803 results match your criteria: "Canada M5S 3G3; Rotman Research Institute[Affiliation]"
Brain Sci
December 2024
Canadian Forces Environmental Medicine Establishment, Toronto, ON M3K 2C9, Canada.
Background/objectives: Military aviators can be exposed to extreme physiological stressors, including decompression stress, G-forces, as well as intermittent hypoxia and/or hyperoxia, which may contribute to neurobiological dysfunction/damage. This study aimed to investigate the levels of neurological biomarkers in military aviators to assess the potential risk of long-term brain injury and neurodegeneration.
Methods: This cross-sectional study involved 48 Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) aviators and 48 non-aviator CAF controls.
Sci Rep
December 2024
Centre of Precision Rehabilitation for Spinal Pain (CPR Spine), School of Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.
Network energy has been conceptualized based on structural balance theory in the physics of complex networks. We utilized this framework to assess the energy of functional brain networks under cognitive control and to understand how energy is allocated across canonical functional networks during various cognitive control tasks. We extracted network energy from functional connectivity patterns of subjects who underwent fMRI scans during cognitive tasks involving working memory, inhibitory control, and cognitive flexibility, in addition to task-free scans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurobiol Aging
December 2024
Department of Psychology, Centre for Integrative and Applied Neuroscience, and Centre for Vision Research, York University, Toronto, Ontario M3J 1P3, Canada; Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest Academy for Research and Education, Toronto, Ontario M6A 2E1, Canada. Electronic address:
Does precision in auditory perception predict precision in subsequent memory (i.e., mnemonic discrimination) in aging? This study examined if the mismatch negativity (MMN), an electrophysiological marker of change detection and encoding, relates to age differences in mnemonic discrimination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Glob Public Health
December 2024
Takemi Program in International Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard University, 665 Huntington Avenue, Bldg. 1, Boston, MA, 02115-6021, USA.
Background: Scholarly critiques have demonstrated that the World Health Organization (WHO) approaches the concept of health equity inconsistently. For example, inconsistencies center around measuring health inequity across individuals versus groups; in approaches and goals sought in striving for health equity; and whether considerations around health equity prioritize socioeconomic status or also consider other social determinants of health. However, the significance of these contrasting approaches has yet to be assessed empirically.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Glob Public Health
December 2023
Takemi Program in International Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard University, 665 Huntington Avenue, Bldg. 1, Boston, MA, 02115-6021, USA.
Background: The World Health Organization (WHO) has focused on health equity as part of its mandate and broader agenda-consider for example, the "health for all" slogan. However, a recent scoping review determined that there are no studies that investigate the WHO's approach to health equity. Therefore, this study is the first such empirical analysis examining discourses of health equity in WHO texts concerning health promotion, the social determinants of health, and urban health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmbio
December 2024
Department of Geography & Planning and School of the Environment, University of Toronto, 100 St. George St, Toronto, ON, M5S 3G3, Canada.
The promise of Indigenous and local knowledge (ILK) for conservation policy depends on how pervasively ILK is held among local people. In the Peruvian Amazon, we conducted a landscape-scale concordance analysis between (1) ILK for game, timber, and fish species collected by the largest representative ILK survey as yet undertaken in tropical forests, and (2) remotely sensed land cover as proxies for species habitat. From our survey among 4000 households in 235 communities, we find that concordant ILK is highly pervasive across gender, age, place of origin, and social status, irrespective of species and people's indigeneity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtten Percept Psychophys
December 2024
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, 100 St. George Street, Toronto, ON, M5S 3G3, Canada.
The nature of visual processes underlying scene perception remains a hotly debated topic. According to one view, scene and object perception rely on similar neural mechanisms, and their processing pathways are tightly interlinked. According to another, scene gist might follow a separate pathway, relying primarily on global image properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
December 2024
Department of Psychology, The University of Toronto, 100 St. George Street, Toronto, ON, M5S 3G3, Canada.
Two experiments in rats examined how training where a stimulus signaled when to respond for reward, conditions that should favour S-R learning, might lead to habitual control of behaviour. Experiment 1 investigated how animals trained with a stimulus preceding lever insertion would impact learning relative to a group that was self-paced and could control lever insertion with a second, distinct response. Rats were then tested for sensitivity to outcome devaluation to distinguish between goal-directed and habitual control.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
December 2024
Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest Academy for Research and Education, Toronto, ON M6A 2E1, Canada; Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 3G3, Canada; Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 1A1, Canada. Electronic address:
Memories can be decoded from brain responses and eye movements. A combined electroencephalogram-eyetracking study now shows that learning is marked by dynamic shifts in brain patterns and eye movements that go from remembering the past to anticipating the future.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
November 2024
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, 100 St George St, Toronto, ON, M5S 3G3, Canada.
Living in isolation is associated with a lack of stimulating experiences, which negatively impacts quality of life and increases risk of advancing cognitive decline for older adults. We examined how engaging in unique events would enhance memory and improve well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns, a period characterized by social isolation and monotonous daily experiences lacking diversity. Over 8-weeks during lockdowns, 18 healthy older adults used a smartphone-based application called "HippoCamera", capturing a total of 670 unique and routine events with short audio-video cues that were later replayed to prompt memory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Commun
November 2024
Neurosciences and Mental Health Program, Research Institute, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, M5G 0A4, Canada.
Demyelination disrupts the transmission of electrical signals in the brain and affects neurodevelopment in children with disorders such as multiple sclerosis and myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein-associated disorders. Although cognitive impairments are prevalent in these conditions, some children maintain cognitive function despite substantial structural injury. These findings raise an important question: in addition to the degenerative process, do compensatory neural mechanisms exist to mitigate the effects of myelin loss? We propose that a multi-dimensional approach integrating multiple neuroimaging modalities, including diffusion tensor imaging, magnetoencephalography and eye-tracking, is key to investigating this question.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInnovation (Camb)
November 2024
Department of Earth System Science, Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Earth System Modeling, Institute for Global Change Studies, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
November 2024
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 3G3, Canada.
Stroke causes pronounced and widespread slowing of neural activity. Despite decades of work exploring these abnormal neural dynamics and their associated functional impairments, their causes remain largely unclear. To close this gap in understanding, we applied a neurophysiological corticothalamic circuit model to simulate magnetoencephalography (MEG) power spectra recorded from chronic stroke patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
November 2024
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, 4thFloor, Sidney Smith Hall, 100 St. George Street, Toronto, ON, M5S 3G3, Canada.
There is substantial evidence to suggest that preference for visual curvature is a reliable phenomenon. Yet, little is known about the ways in which the encoding of curvature in the brain contributes to hedonic evaluation while participants are actively engaged in making choices about objects varying in curvature. To address this question, we reanalyzed fMRI data collected while participants made aesthetic judgments (beautiful vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCereb Cortex
January 2025
Program in Neurosciences & Mental Health, Hospital for Sick Children, 555 University Ave., Toronto, ON M5G 1X8, Canada.
Joseph LeDoux is a pioneering neuroscientist who has made profound discoveries that continue to impact our understanding of the neural basis of emotion and memory, particularly the role of the amygdala in threat conditioning. LeDoux's trailblazing and elegant studies were some of the first to examine the circuit basis of behavior. His work combined techniques to trace pathways into and out of the amygdala important for threat conditioning and related behaviors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPNAS Nexus
October 2024
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, 100 St. George Street, Toronto, Ontario M5S 3G3, Canada.
Neuroimage Clin
November 2024
The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON M5G 0A4, Canada; University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 3G3, Canada. Electronic address:
Elucidating how adaptive and maladaptive changes to the structural connectivity of brain networks influences neural synchrony, and how this structure-function coupling impacts cognition is an important question in human neuroscience. This study assesses these links in the default mode and executive control networks during resting state, a visual-motor task, and through computational modeling in the developing brain and in acquired brain injuries. Pediatric brain tumor survivors were used as an injury model as they are known to exhibit cognitive deficits, structural connectivity compromise, and perturbations in neural communication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCereb Cortex
September 2024
Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest Academy for Research and Education, 3560 Bathurst St, North York, ON M6A 2E1, Canada.
Cell Commun Signal
September 2024
Laboratory of Tumor Immunobiology, Department of Public Health and Pathogen Biology, College of Integrated Chinese and Western Medicine (College of Life Science), Anhui University of Chinese Medicine, Hefei, Anhui, 230012, China.
Immunotherapy has emerged as a highly effective treatment for various tumors. However, the variable response rates associated with current immunotherapies often restrict their beneficial impact on a subset of patients. Therefore, more effective treatment approaches that can broaden the scope of therapeutic benefits to a larger patient population are urgently needed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhilos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci
November 2024
Department of Psychology, Toronto Metropolitan University, Toronto, ON M5B 2K3, Canada.
Tulving's concept of mental time travel (MTT), and the related distinction of episodic and semantic memory, have been highly influential contributions to memory research, resulting in a wealth of findings and a deeper understanding of the neurocognitive correlates of memory and future thinking. Many models have conceptualized episodic and semantic representations as existing on a continuum that can help to account for various hybrid forms. Nevertheless, in most theories, MTT remains distinctly associated with episodic representations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPNAS Nexus
September 2024
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, 100 St. George Street, Toronto, ON M5S 3G3, Canada.
People ubiquitously smile during brief interactions and first encounters, and when posing for photos used for virtual dating, social networking, and professional profiles. Yet not all smiles are the same: subtle individual differences emerge in how people display this nonverbal facial expression. We hypothesized that idiosyncrasies in people's smiles can reveal aspects of their personality and guide the personality judgments made by observers, thus enabling a smiling face to serve as a valuable tool in making more precise inferences about an individual's personality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
September 2024
Department of Human Genetics, McGill University, Montreal, QC, H3A 0C7, Canada.
Histone H3-mutant gliomas are deadly brain tumors characterized by a dysregulated epigenome and stalled differentiation. In contrast to the extensive datasets available on tumor cells, limited information exists on their tumor microenvironment (TME), particularly the immune infiltrate. Here, we characterize the immune TME of H3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
September 2024
Department of Psychology, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, 603 East Daniel Street, Champaign, IL, 61820, US.
Social scientists from different disciplines have long argued that direct reciprocity plays an important role in regulating social interactions between unrelated individuals. Here, we examine whether 15-month-old infants (N = 160) already expect direct positive and negative reciprocity between strangers. In violation-of-expectation experiments, infants watch successive interactions between two strangers we refer to as agent1 and agent2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHorm Behav
September 2024
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Toronto M5S 3G3, Canada; Baycrest Academy of Research and Education, Baycrest Health Sciences, Toronto M6A 2E1, Canada; Tema Genus, Linköping University, Linköping 581 83, Sweden. Electronic address:
Bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (BSO; removal of ovaries and fallopian tubes) prior to age 48 is associated with elevated risk for both Alzheimer's disease (AD) and sleep disorders such as insomnia and sleep apnea. In early midlife, individuals with BSO show reduced hippocampal volume, function, and hippocampal-dependent verbal episodic memory performance associated with changes in sleep. It is unknown whether BSO affects fine-grained sleep measurements (sleep microarchitecture) and how these changes might relate to hippocampal-dependent memory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPNAS Nexus
August 2024
Department of Computer Science, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 3G4, Canada.
Theorists have argued that morality builds on several core modular foundations. When do different moral foundations emerge in life? Prior work has explored the conceptual development of different aspects of morality in childhood. Here, we offer an alternative approach to investigate the developmental emergence of moral foundations through the lexicon, namely the words used to talk about moral foundations.
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