be transported in high concentrations directly from one capillary bed to the other without dilution in the systemic circulation. Two portal systems have been identified in the brain.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The brain prioritizes the basic level of object category abstraction.

Sci Rep

January 2025

Bates College Program in Neuroscience, Bates College, Lewiston, ME, USA.

Article Synopsis
  • Human observers tend to name objects using a mid-level of specificity called the basic level, despite the existence of multiple descriptive levels (e.g., "parka" vs. "clothing").
  • In a study, 1080 objects were shown while researchers recorded EEG to understand how quickly and dynamically the brain retrieves information about these object categories.
  • The findings revealed that the brain utilizes basic-level category information rapidly (starting around 50 ms after seeing an object) and that the processing of different task demands becomes apparent between 200-300 ms after the object is presented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Hoxa5 plays numerous roles in development, but its downstream molecular effects are mostly unknown. We applied bulk RNA-seq assays to characterize the transcriptional impact of the loss of Hoxa5 gene function in seven different biological contexts, including developing respiratory and musculoskeletal tissues that present phenotypes in Hoxa5 mouse mutants. This global analysis revealed few common transcriptional changes, suggesting that HOXA5 acts mainly via the regulation of context-specific effectors.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Heme alters biofilm formation in .

Microbiol Spectr

December 2024

Department of Chemistry, Barnard College, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA.

(Mabs) is commonly found in the cystic fibrosis (CF) lung. During infection, Mabs can form biofilms in the lung which reduce both the ability of the immune response to clear infection and the effectiveness of antibiotic therapy. In the CF lung, heme and hemoglobin levels are increased and may provide both iron and heme to Mabs cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ultra long-range genomic contacts, which emerge as prominent components of genome architecture, constitute a biochemical paradox. This is because regulatory DNA elements make selective and stable contacts with DNA sequences located megabases away, instead of interacting with proximal sequences occupied by the same exact transcription factors (TF). This is exemplified in olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs), where only a fraction of Lhx2/Ebf1/Ldb1-bound sites interact with each other, converging into highly selective multi-chromosomal enhancer hubs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Spatial navigation allows animals to understand their environment position and is crucial to survival. An animal's primary mode of spatial navigation (horizontal or vertical) is dependent on how they naturally move in space. Observations of the domestic dog () have shown that they, like other terrestrial animals, navigate poorly in vertical space.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Shake It Off: Investigating the Function of a Domestic Dog Behavior in Social Contexts.

Animals (Basel)

November 2024

Dog Cognition Lab, Department of Psychology, Barnard College, New York, NY 10027, USA.

Shaking in domestic dogs-a rapid side-to-side movement of the body or head-is a commonly observed behavior, yet its function remains minimally researched. The present study aimed to investigate the use of shaking behavior in naturalistic social contexts, with the hypothesis that shaking functions as a marker of transition between behaviors or activities. In addition, as the prior literature has suggested that shaking more frequently occurred in postures or conditions of stress, either to signal stress or to mitigate it, we looked at postures related to affect before and after shaking.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Recent studies indicate that performance on cognitive control tasks stems largely from a task-general efficiency of evidence accumulation (EEA), which is the ability to gather relevant evidence for the task.
  • However, findings from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study suggest that EEA estimates from conflict recognition tasks show inconsistencies, particularly in how individuals respond to familiar stimuli instead of goal-relevant ones.
  • A new model proposed distinguishes between EEA linked to task goals and use of familiarity, revealing that while EEA correlates strongly across tasks, it shows significant developmental differences and greater reliability compared to familiarity-based processing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Examining threat responses through a developmental lens.

Cereb Cortex

January 2025

Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Boston University, 610 Commonwealth Ave, 7th Floor, Boston, MA 02215, United States.

Adolescence has been characterized by risk taking and fearlessness. Yet, the emergence of anxiety disorders that are associated with fear peaks during this developmental period. Moreover, adolescents show heightened sensitivity to stress relative to children and adults.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Discrimination in evaluations contributes significantly to social inequality, yet there is limited knowledge about psychological interventions to combat biased assessments.
  • A research contest tested 30 interventions aimed at reducing discrimination based on physical attractiveness, revealing two effective strategies that reduced both decision noise and bias.
  • The findings highlight the need for concrete strategies that focus on relevant criteria in decision-making and emphasize the challenge of developing scalable interventions to effectively change discriminatory behaviors across various contexts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: During the COVID-19 pandemic, birthing parents were identified as a high-risk group with greater vulnerability to the harms associated with SARS-CoV-2. This led to necessary changes in perinatal health policies but also to experiences of maternal isolation and loneliness, both in hospital settings, due to infection mitigation procedures, and once home, due to social distancing.

Methods: In this study, we qualitatively explored birthing and postpartum experiences in New York City during the early days of the pandemic when lockdowns were in effect and policies and practices were rapidly changing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Music-evoked autobiographical memories (MEAMs) are typically elicited by music that listeners have heard before. While studies that have directly manipulated music familiarity show that familiar music evokes more MEAMs than music listeners have not heard before, music that is unfamiliar to the listener can also sporadically cue autobiographical memory. Here we examined whether music that sounds familiar even without previous exposure can produce spontaneous MEAMs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Predators regulate communities through top-down control in many ecosystems. Because most studies of top-down control last less than a year and focus on only a subset of the community, they may miss predator effects that manifest at longer timescales or across whole food webs. In southeastern US salt marshes, short-term and small-scale experiments indicate that nektonic predators (e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Pubertal maturation is marked by significant changes in stress-induced hormonal responses mediated by the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, with prepubertal male and female rats often exhibiting greater HPA reactivity compared to adult males and females. Though the implications of these changes are unclear, elevated stress responsiveness might contribute to the stress-related vulnerabilities often associated with puberty.

Methods: The current experiments sought to determine whether differences in cellular activation, as measured by FOS immunohistochemistry, or excitatory ionotropic glutamate receptor subunit expression, as measured by qRT-PCR, in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN) were associated with these noted pubertal shifts in stress reactivity in male and female rats.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Drosophila circadian clock gene cycle controls the development of clock neurons.

PLoS Genet

October 2024

Department of Neuroscience and Behavior, Barnard College, New York, New York, United States of America.

Daily behavioral and physiological rhythms are controlled by the brain's circadian timekeeping system, a synchronized network of neurons that maintains endogenous molecular oscillations. These oscillations are based on transcriptional feedback loops of clock genes, which in Drosophila include the transcriptional activators Clock (Clk) and cycle (cyc). While the mechanisms underlying this molecular clock are very well characterized, the roles that the core clock genes play in neuronal physiology and development are much less understood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • In Pavlovian conditioning, the strength of responses depends on the probability of reinforcement, but this study controlled for reinforcement rates to better understand this relationship.
  • Two experiments with mice showed that varying the probability of reinforcement influenced response rates during training and extinction phases, even when the overall reinforcement rate was constant.
  • The findings suggest that both the probability of reinforcement and the rate at which it is delivered play important roles in behavior, challenging existing learning theories to incorporate these factors more effectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Executive function deficits have been reported in both autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). However, little is known regarding which, if any, of these impairments are unique vs. shared in children with ADHD versus ASD.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Research suggests that individuals with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) frequently experience insomnia. Some previous studies have suggested that insomnia may predict treatment outcomes, but the evidence is limited, especially for adolescents. This study examined the prevalence of insomnia in an adolescent OCD patient sample, explored the correlation between OCD and insomnia, and tested whether levels of insomnia at baseline predict outcomes for adolescent patients receiving the Bergen 4-Day Treatment (B4DT) for OCD.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF