36 results match your criteria: "Yale UniversityNew Haven[Affiliation]"
Camb Q Healthc Ethics
October 2021
Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale UniversityNew Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Cyberbiosecurity is an emerging field that relates to the intersection of cybersecurity and the clinical and research practice in the biosciences. Beyond the concerns that usually arise in the areas of genomics, this paper highlights ethical concerns raised by cyberbiosecurity in clinical neuroscience. These concerns relate not only to the privacy of the data collected by imaging devices, but also the concern that patients using various stimulatory devices can be harmed by a hacker who either obfuscates the outputs or who interferes with the stimulatory process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArthritis Care Res (Hoboken)
August 2020
University of Nebraska Medical CenterOmaha, Nebraskaand FORWARD, The National Databank for Rheumatic Diseases, Wichita, Kansas.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med
January 2020
Mount Auburn HospitalCambridge, Massachusettsand.
Front Psychol
September 2017
Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Yale UniversityNew Haven, CT, United States.
There is an emerging cultural narrative in the United States that we are entering an age of purpose-that millennials, more than any other generation, are searching for purpose and purposeful work (Sheahan, 2005) and that we are entering an era or economy of purpose (Hurst, 2014). For profit, non-profit, and educational institutions are perceiving and adapting to serve millennials' demand for purpose in life, specifically within the workplace (Klein et al., 2015).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Hum Neurosci
August 2017
Department of Psychology, UCLALos Angeles, CA, United States.
Individuals with schizophrenia (SZ) consistently show deficits in spatial working memory (WM) and associated atypical patterns of neural activity within key WM regions, including the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) and parietal cortices. However, little research has focused on adolescent psychosis (AP) and potential age-associated disruptions of WM circuitry that may occur in youth with this severe form of illness. Here we utilized each subject's individual spatial WM capacity to investigate task-based neural dysfunction in 17 patients with AP (16.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
August 2017
Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-MilwaukeeMilwaukee, WI, United States.
[This corrects the article on p. 348 in vol. 7, PMID: 27014154.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Microbiol
August 2017
Chesapeake Biological LaboratorySolomons, MD, United States.
Urbanization strongly influences headwater stream chemistry and hydrology, but little is known about how these conditions impact bacterial community composition. We predicted that urbanization would impact bacterial community composition, but that stream water column bacterial communities would be most strongly linked to urbanization at a watershed-scale, as measured by impervious cover, while sediment bacterial communities would correlate with environmental conditions at the scale of stream reaches. To test this hypothesis, we determined bacterial community composition in the water column and sediment of headwater streams located across a gradient of watershed impervious cover using high-throughput 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Physiol
July 2017
Institute of Clinical Experimental Research, Semmelweis UniversityBudapest, Hungary.
Physiological processes-such as, the brain's resting-state electrical activity or hemodynamic fluctuations-exhibit scale-free temporal structuring. However, impacts common in biological systems such as, noise, multiple signal generators, or filtering by transport function, result in multimodal scaling that cannot be reliably assessed by standard analytical tools that assume unimodal scaling. Here, we present two methods to identify breakpoints or crossovers in multimodal multifractal scaling functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neurosci
June 2017
Department of Psychiatry, Department of Neurobiology, Yale School of Medicine, Yale UniversityNew Haven, CT, United States.
The Internet search engine has become an indispensable tool for many people, yet the ways in which Internet searching may alter brain structure and function is poorly understood. In this study, we investigated the influence of short-term Internet-search "training" on white matter microstructure using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). Fifty-nine valid subjects (Experimental group, 43; Control group, 16) completed the whole procedure: pre- DTI scan, 6-day's training and post- DTI scan.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Aging Neurosci
June 2017
Institute of Basic and Translational Medicine, and School of Basic Medical Sciences, and Shaanxi Key Laboratory of Brain Disorders, Xi'an Medical UniversityXi'an, China.
Paired immunoglobulin-like receptor B (PirB), a functional receptor for myelin-associated inhibitory proteins, plays an important role in axon regeneration in injured brains. However, its role in normal brain function with age has not been previously investigated. Therefore in this study, we examined the expression level of PirB in the cerebral cortex, hippocampus and cerebellum of mice at 1 month, 3 months and 18 months of age.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Cell Infect Microbiol
August 2018
Section of Infectious Disease, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University School of MedicineNew Haven, CT, United States.
Front Neurosci
May 2017
Department of Neurology, Yale UniversityNew Haven, CT, United States.
Synapses must be preserved throughout an organism's lifespan to allow for normal brain function and behavior. Synapse maintenance is challenging given the long distances between the termini and the cell body, reliance on axonal transport for delivery of newly synthesized presynaptic proteins, and high rates of synaptic vesicle exo- and endocytosis. Hence, synapses rely on efficient proteostasis mechanisms to preserve their structure and function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Mol Biosci
May 2017
Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale UniversityNew Haven, CT, USA.
Torsins are essential, disease-relevant AAA+ (ATPases associated with various cellular activities) proteins residing in the endoplasmic reticulum and perinuclear space, where they are implicated in a variety of cellular functions. Recently, new structural and functional details about Torsins have emerged that will have a profound influence on unraveling the precise mechanistic details of their yet-unknown mode of action in the cell. While Torsins are phylogenetically related to Clp/HSP100 proteins, they exhibit comparatively weak ATPase activities, which are tightly controlled by virtue of an active site complementation through accessory cofactors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Hum Neurosci
May 2017
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of MedicineNew Haven, CT, USA.
Impulsivity is a personality trait of clinical importance. Extant research focuses on fronto-striatal mechanisms of impulsivity and how executive functions are compromised in impulsive individuals. Imaging studies employing voxel based morphometry highlighted impulsivity-related changes in gray matter concentrations in a wide array of cerebral structures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Hum Neurosci
April 2017
Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins School of MedicineBaltimore, MD, USA.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) became a treatable illness with the introduction of combination antiretroviral therapy (CART). As a result, patients with regular access to CART are expected to live decades with HIV. Long-term HIV infection presents unique challenges, including neurocognitive impairments defined by three major stages of HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Syst Neurosci
April 2017
Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, Yale UniversityNew Haven, CT, USA.
During development, neurons establish inappropriate connections as they seek out their synaptic partners, resulting in supernumerary synapses that must be pruned away. The removal of miswired synapses usually involves electrical activity, often through a Hebbian spike-timing mechanism. A novel form of activity-dependent refinement is used by that may be non-Hebbian, and is critical for generating the precise connectivity observed in that system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
April 2017
Division of Health Care Policy and Research, Mayo ClinicRochester, MN, USA.
Am J Cardiovasc Dis
November 2016
Section on Cardiovascular Medicine, Wake Forest School of Medicine Winston Salem, NC.
Cathepsins are proteolytic enzymes typically located within the lysosomes of macrophages. Once released, they can enhance the inflammatory process in atherosclerosis. Cathepsin X aids in the migration of T-lymphocytes and the release of cytokines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neurorobot
December 2016
Prosthetics and Orthotics Program, University of HartfordWest Hartford, CT, USA; Department of Biostatistics, Yale School of Public Health, Yale UniversityNew Haven, CT, USA; Cooperative Studies Program, Department of Veterans AffairsWest Haven, CT, USA.
Embodiment is the process by which patients with limb loss come to accept their peripheral device as a natural extension of self. However, there is little guidance as to how exacting the prosthesis must be in order for embodiment to take place: is it necessary for the prosthetic hand to look just like the absent hand? Here, we describe a protocol for testing whether an individual would select a hand that looks like their own from among a selection of five hands, and whether the hand selection (regardless of homology) is consistent across multiple exposures to the same (but reordered) set of candidate hands. Pilot results using healthy volunteers reveals that hand selection is only modestly consistent, and that selection of the prosthetic homologue is atypical (61 of 192 total exposures).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Cell Neurosci
December 2016
Burnett School of Biomedical Sciences, College of Medicine, University of Central Florida Orlando, FL, USA.
Superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) knockout () mice exhibit an accelerated aging phenotype. In humans, mutations are linked to familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and post-translational modification (PTM) of wild-type SOD1 has been associated with sporadic ALS. Reversible acetylation regulates many enzymes and proteomic studies have identified SOD1 acetylation at lysine 123 (K123).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Syst Neurosci
November 2016
Department of Surgical, Medical, Molecular Pathology and Critical Care, University of PisaPisa, Italy; MOMILab, IMT School for Advanced Studies LuccaLucca, Italy.
Research in blind individuals has primarily focused for a long time on the brain plastic reorganization that occurs in early visual areas. Only more recently, scientists have developed innovative strategies to understand to what extent vision is truly a mandatory prerequisite for the brain's fine morphological architecture to develop and function. As a whole, the studies conducted to date in sighted and congenitally blind individuals have provided ample evidence that several "visual" cortical areas develop independently from visual experience and do process information content regardless of the sensory modality through which a particular stimulus is conveyed: a property named .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Physiol
October 2016
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Yale UniversityNew Haven, CT, USA; Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology, Yale School of MedicineNew Haven, CT, USA.
Front Psychol
September 2016
Interdepartmental Neuroscience Program, Magnetic Resonance Research Center, Yale University New Haven, CT, USA.
In the sentence "The captain who the sailor greeted is tall," the connection between the relative pronoun and the object position of represents a long-distance dependency (LDD), necessary for the interpretation of "the captain" as the individual being greeted. Whereas the lesion-based record shows preferential involvement of only the left inferior frontal (LIF) cortex, associated with Broca's aphasia, during real-time comprehension of LDDs, the neuroimaging record shows involvement of the left posterior superior temporal (LPST) and lower parietal cortices, which are associated with Wernicke's aphasia. We test the hypothesis that this localization incongruence emerges from an interaction of memory and linguistic constraints involved in the real-time implementation of these dependencies and which had not been previously isolated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Hum Neurosci
September 2016
The Mind Research NetworkAlbuquerque, NM, USA; Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of New MexicoAlbuquerque, NM, USA; Department of Psychiatry, Yale UniversityNew Haven, CT, USA.
The topological architecture of brain connectivity has been well-characterized by graph theory based analysis. However, previous studies have primarily built brain graphs based on a single modality of brain imaging data. Here we develop a framework to construct multi-modal brain graphs using concurrent EEG-fMRI data which are simultaneously collected during eyes open (EO) and eyes closed (EC) resting states.
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