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1
An In Vivo MRI Study of Prefrontal Cortical Complexity in First-Episode Psychosis
2005-01-01

ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to investigate abnormalities in the surface complexity of the prefrontal cortex and in the hemispheric asymmetry of cortical complexity in first-episode patients with schizophrenia.MethodAn estimate of the surface complexity of the prefrontal cortex was derived from the number of voxels along the ...

PubMed Central

2
Cortical complexity analysis of patients with bipolar disorder using three-dimensional gyrification index.
2008-01-01

Bipolar disorder (BD) is a common affective disorder. In morphometric brain imaging studies, BD subjects have atrophic gray matter, especially in the prefrontal area. These structural abnormalities could involve the change of cortical shape. Gyrification index (GI) is a useful metric to measure the degree of cortical complexity. This ...

PubMed

3
Cortical Asymmetry - Left Brain, Right Brain
2009-04-14

Professor Daniel Geschwind explains that cortical asymmetry refers to differences between the right and left side of the brain. This relates to gene expression.

NSDL National Science Digital Library

4
Relationship of resting EEG with anatomical MRI measures in individuals at high and low risk for depression.
2011-04-15

Studies have found abnormalities of resting EEG measures of hemispheric activity in depressive disorders. Similar EEG findings and a prominent thinning of the cortical mantle have been reported for persons at risk for depression. The correspondence between EEG alpha power and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measures of cortical ...

PubMed

5
Application of an Objective Method for Localizing Bilateral Cortical FDG PET Abnormalities to Guide the Resection of Epileptic Foci
2005-09-01

PurposeIn order to improve the objective localization of bilateral cortical abnormalities in positron emission tomography (PET) image volumes, we developed a new three-dimensional image processing technique. The accuracy of this approach with respect to invasive subdural electroencephalography (EEG) data was assessed in a group of children with neocortical ...

PubMed Central

6
Cortical-basal ganglionic degeneration.
1990-08-01

We report our experience with 15 patients believed to have cortical-basal ganglionic degeneration. The clinical picture is distinctive, comprising features referable to both cortical and basal ganglionic dysfunction. Characteristic manifestations include cortical sensory loss, focal reflex myoclonus, "alien limb" phenomena, apraxia, ...

PubMed

7
A Model of Lateralization and Asymmetries in Cortical Maps
2000-01-01

Cortical sensory maps in mammalian brain exhibit various kinds of asymmetry and lateralization, the causes and mechanisms of which are not well understood and are a subject of controversy. This study uses a neural network model of left and right cortical regions connected via a corpus callosum to examine possible factors involved in ...

E-print Network

8
Mapping the Early Cortical Folding Process in the Preterm Newborn Brain
2008-01-01

In the developing human brain, the cortical sulci formation is a complex process starting from 14 weeks of gestation onward. The potential influence of underlying mechanisms (genetic, epigenetic, mechanical or environmental) is still poorly understood, because reliable quantification in vivo of the early folding is lacking. In this study, we investigate the sulcal emergence ...

E-print Network

9
Technetium-99m HM-PAO-SPECT study of regional cerebral perfusion in early Alzheimer's disease
1988-09-01

Regional cerebral perfusion was evaluated by single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) using technetium-99m hexamethylpropyleneamine oxime ((/sup 99m/Tc)HM-PAO) in sixteen patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) in early clinical phase and in 16 healthy elderly controls. In all patients transmission computed tomography (TCT) and/or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) did not show ...

Energy Citations Database

10
Localization of cortical dysfunction based on auditory and visual naming performance
2009-07-01

Naming is generally considered a left hemisphere function without precise localization. However, recent cortical stimulation studies demonstrate a modality-related anatomical dissociation, in that anterior temporal stimulation disrupts auditory description naming (�auditory naming�), but not visual object naming (�visual naming�), whereas posterior temporal stimulation ...

PubMed Central

11
Mapping cortical change in Alzheimer's disease, brain development, and schizophrenia.
2004-01-01

This paper describes algorithms that can identify patterns of brain structure and function associated with Alzheimer's disease, schizophrenia, normal aging, and abnormal brain development based on imaging data collected in large human populations. Extraordinary information can be discovered with these techniques: dynamic brain maps reveal how the brain grows in childhood, how ...

PubMed

12
Abnormal cortical processing of the syllable rate of speech in poor readers
2009-06-17

Children with reading impairments have long been associated with impaired perception for rapidly presented acoustic stimuli and recently have shown deficits for slower features. It is not known whether impairments for low-frequency acoustic features negatively impact processing of speech in reading impaired individuals. Here we provide neurophysiological evidence that poor readers have impaired ...

PubMed Central

13
Aberrant functional organization and maturation in early-onset psychosis: evidence from magnetoencephalography.
2007-08-28

Studies of the location of somatosensory and auditory cortical responses have shown anomalous hemispheric asymmetries in a variety of neurodevelopmental disorders. To date, abnormal asymmetries in the somatosensory region have shown greater specificity, being reported only in psychotic adults. This study examines ...

PubMed

14
Reduced cortical folding of the anterior cingulate cortex in obsessive�compulsive disorder
2009-11-01

BackgroundAnterior cingulate cortex (ACC) abnormalities have been implicated consistently in the pathophysiology of obsessive�compulsive disorder (OCD), yet it remains unclear whether these abnormalities originated during early neurodevelopment. In this study, we examined the ACC sulcal/gyral patterns to investigate whether neurodevelopmental anomalies ...

PubMed Central

15
Intracranial extracerebral neuroglial heterotopia: A case report and review of the literature.
1999-06-01

Heterotopic masses of neuroglial tissue are uncommon and most frequently involve extracranial midline structures. We report an unusual case of an intracranial, extracerebral neuroglial heterotopia involving the middle and anterior cranial fossae of a 5-year-old girl who presented with facial asymmetry. The lesion was composed of mature but disorganized gray and white matter ...

PubMed

16
Congenital or early developmental versus later acquired renal function asymmetry. Scintigraphic characteristics.
1993-12-01

A congenitally or developmentally small right kidney in an adult spinal cord injury patient had only 12% of total uptake on radioiodine-labeled orthoiodohippurate renography but nevertheless had a normal-shaped time-activity curve. In a subsequent retrospective review of 175 consecutive radioiodine-labeled orthoiodohippurate renograms performed on adult patients over a 3-year period, 35 other ...

PubMed

17
[Chronic dizziness in elderly people: its clinical characteristics and magneto-encephalographic findings].
2008-06-01

Many elderly people complain dizziness which may continue occasionally for months or years. According to epidemiological studies, 25-29% of subjects with more than 60 years of age have the experience of dizziness. Dizziness occurs most commonly during head positional changes or walking. Clinical studies have indicated that causes of dizziness are nonspecific and multi-factorial; cerebrovascular ...

PubMed

18
Planum temporale asymmetry to the right hemisphere in first-episode schizophrenia.
2011-05-18

In schizophrenia patients reduced cerebral asymmetry is an important finding and this may reflect a disturbance in cortical development. We investigated planum temporale (PT) volume and asymmetry in 23 first-episode schizophrenia patients compared to healthy controls and found for the first time an in vivo volume ...

PubMed

19
Individual Differences in Cerebral Cortical Activity During ...
2009-04-30

... EEG asymmetry (F4 minus F3 alpha power) in an attempt to enhance emotion ... remained beyond the detection of the analysis described above. ...

DTIC Science & Technology

20
Clinical and histopathologic correlates of (11) C-alpha-methyl-l-tryptophan (AMT) PET abnormalities in children with intractable epilepsy.
2011-05-13

Purpose:? Interictal increase of (11) C-alpha-methyl-l-tryptophan (AMT) on positron emission tomography (PET) can be seen in cortical epileptic foci, and is particularly common in cortical developmental malformations. Therefore, in the present study, we evaluated the clinical and histopathologic correlates of AMT-PET abnormalities in ...

PubMed

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21
Computed tomography of cerebral palsy: evaluation of brain damage by volume index of CSF space.
1979-01-01

Between 1976 and 1978, we examined 110 Japanese children with cerebral palsy using a CT 1000 and a CT 1010 (EMI). In 92% of all patients, there were abnormal findings. Cortical atrophy was seen in 51%, ventricular dilatation in 86%, localized low density areas in 22%, brain anomalies in 10% and asymmetry of cerebral hemisphere in 31%. ...

PubMed

22
Aberrant functional organization and maturation in early-onset psychosis: Evidence from magnetoencephalography
2007-08-28

Studies of the location of somatosensory and auditory cortical responses have shown anomalous hemispheric asymmetries in a variety of neurodevelopmental disorders. Although to date, abnormal asymmetries in the somatosensory region have shown greater specificity being reported only in psychotic adults. This study ...

PubMed Central

23
Detecting disease-specific patterns of brain structure using cortical pattern matching and a population-based probabilistic brain atlas
2001-01-01

The rapid creation of comprehensive brain image databases mandates the development of mathematical algorithms to uncover disease specific patterns of brain structure and function in human populations. We describe our construction of probabilistic atlases that store detailed information on how the brain varies across age and gender, across time, in health and disease, and in large human ...

PubMed Central

24
Polymorphisms in genes involved in neurodevelopment may be associated with altered brain morphology in schizophrenia: preliminary evidence.
2008-12-02

An abnormality in neurodevelopment is one of the most robust etiologic hypotheses in schizophrenia (SZ). There is also strong evidence that genetic factors may influence abnormal neurodevelopment in the disease. The present study evaluated in SZ patients, whose brain structural data had been obtained with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), the possible ...

PubMed

25
Cortical asymmetries in normal, mild cognitive impairment, and Alzheimer's disease.
2011-09-01

There are functional and structural neocortical hemispheric asymmetries in people with normal cognition. These asymmetries may be altered in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) because there is a loss of neuronal connectivity in the heteromodal cortex. The purpose of this study is to test the hypothesis that individuals with amnestic mild cognitive ...

PubMed

26
Abnormal activation of the motor cortical network in idiopathic scoliosis demonstrated by functional MRI.
2011-04-16

The aetiology of idiopathic scoliosis (IS) remains unknown, but there is growing support for the possibility of an underlying neurological disorder. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) can characterize the abnormal activation of the sensorimotor brain network in movement disorders and could provide further insights into the neuropathogenesis of IS. Twenty subjects ...

PubMed

27
Local tissue growth patterns underlying normal fetal human brain gyrification quantified in utero.
2011-02-23

Existing knowledge of growth patterns in the living fetal human brain is based upon in utero imaging studies by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and ultrasound, which describe overall growth and provide mainly qualitative findings. However, formation of the complex folded cortical structure of the adult brain requires, in part, differential rates of regional tissue growth. To ...

PubMed

28
Local tissue growth patterns underlying normal fetal human brain gyrification quantified in utero
2011-02-23

Existing knowledge of growth patterns in the living fetal human brain is based upon in utero imaging studies by MRI and ultrasound, which describe overall growth and provided mainly qualitative findings. However, formation of the complex folded cortical structure of the adult brain requires, in part, differential rates of regional tissue growth. To better understand these ...

PubMed Central

29
Dendritic asymmetry cannot account for directional responses of neurons in visual cortex.
1999-09-01

A simple model was proposed to account for the direction selectivity of neurons in the primary visual cortex, area V1. In this model, the temporal asymmetries in the summation of inhibition and excitation that produce directionality were generated by structural asymmetries in the tangential organization of the basal dendritic tree of ...

PubMed

30
Abnormal cortical folding patterns within Broca's area in schizophrenia: Evidence from structural MRI

Abnormal cortical folding patterns within Broca's area in schizophrenia: Evidence from structural compared cortical folding patterns between patients with schizophrenia and demographically-matched healthy and language dysfunction in schizophrenia. � 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. Keywords: Schizophrenia

E-print Network

31
Multimodal surface-based morphometry reveals diffuse cortical atrophy in traumatic brain injury.
2009-12-31

BackgroundPatients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) often present with significant cognitive deficits without corresponding evidence of cortical damage on neuroradiological examinations. One explanation for this puzzling observation is that the diffuse cortical abnormalities that characterize TBI are difficult to detect with standard ...

PubMed Central

32
Auditory cortex asymmetry, altered minicolumn spacing and absence of ageing effects in schizophrenia
2008-12-26

The superior temporal gyrus, which contains the auditory cortex, including the planum temporale, is the most consistently altered neocortical structure in schizophrenia (Shenton ME, Dickey CC, Frumin M, McCarley RW. A review of MRI findings in schizophrenia. Schizophr Res 2001; 49: 1�52). Auditory hallucinations are associated with abnormalities in this region and activation ...

PubMed Central

33
Development of Cortical Asymmetry in Typically Developing Children and Its Disruption in Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
2009-08-01

ContextJust as typical development of anatomical asymmetries in the human brain has been linked with normal lateralization of motor and cognitive functions, disruption of asymmetry has been implicated in the pathogenesis of neurodevelopmental disorders such as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). No study has examined the development of ...

PubMed Central

34
The circling ci2 rat mutant revisited: receptor architecture of the motor cortex.
2010-07-29

Circling behaviour of the ci2 rat mutant has been associated with an abnormal laterality concerning nigrostriatal and vestibular dopamine content and densities of several neurotransmitter receptors. Since not only subcortical, but also cortical activity subserve behavioural asymmetry, we applied quantitative in vitro receptor ...

PubMed

35
Tuberous Sclerosis Complex and Autism Spectrum Disorders

... In general, it is believed the abnormalities in brain development that occur in TSC sometimes interfere with the ... cortical tubers (which develop in earlier stages of brain development) in individuals with TSC involve the region of ...

MedlinePLUS

36
The Effects of Supraoptimal Temperatures on Population Growth and Cortical Patterning in Tetrahymena pyriformis and ...

... cell division described above (Frankel 1964). Such a developmental abnormality was not observed during transient inhibition of cell ... ...

NBII National Biological Information Infrastructure

37
Monocular activation of V1 and V2 in amblyopic adults measured with fMRI
2007-04-16

PurposeAlthough previous neuroimaging efforts clearly indicate visual cortical dysfunction in adults with amblyopia, the extent of abnormalities remains unclear.MethodsThis fMRI study directly compared activity in visual cortex produced by monocular stimulation in 18 adults (6 esotropic strabismics, 6 anisometropes, and 6 controls). Measures were made in ...

PubMed Central

38
RAPID ACOUSTIC PROCESSING IN THE AUDITORY BRAINSTEM IS NOT RELATED TO CORTICAL ASYMMETRY FOR THE SYLLABLE RATE OF SPEECH
2010-04-08

ObjectiveTemporal acuity in the auditory brainstem is correlated with left-dominant patterns of cortical asymmetry for processing rapid speech-sound stimuli. Here we investigate whether a similar relationship exists between brainstem processing of rapid speech components and cortical processing of syllable patterns in speech.MethodsWe ...

PubMed Central

39
Abnormal Asymmetry in Language Association Cortex in Autism

Abnormal Asymmetry in Language Association Cortex in Autism Martha R. Herbert, MD, PhD,1 Gordon J Masanori Takeoka, MD,7 Helen Tager-Flusberg, PhD,4 and Verne S. Caviness, Jr., MD1 Autism- related cortex in autistic and control subjects. Subjects included 16 boys with autism (aged 7�11 years

E-print Network

40
Brain blood flow related to acoustic laryngeal reaction time in adult developmental stutterers.
1992-06-01

The 1980s witnessed renewed interest in the relation between developmental stuttering and central nervous system (CNS) abnormalities. We have reported differences between nonstutterers and developmental stutterers on electrophysiologic (QTE) and metabolic (rCBF) measures of brain function. A critical step in the interpretation of results of functional brain imaging studies is ...

PubMed

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41
1H MR spectroscopy in histopathological subgroups of mesial temporal lobe epilepsy.
2008-08-30

The aim of the study was to analyze the lateralizing value of proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy ((1)H MRS) in histopathologically different subgroups of mesial temporal lobe epilepsies (MTLE) and to correlate results with clinical, MRI and seizure outcome data. A group of 35 patients who underwent resective epilepsy surgery was retrospectively studied. Hippocampal (1)H MR spectra were ...

PubMed

42
DISEASE-SPECIFIC BRAIN ATLASES 1

Encoding Anatomic Variability Parametric Mesh Modeling Brain Asymmetry Corpus Callosum Differences Gender-based maps of cortical variation reveal a mosaic of variability patterns that are characteristic of each

E-print Network

43
A Spherical Map for Cortical Geometry
1998-01-01

Introduction Characterizing normal versus abnormal cortical geometry is an important goal of human brain mapping. This task proves difficult because of the convoluted nature of the cortical surface. Difficulties arise in both identifying topological landmarks and obtaining reliable quantitative measurements. A standard measurement ...

E-print Network

44
Three-dimensional mapping of cortical thickness using Laplace�s equation
2000-01-01

Abstract: We present anovel, computerized method of examining cerebral cortical thickness. The normal cortex varies in thickness from 2to 4mm, reflecting the morphology of neuronal sublayers. Cortical pathologies often manifest abnormal variations in thickness, with examples of Alzheimer�s disease and cortical ...

E-print Network

45
The Cortical Signature of Alzheimer's Disease: Regionally Specific Cortical Thinning Relates to Symptom Severity in Very Mild to Mild AD Dementia and is Detectable in Asymptomatic Amyloid-Positive Individuals
2009-03-16

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is associated with neurodegeneration in vulnerable limbic and heteromodal regions of the cerebral cortex, detectable in vivo using magnetic resonance imaging. It is not clear whether abnormalities of cortical anatomy in AD can be reliably measured across different subject samples, how closely they track symptoms, and whether they ...

PubMed Central

46
Unified Cortical Asymmetry Analysis in Autism via Weighted-SPHARM Moo K. Chung1,3, Kim M. Dalton3, Richard J. Davidson2,3

Unified Cortical Asymmetry Analysis in Autism via Weighted-SPHARM Moo K. Chung1,3, Kim M. Dalton3. References �Chung, M.K., Dalton, K.M., Shen, L., Evans, A.C., Davidson, R.J. Weighted Fourier Series

E-print Network

47
Deconstructing the �Resting� State: Exploring the Temporal Dynamics of Frontal Alpha Asymmetry as an Endophenotype for Depression
2010-12-29

Asymmetry in frontal electrocortical alpha-band (8�13?Hz) activity recorded during resting situations (i.e., in absence of a specific task) has been investigated in relation to emotion and depression for over 30 years. This asymmetry reflects an aspect of endogenous cortical dynamics that is stable over repeated measurements and that ...

PubMed Central

48
Serotonin in Autism and Pediatric Epilepsies
2004-05-01

Serotonergic abnormalities have been reported in both autism and epilepsy. This association may provide insights into underlying mechanisms of these disorders because serotonin plays an important neurotrophic role during brain development--and there is evidence for abnormal cortical development in both autism and some forms of ...

ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

49
Abnormal pyramidal cell morphology and HCN channel expression in cortical dysplasia
2010-07-01

SummaryCortical dysplasia is often associated with intractable seizures. Studies in animal models have described changes in inhibitory and excitatory synaptic function that contribute to hyperexcitability. The role of changes in intrinsic excitability and abnormal dendritic properties has received less attention. Changes in hyperpolarization-activated ...

PubMed Central

50
Differences in lateral hemispheric asymmetries of glucose utilization between early- and late-onset Alzheimer-type dementia
1985-05-01

Positron emission tomography with (/sup 18/F)fluorodeoxyglucose revealed greater right than left hemispheric impairment of cortical glucose metabolism in patients with probable Alzheimer's disease who were younger than 65 but not in those over 65. This asymmetry was related to poor visuospatial performance.

Energy Citations Database

51
Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems 12, S. A. Solla, T. K. Leen, and K�R. Muller (Eds.), MIT Press, 164�170, 2000.

, after 100 trials, the excitatory and inhibitory connections to neuron N1 exhibit a marked asymmetry excitatory and inhibitory alpha synapses on the dendrite of each model neuron. Post stimulus time histograms cortical neurons are onto other excitatory cortical neurons. Why is there such massive re� current

E-print Network

52
4D Traction Force Microscopy Reveals Asymmetric Cortical Forces in Migrating Dictyostelium Cells
2010-12-01

We present a 4D (x; y; z; t) force map of Dictyostelium cells crawling on a soft gel substrate. Vertical forces are of the same order as the tangential ones. The cells pull the substratum upward along the cell, medium, or substratum contact line and push it downward under the cell except for the pseudopods. We demonstrate quantitatively that the variations in the asymmetry in ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

53
Surface area accounts for the relation of gray matter volume to reading-related skills and history of dyslexia.
2010-02-12

It is unknown whether the abnormalities in brain structure and function observed in dyslexic readers are congenital or arise later in development. Analyzing the 2 components of gray matter volume separately may help in differentiating these possibilities. Gray matter volume is the product of cortical surface area, determined during prenatal brain ...

PubMed

54
Cortical thickness reduction in individuals at ultra-high-risk for psychosis.
2009-12-21

Although schizophrenia is characterized by gray matter (GM) abnormalities, particularly in the prefrontal and temporal cortices, it is unclear whether cerebral cortical GM is abnormal in individuals at ultra-high-risk (UHR) for psychosis. We addressed this issue by studying cortical thickness ...

PubMed

55
A surface-based analysis of hemispheric asymmetries and folding of cerebral cortex in term-born human infants.
2010-02-10

We have established a population average surface-based atlas of human cerebral cortex at term gestation and used it to compare infant and adult cortical shape characteristics. Accurate cortical surface reconstructions for each hemisphere of 12 healthy term gestation infants were generated from structural magnetic resonance imaging data using a novel ...

PubMed

56
A surface-based analysis of hemispheric asymmetries and folding of cerebral cortex in term-born human infants
2010-02-10

We have established a population average surface based atlas of human cerebral cortex at term gestation and used it to compare infant and adult cortical shape characteristics. Accurate cortical surface reconstructions for each hemisphere of 12 healthy term gestation infants were generated from structural magnetic resonance imaging data using a novel ...

PubMed Central

57
Central auditory processing, MRI morphometry and brain laterality: applications to dyslexia.
1998-01-01

We review data from our laboratory related to a view of dyslexia as a biological disorder, or deficit, caused by both structural and functional brain abnormalities. The review is focused on central auditory processing in dyslexia, and the possibility that impairments in the auditory or acoustic features of the phonological code may be at the heart of the impairments seen in ...

PubMed

58
Balloon cells in human cortical dysplasia and tuberous sclerosis: isolation of a pathological progenitor-like cell.
2010-03-30

Neural stem cells are present in the human post-natal brain and are important in the development of brain tumours. However, their contribution to non-neoplastic human disease is less clear. We have tested the hypothesis that malformations of cortical development contain abnormal (pathological) stem cells. Such malformations are a major cause of epilepsy. ...

PubMed

59
Rapamycin suppresses seizures and neuronal hypertrophy in a mouse model of cortical dysplasia
2009-05-26

SUMMARYMalformations of the cerebral cortex known as cortical dysplasia account for the majority of cases of intractable childhood epilepsy. With the exception of the tuberous sclerosis complex, the molecular basis of most types of cortical dysplasia is completely unknown. Currently, there are no good animal models available that recapitulate key features ...

PubMed Central

60
Asymmetries of cortical shape: Effects . . .
2007-01-01

Some evidence suggests that sex, handedness and disease processes associated with schizophrenia affect the magnitude and/or direction of structural brain asymmetries. There are mixed findings, however, on how these factors influence cerebral torque, when torque is assessed with linear or volumetric measurements. We obtained MRI data from 67 healthy (30 males, 10 non-dextrals) ...

E-print Network

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61
Abnormal neural activities in first-episode, treatment-na�ve, short-illness-duration, and treatment-response patients with major depressive disorder: A resting-state fMRI study.
2011-07-20

BACKGROUND: Abnormality of limbic-cortical networks was postulated in depression. Using a regional homogeneity (ReHo) approach, we explored the regional homogeneity (ReHo) of the brain regions in patients with first-episode, treatment-na�ve, short-illness-duration, and treatment-response depression in resting state to test the ...

PubMed

62
A systematic approach for interpreting MR images of the seizure patient.
1997-07-01

A systematic approach needs to be used to review MR scans in epilepsy patients to avoid the common pitfalls engendered by the subtle nature of many epileptogenic lesions. One should always evaluate the hippocampus regardless of other MR findings to avoid missing dual abnormalities. False-positive and false-negative diagnosis of hippocampal sclerosis can be avoided by ...

PubMed

63
The Association between Handedness, Brain Asymmetries, and Corpus Callosum Size in Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)
2006-09-29

It has been suggested from studies in human subjects that sex, handedness, and brain asymmetries influence variation in corpus callosum (CC) size and these differences reflect the degree of connectivity between homotopic regions of the left and right cerebral hemispheres. Here we report that handedness is associated with variation in the size of the CC in chimpanzees. We ...

PubMed Central

64
REGENERATIONAL LEG ASYMMETRY IN DAMAGED TROGULUS NEPAEFORMIS (SCOPOLI 1763)(OPILIONES, TROGULIDAE)

... missing entire articles, and four with abnormally elongated secondary end-articles were not included. We measured legs by laying ... species. In a few cases, elongation of the secondary end-article was re...

NBII National Biological Information Infrastructure

65
Effects of Consonant-Vowel Transitions in Speech Stimuli on Cortical Auditory Evoked Potentials in Adults
2011-05-04

We examined the neural activation to consonant-vowel transitions by cortical auditory evoked potentials (AEPs). The aim was to show whether cortical response patterns to speech stimuli contain components due to one of the temporal features, the voice-onset time (VOT). In seven normal-hearing adults, the cortical responses to four ...

PubMed Central

66
Computed tomographic evaluation of the cavernous sinus.
1982-04-01

In evaluating over 300 patients with sellar and parasellar lesions, the computed tomographic (CT) appearance of the cavernous sinus was studied. Optimal visualization of the cavernous sinus was obtained with continuous contrast enhancement of both axial and coronal tomograms. The coronal projection and reformatted views provided imaging of the cranial nerves within the cavernous sinus. In addition ...

PubMed

67
Quantitative MRI detects abnormalities in relatives of patients with epilepsy and malformations of cortical development.
2003-03-01

Malformations of cortical development (MCD) are a common etiology for epilepsy. Laminar heterotopia, bilateral subependymal heterotopia, and lissencephaly have a genetic basis. No gene mutations have yet been identified in patients with focal cortical dysplasias. The aim of this study was to use quantitative morphometric tools to determine if there were ...

PubMed

68
[Imaging of the brain malformations].
2008-04-01

Cortical dysplasia (CD) is a malformation predominantly affected cerebral neocortex, resulting in disorganized brain cytoarchitecture. Normal cortical lamination is disturbed and neurons are abnormally located. Adjacent white matter is often involved. Chronic seizures are a clinical feature of developmental disorders of the brain, ...

PubMed

69
Dystonia: a disorder of motor programming or motor execution?
2002-11-01

For some time, dystonia has been seen as purely a motor disorder. Relatively novel concepts published approximately 10 years ago also presumed that in the development of dystonic dyskinesias, only motor behaviour was abnormal. Neurophysiological observations of various types of dystonic disorders, which were performed using sophisticated electromyography, polymyography, ...

PubMed

70
A Fuzzy System for Helping Medical Diagnosis of Malformations of Cortical Development
2006-11-18

Malformations of the cerebral cortex are recognized as a common cause of developmental delay, neurological deficits, mental retardation and epilepsy. Currently, the diagnosis of cerebral cortical malformations is based on a subjective interpretation of neuroimaging characteristics of the cerebral gray matter and underlying white matter.There is no automated system for aiding ...

PubMed Central

71
Status epilepticus-induced pathologic plasticity in a rat model of focal cortical dysplasia.
2011-04-10

We have generated an experimental 'double-hit' model of chronic epilepsy to recapitulate the co-existence of abnormal cortical structure and frequently recurrent seizures as observed in human focal cortical dysplasia. We induced cortical malformations by exposing rats prenatally to methylazoxymethanol acetate and ...

PubMed

72
Altered layer-specific gene expression in cortical samples from patients with temporal lobe epilepsy.
2011-08-29

Purpose:? Neuropathologic investigations frequently reveal the presence of architectural cortical dysplasia in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), sometimes as an isolated finding but more commonly associated with hippocampal sclerosis (HS) and white matter abnormalities. The histologic pattern and the developmental origin of these alterations are ...

PubMed

73
A robust cerebral asymmetry in the infant brain: The rightward superior temporal sulcus.
2011-06-23

In order to understand how genetic mutations might have favored language development in our species, we need a better description of the human brain at the beginning of life. As the linguistic network mainly involves the left perisylvian regions in adults, we used anatomical MRI to study the structural asymmetries of these regions in 14 preverbal infants. Our results show four ...

PubMed

74
Cortical pathology and cognitive impairment in multiple sclerosis.
2011-03-01

Cognitive impairment constitutes a relevant clinical aspect of multiple sclerosis (MS). Depending on the disease phase and type, 40-65% of MS patients develop various degrees of cognitive dysfunction. Pathological and MRI studies have failed to demonstrate the existence of a strict relationship between cognitive impairment and subcortical white matter pathology. The correlation is also poor when ...

PubMed

75
A Large-Scale Investigation of Lateralization in Cortical Anatomy and Word Reading: Are There Sex Differences?
2009-03-01

Although left hemisphere language specialization is one of the most widely reported findings in human neuropsychology, some studies have found evidence for more bilateral language organization in women. We report findings of a large scale, multi-task investigation of sex differences in both structural asymmetries and lateralization of word reading. Two hundred participants ...

PubMed Central

76
[Radiology of the cervical spine].
1989-04-01

The author describes some particularities seen in the abnormal or pathological image of the cervical spine: the osteolysis of the cortical bone in the spinous processes, the "Y" shaped course of the corporeal veins, the notch in interspinous bursitis, and the main forms of constitutional stenosis of the cervical canal. PMID:2727290

PubMed

77
Study of interhemispheric asymmetries in electroencephalographic signals by frequency analysis
2011-01-01

This study provides a new method for the detection of interhemispheric asymmetries in patients with continuous video-electroencephalography (EEG) monitoring at Intensive Care Unit (ICU), using wavelet energy. We obtained the registration of EEG signals in 42 patients with different pathologies, and then we proceeded to perform signal processing using the Matlab program, we ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

78
Intra- and Interindividual Differences in Lateralized Cognitive Performance and Asymmetrical EEG Activity in the Frontal Cortex
2011-04-01

The study shows that changes in relative verbal vs. figural working memory and fluency performance from one session to a second session two to 3 weeks apart covary with spontaneously occurring changes of cortical asymmetry in the lateral frontal and central cortex, measured by electroencephalography (EEG) in resting conditions before the execution of ...

ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

79
Magnetic resonance imaging evidence for a defect of cerebral cortical development in autism.
1990-06-01

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans were performed on 13 high-functioning male autistic subjects and 13 male nonautistic control subjects comparable in age and nonverbal IQ. Scans were rated for the presence of cerebral cortical malformations. Five autistic subjects had polymicrogyria, one had schizencephaly and macrogyria, and one had macrogyria. None of the control ...

PubMed

80
Craniocervical dystonia: clinical and pathophysiological features.
2010-07-01

Blepharospasm, oromandibular, lingual, laryngeal and cervical dystonia are common forms of adult-onset dystonia. Each condition may appear in isolation or manifest along with other forms of craniocervical dystonia. Although the various craniocervical dystonias typically present with involuntary muscle spasms causing abnormal postures, they differ for some clinical features. ...

PubMed

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81
Abnormal cortical thickness and brain-behavior correlation patterns in individuals with heavy prenatal alcohol exposure.
2007-04-18

Quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies in children with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASDs) have shown regional patterns of dysmorphology, most prominent in parietal and posterior temporal cortices. Various methods of image analysis have been employed in these studies, but abnormalities in cortical thickness have ...

PubMed

82
Disorganization of cortical structure and the brain tumors.
1999-01-01

In the course of histopathological investigation of the temporal lobe sections, selected from 63 patients treated surgically for intractable epilepsy and finally presented with primary temporal tumors, we found 12 cases expressed both neoplastic process' and developmental disorders. The temporal mass lesions consisting of neuro-glial or pure glial tumors were associated with some developmental ...

PubMed

83
doi:10.1093/brain/awh367 Brain (2005), 128, 417�423 Correlation between brainstem and cortical auditory

system function in children with auditory processing disorders. Audiol Neuro-Otol 2004; 9: 107 auditory processes in normal and language-impaired children Brad Wible,1 Trent Nicol2 and Nina Kraus3 relationship between brainstem and cortical auditory processing was shown to be abnormal in children

E-print Network

84
Visual Behaviors and Adaptations Associated with Cortical and Ocular Impairment in Children.
1992-12-01

This article shows the usefulness of understanding visual behaviors in the diagnosis of various types of visual impairments that are due to ocular and cortical disorders. Behaviors discussed include nystagmus, ocular motor dyspraxia, head position, close viewing, field loss adaptations, mannerisms, photophobia, and abnormal color perception. (JDD)

ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

85
Reelin' in Genes for Cortical Dysplasia
2001-11-01

Malformations of cortical development are a broad family of disorders that are characterized by abnormal cytoarchitecture of the cerebral cortex and a high association with epilepsy. In recent years positional cloning strategies have been implemented to identify several distinct gene mutations that are responsible for developmental brain malformations. The ...

PubMed Central

86
Reduced dopamine-beta-hydroxylase activity in Alzheimer's disease
1981-01-10

The activity of the noradrenergic marker enzyme dopamine-beta-hydroxylase was measured in brains removed postmortem from control patients and patients with Alzheimer's disease. Enzyme activity was decreased in the frontal and temporal cortices and hippocampus in patients with Alzheimer's disease, but was within the normal range in patients with depression, multiinfarct ...

PubMed Central

87
Mapping Corpus Callosum Deficits in Autism: An Index of Aberrant Cortical Connectivity

Mapping Corpus Callosum Deficits in Autism: An Index of Aberrant Cortical Connectivity Christine N Background: Volumetric studies have reported reductions in the size of the corpus callosum (CC) in autism method was used to detect and map the spatial pattern of CC abnormalities in male patients with autism

E-print Network

88
Neuronal migration disorders.
2009-02-23

Lissencephaly-pachygyria-severe band heterotopia are diffuse neuronal migration disorders (NMDs) causing severe, global neurological impairment. Abnormalities of the LIS1, DCX, ARX, TUBA1A and RELN genes have been associated with these malformations. NMDs only affecting subsets of neurons, such as mild subcortical band heterotopia and periventricular heterotopia, cause ...

PubMed

89
A reassessment of sensory evoked potential parameters in multiple sclerosis: a discriminant analysis approach.
1981-02-01

The sensitivity of the different parameters (absolute latency, interwave latency, latency asymmetry, amplitude) of both cervical and cerebral responses evoked by stimulation of the median nerve at the wrist was assessed in patients with multiple sclerosis by discriminant analysis. The peak latency of N13 or N20 SEP components or both was found to be more sensitive than their ...

PubMed Central

90
Imaging in acute renal infection in children.
1987-03-01

Infection is the most common disease of the urinary tract in children, and various imaging techniques have been used to verify its presence and location. On retrospective analysis, 50 consecutive children with documented upper urinary tract infection had abnormal findings on renal cortical scintigraphy with 99mTc-glucoheptonate. The infection involved the ...

PubMed

91
Imaging in acute renal infection in children
1987-03-01

Infection is the most common disease of the urinary tract in children, and various imaging techniques have been used to verify its presence and location. On retrospective analysis, 50 consecutive children with documented upper urinary tract infection had abnormal findings on renal cortical scintigraphy with 99mTc-glucoheptonate. The infection involved the ...

Energy Citations Database

92
Widespread cortical thinning in children with frontal lobe epilepsy.
2011-05-31

Purpose:? Spread of seizure activity outside the frontal lobe due to cortico-cortical connections can result in alteration in the cortex beyond the frontal lobe in children with intractable frontal lobe epilepsy (FLE). The aim of this study was to identify regions of reduced cortical thickness in children with intractable FLE. Methods:? High-resolution ...

PubMed

93
Catechol-o-methyl transferase (COMT) val158met polymorphism and adolescent cortical development in patients with childhood-onset schizophrenia, their non-psychotic siblings, and healthy controls.
2011-05-15

Non-psychotic individuals at increased risk for schizophrenia show alterations in fronto-striatal dopamine signaling and cortical gray matter maturation reminiscent of those seen in schizophrenia. It remains unclear however if variations in dopamine signaling influence rates of structural cortical maturation in typically developing individuals, and whether ...

PubMed

94
Cortical Volume and Developmental Instability Are Independent Predictors of General Intellectual Ability
2004-12-01

Measures of developmental instability (DI) reflect developmental disruptions due to genetic and environmental perturbations during normal development. DI might be expected to influence the developmental course of brain development and hence intelligence, and several studies indicate this to be the case. The factors that mediate this relationship are unknown. One possibility is that DI affects ...

ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

95
An Architectural Mechanism for Direction-tuned Cortical Simple Cells: The Role of Mutual Inhibition
1996-01-01

A linear architectural model of cortical simple cells is presented. The model evidences how mutual inhibition, occurring through synaptic coupling functions asymmetrically distributed in space, can be a possible basis for a wide variety of spatio-temporal simple cell response properties, including direction selectivity and velocity tuning. While spatial ...

E-print Network

96
Detection of epileptogenic cortical malformations with surface-based MRI morphometry.
2011-02-04

Magnetic resonance imaging has revolutionized the detection of structural abnormalities in patients with epilepsy. However, many focal abnormalities remain undetected in routine visual inspection. Here we use an automated, surface-based method for quantifying morphometric features related to epileptogenic cortical malformations to ...

PubMed

97
Detection of Epileptogenic Cortical Malformations with Surface-Based MRI Morphometry
2011-02-04

Magnetic resonance imaging has revolutionized the detection of structural abnormalities in patients with epilepsy. However, many focal abnormalities remain undetected in routine visual inspection. Here we use an automated, surface-based method for quantifying morphometric features related to epileptogenic cortical malformations to ...

PubMed Central

98
Extended neocortical maturation time encompasses speciation, fatty acid and lateralization theories of the evolution of schizophrenia and creativity.
2007-04-20

I suggest that the extended maturation time of some regions of the human neocortex is the uniquely human factor which allows the development of language, creativity and madness. The genetic event or events which contribute to the long delay to final maturation occurred at or after the speciation of Homo sapiens sapiens. Neocortical growth may follow the previously detailed "balloon model", which ...

PubMed

99
EEG functional connectivity of the intrahemispheric cortico-cortical network of idiopathic generalized epilepsy.
2011-05-19

AIMS: Intrahemispheric, cortico-cortical EEG functional connectivity (fC) was investigated in untreated patients with idiopathic generalized epilepsy (IGE) in this explorative study. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Group comparison was carried out between 19, drug-naive IGE patients and 19, matched healthy persons. 90�2s of 19 channels waking, interictal background EEG signal (without ...

PubMed

100
Impact of Dendritic Spine Preservation in Medium Spiny Neurons on Dopamine Graft Efficacy and the Expression of Dyskinesias in Parkinsonian Rats
2010-01-25

Dopamine deficiency associated with Parkinson�s disease (PD) results in numerous changes in striatal transmitter function and neuron morphology. Specifically, there is marked atrophy of dendrites and dendritic spines on striatal medium spiny neurons (MSN), primary targets of inputs from nigral dopamine and cortical glutamate neurons, in advanced PD and rodent models of ...

PubMed Central

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101
Crossed cerebellar diaschisis and cerebral perfusion reserve in unilateral occlusive cerebrov ascular diseases
1994-05-01

The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between crossed cerebellar diaschisis (CCD) and cerebral perfusion reserve in patients with unilateral occlusive cerebrovascular diseases using SPECT and acetazolamide (ACZ) enhancement. We studied 14 patients who had reduced cerebral cortical blood flow on SPECT but only subcortical ...

Energy Citations Database

102
Brain imaging findings in dyslexia.
2010-04-01

Dyslexia is a brain-based disorder that has been intensively studied in the Western world for more than a century because of its social burden. However, affected individuals in Chinese communities are neither recognized nor formally diagnosed. Previous studies have concentrated on the disadvantages of reading deficits, and few have addressed non-linguistic skills, which are included in the ...

PubMed

103
Diagnosis and Molecular Variability of an Argentinean Population of Nacobbus aberrans with Some Observations on Histopathology in Tomato
2007-03-01

Diagnosis of an Argentinean population of Nacobbus sp. infecting sweet pepper (lamuyo) was carried out including morphology, scanning electron microscopy, and molecular studies. In light of our morphometric, molecular and host-range results, we consider the studied population to belong to N. aberrans s. l., and by host range tests the population is assigned to the "sugar beet group." ITS-PCR ...

PubMed Central

104
Postnatal developmental trajectories of neural circuits in the primate prefrontal cortex: identifying sensitive periods for vulnerability to schizophrenia.
2011-05-01

Schizophrenia is a disorder of cognitive neurodevelopment with characteristic abnormalities in working memory attributed, at least in part, to alterations in the circuitry of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. Various environmental exposures from conception through adolescence increase risk for the illness, possibly by altering the developmental trajectories of prefrontal ...

PubMed

105
Anger Style, Psychopathology, and Regional Brain Activity
2008-10-01

Depression and anxiety often involve high levels of trait anger and disturbances in anger expression. Reported anger experience and outward anger expression have recently been associated with left-biased asymmetry of frontal cortical activity, assumed to reflect approach motivation. However, different styles of anger expression could presumably involve ...

PubMed Central

106
Reversal of brain metabolic abnormalities following treatment of AIDS dementia complex with 3'-azido-2',3'-dideoxythymidine (AZT, zidovudine): a PET-FDG study
1989-05-01

Brain glucose metabolism was evaluated in four patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) dementia complex using (/sup 18/F)fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) and positron emission tomography (PET) scans at the beginning of therapy with 3'-azido-2',3'-dideoxythymidine (AZT, zidovudine), and later in the course of therapy. In two patients, baseline, large focal ...

Energy Citations Database

107
Amygdala�hippocampal shape differences in schizophrenia: the application of 3D shape models to volumetric MR data
2002-08-20

Evidence suggests that some structural brain abnormalities in schizophrenia are neurodevelopmental in origin. There is also growing evidence to suggest that shape deformations in brain structure may reflect abnormalities in neurodevelopment. While many magnetic resonance (MR) imaging studies have investigated brain area and volume measures in ...

PubMed Central

108
Somatosensory evoked potentials in children with bilateral spastic cerebral palsy.
2011-03-01

Alterations were monitored of somatosensory evoked potentials in children with bilateral spastic cerebral palsy and these findings correlated with relevant clinical and laboratory parameters. Fifty-one children with bilateral spastic cerebral palsy (31 boys, 20 girls; age range 24-168 months) participated in the study. Abnormal somatosensory evoked potentials latencies were ...

PubMed

109
ABNORMAL SENSORIMOTOR PLASTICITY IN ORGANIC BUT NOT IN PSYCHOGENIC DYSTONIA
2009-08-18

Dystonia is characterised by two main pathophysiological abnormalities: reduced excitability of inhibitory systems at many levels of the sensorimotor system, and increased plasticity of neural connections in sensorimotor circuits at a brainstem and spinal level. A surprising finding in two recent papers has been the fact that abnormalities of inhibition ...

PubMed Central

110
Abnormal neuronal migration, deranged cerebral cortical organization, and diffuse white matter astrocytosis of human fetal brain: a major effect of methylmercury poisoning in utero. [Fetal brain development altered by material ingestion of mercury-contaminated food during early pregnancy
1978-01-01

Detailed clinical and neuropathological studies were made in two fullterm newborn human infants who were exposed to methylmercury in utero as a result of maternal ingestion of methylmercury-contaminated bread in early phases of pregnancy. High levels of mercury were detected in various regions of the brain at autopsy. Study of the brains revealed a disturbance in the development in both cases, ...

Energy Citations Database

111
Fish otolith asymmetry: morphometry and modeling.
2006-07-21

Mathematical modeling suggests that relatively large values of otolith mass asymmetry in fishes can alter acoustic functionality and may be responsible for abnormal fish behavior when subjected to weightlessness during parabolic or space flight [D.V. Lychakov, Y.T. Rebane, Otolith mass asymmetry in 18 species of fish and pigeon, J. ...

PubMed

112
Comparison of metabolic rates, language, and memory in subcortical aphasias. [Tomographic studies using /sup 18/F-fluorodeoxyglulcose
1981-01-01

Four patients with subcortical lesions and either aphasia or amnesia were compared to four patients with cortical lesions and aphasia. Each patient had /sup 18/F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission computed tomography and language and memory evaluations. Metabolic depression was found in the thalamus and caudate in both groups, while only the cortical ...

Energy Citations Database

113
Magnetoencephalographic Abnormalities in Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease: A Case Report
2010-10-11

Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) is a rare neurodegenerative disease with no effective therapy available. We recorded spontaneous magnetoencephalography and auditory evoked fields (AEFs) from a male patient with a rapidly progressive memory disorder, ataxia and myoclonus. Post-mortem examination confirmed sporadic CJD. Sources of the abnormal slow wave activity were localized ...

PubMed Central

114
Metrizamide and radionuclide cisternography in communicating hydrocephalus.
1979-03-01

Simultaneous 111In-DPTA and metrizamide CT cisternography correlated closely in the qualitative imaging of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) dynamics in 9 normal patients and in 11 patients thought to have communicating hydrocephalus. CSF clearance of both tracers was similar; significant absorption occurred in the spinal dural sac. Although delayed elevated serum iodine levels correlated highly with ...

PubMed

115
Metrizamide and radionuclide cisternography in communicating hydrocephalus
1979-03-01

Simultaneous /sup 111/In-DTPA and metrizamide CT cisternography correlated closely in the qualitative imaging of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) dynamics in 9 normal patients and in 11 patients thought to have communicating hydrocephalus. CSF clearance of both tracers was similar; significant absorption occurred in the spinal dural sac. Although delayed elevated serum iodine levels correlated highly ...

Energy Citations Database

116
MRI findings in a patient with partial monosomy 10p.
1998-02-01

Partial monosomy 10p is a rare chromosomal disorder characterised by frontal bossing, micrognathia, congenital heart defects, vesicoureteral abnormalities, and developmental delay. This is the first report to describe seizures not associated with hypocalcaemia, as well as cortical atrophy and decreased white matter volume on magnetic resonance imaging, in ...

PubMed Central

117
Comparison of metrizamide CT cisternography with radionuclide cisternography in abnormal cerebrospinal fluid dynamics.
1978-01-01

Metrizamide CT cisternograms were performed on 39 patients with a clinical diagnosis of CSF abnormalities; 20 of these patients underwent radionuclide cisternography as well. Comparison of metrizamide CT and RN cisternography revealed good correlation in the degree, extent, and time sequence of ventricular reflux as well as the extent of cortical staining ...

PubMed

118
A clinicopathological study of autism.
1998-05-01

A neuropathological study of autism was established and brain tissue examined from six mentally handicapped subjects with autism. Clinical and educational records were obtained and standardized diagnostic interviews conducted with the parents of cases not seen before death. Four of the six brains were megalencephalic, and areas of cortical abnormality were ...

PubMed

119
Neuroananatomical Correlates of Cognitive Phenotypes in Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
2009-06-26

BackgroundPrevious research characterized three cognitive phenotypes in temporal lobe epilepsy; each associated with different profiles of clinical seizure and demographic characteristics, total cerebral (gray, white, CSF) and hippocampal volumes, and prospective cognitive trajectories. The objective of this investigation is to characterize in detail the specific neuroanatomical ...

PubMed Central

120
ADHD Familial Loading and Abnormal EEG Alpha Asymmetry in Children with ADHD1
2009-12-16

ObjectiveAbnormal brain laterality (ABL) is indicated in ADHD. ADHD and brain laterality are heritable. Genetic factors contributing to lateralization of brain function may contribute to ADHD. If so, increased ADHD family loading should be associated with greater ABL. Previous studies have shown increased rightward alpha asymmetry in ADHD. We tested ...

PubMed Central

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121
Rapid acoustic processing in the auditory brainstem is not related to cortical asymmetry for the syllable rate of speech

; Banai et al., 2005, 2009; Hornickel et al., 2009; Chandrasekaran et al., 2009). An important; Chandrasekaran et al., 2009; Hornickel et al., 2009; Dhar et al., 2009), and in the current work none and Kraus, 2009; Parbery-Clark et al. 2009; Bidelman et al., 2009; Chandrasekaran and Kraus, 2010), language

E-print Network

122
Patient Identification. _ _ _ _ _ Pt. Date of Birth _ _/_ _/_

(blind including cortical blindness). ______ 4. Facial Palsy: Ask � or use pantomime to encourage stimuli in the poorly responsive or non-comprehending patient. If facial trauma/bandages, orotracheal tube = Normal symmetrical movements. 1 = Minor paralysis (flattened nasolabial fold, asymmetry on smiling). 2

E-print Network

123
Modification of the Bilateral Sagittal Split Osteotomy for the Asymmetric Mandible.
2011-04-14

The asymmetric mandible is often corrected using the bilateral sagittal split osteotomy. Significant rotation or lateralization of the dentate (distal) segment to correct an asymmetry often results in misalignment of the proximal and distal segments. Fixation of the 2 segments can displace the proximal segment out of the glenoid fossa, leading to postoperative malocclusion. A ...

PubMed

124
J Am Acad Audiol 10: 304�318 (1999) T

difficulty understanding speech (e.g., individuals with central auditory processing disorders). In our- documented cortical asymmetry associated with speech and language processing. Auditory Cortex Evidence. These data contradict arguments that the auditory cortex has poor temporal processing ability. Those

E-print Network

125
Asymmetries of cortical shape: Effects of handedness, sex and schizophrenia

and hemispheric language dominance in healthy humans. Brain 123 (Pt 12), 2512�2518. Koff, E., Naeser, M dominance or other lateralized brain functions dissociable from handedness, may more closely relate to hemispheric shape asymme- tries, while the lateralization of other discrete brain regions may be more

E-print Network

126
Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems 12, S. A. Solla, T. K. Leen, and K-R. Muller (Eds.), MIT Press, 164-170, 2000.

100 trials, the excitatory and inhibitory connections to neuron N1 exhibit a marked asymmetry excitatory and inhibitory alpha synapses on the dendrite of each model neuron. Post stimulus time histograms by massive excitatory feedback: more than eighty percent of the synapses made by excitatory cortical neurons

E-print Network

127
FOCAL DECREASES OF CORTICAL GABAA RECEPTOR BINDING REMOTE FROM THE PRIMARY SEIZURE FOCUS
2008-07-14

PurposeTo determine the electro-clinical significance and histopathological correlates of cortical gamma-aminobutyric acidA (GABAA) receptor abnormalities detected in and remote from human neocortical epileptic foci.MethodsCortical areas with decreased [11C]flumazenil ...

PubMed Central

128
Correlation between brainstem and cortical auditory processes in normal and language-impaired children.
2005-01-05

A functional relationship between brainstem and cortical auditory processing was shown to be abnormal in children with language-based learning problems (LP). Auditory evoked potentials were used to investigate brainstem and cortical responses to the speech sound /da/. The duration of the wave V-V(n) complex of the auditory brainstem ...

PubMed

129
Retrospective study on PET-SPECT imaging in a large cohort of myotonic dystrophy type 1 patients.
2010-09-15

The aim was to study brain involvement in myotonic dystrophy type 1 by single photon emission tomography (SPECT) and positron emission tomography (PET). 58 DM1 patients were subjected to SPECT; 17 to both SPECT and PET. SPECT patients were grouped as 'normally perfused' and 'abnormally perfused'; PET patients as 'normal performers' and 'abnormal ...

PubMed

130
Regional brain activation and affective response to physical activity among healthy adolescents
2009-08-15

Research has shown that frontal brain activation, assessed via electroencephalographic (EEG) asymmetry, predicts the post-exercise affective response to exercise among adults. Building on this evidence, the present study investigates the utility of resting cortical asymmetry for explaining variance in the affective response both during ...

PubMed Central

131
Early asymmetries in maternal transcript distribution associated with a cortical microtubule network and a polar body in the beetle Tribolium castaneum.
2010-11-01

The localization of maternal mRNAs during oogenesis plays a central role in axial specification in some insects. Here we describe a polar body-associated asymmetry in maternal transcript distribution in pre-blastoderm eggs of the beetle Tribolium castaneum. Since the position of the polar body marks the future dorsal side of the embryo, we have investigated whether this ...

PubMed

132
Carbon dioxide-induced panic attacks and quantitative electroencephalogram in panic disorder patients.
2010-03-01

The objective of the study was to investigate and compare the brain cortical activity, as indexed by quantitative electroencephalographic (qEEG) power, coherence and asymmetry measures, in panic disorder (PD) patients during an induced panic attack with a 35% CO(2) challenge test and also in a resting condition. Fifteen subjects with PD were randomly ...

PubMed

133
Morphometric abnormalities in brains of great blue heron hatchlings exposed in the wild to PCDDs.
1995-05-01

Great blue heron hatchlings from colonies in the Strait of Georgia, British Columbia, Canada are being monitored for environmental contaminant exposure and effects by the Canadian Wildlife Service. The contaminants of concern are polychlorinated dibenzodioxins (PCDDs) and polychlorinated dibenzofurans (PCDFs), primarily derived from kraft pulp mill effluent. The levels of PCDDs and PCDFs in eggs ...

PubMed Central

134
Cholinergic influences on cortical development and adult neurogenesis.
2011-01-25

In this review, we focus on immature neurons and their regulation by the cholinergic system, both during cortical development as well as during adult neurogenesis. We discuss various studies that indicate roles for acetylcholine in precursor development and neuronal differentiation. Cholinergic neurons projecting from the basal forebrain innervate the cerebral cortex during ...

PubMed

135
Neurological asymmetries immediately after unilateral ECT.
1978-12-01

Twenty-nine right handed patients were examined neurologically before and immediately after each of 62 unilateral ECTs to the dominant and non-dominant hemispheres. Most convulsions were followed by signs of transitory neurological dysfunction referable to the treated hemisphere. These signs included deep tendon reflex asymmetry, hemiparesis, tactile and visual inattention, ...

PubMed Central

136
Enhancement of the asymmetry-based overlapping analysis through features extraction
2011-01-01

In this paper, an enhanced algorithm is proposed to detect foot inflammation and, hence, predict ulcers before they can develop. This algorithm is based on an asymmetry analysis combined with a segmentation technique with a genetic algorithm to achieve higher efficiency in the detection of inflammation. The analysis involves several steps: segmentation, geometry ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

137
Abnormal digastric muscle with unilateral quadrification of the anterior belly.
2002-01-01

During dissection of the submental region we observed that the anterior belly of the left digastric muscle had four separate insertions. These muscle bands united in a common tendon as they continued with the posterior belly. This is an anatomical variation in the mylohyoid digastric muscle group in the floor of the mouth. When an asymmetry in the floor of the mouth is ...

PubMed

138
PAR-3 Oligomerization May Provide an Actin-Independent Mechanism to Maintain Distinct Par Protein Domains in the Early Caenorhabditis elegans Embryo.
2011-09-20

Par proteins establish discrete intracellular spatial domains to polarize many different cell types. In the single-cell embryo of the nematode worm Caenorhabditis elegans, the segregation of Par proteins is crucial for proper division and cell fate specification. Actomyosin-based cortical flows drive the initial formation of anterior and posterior Par domains, but ...

PubMed

139
Motor cortical hyperexcitability in idiopathic scoliosis: could focal dystonia be a subclinical etiological factor?
2009-12-24

The aetiology of idiopathic scoliosis (IS) remains unknown; however, there is a growing body of evidence suggesting that the spine deformity could be the expression of a subclinical nervous system disorder. A defective sensory input or an anomalous sensorimotor integration may lead to an abnormal postural tone and therefore the development of a spine deformity. Inhibition of ...

PubMed Central

140
Motor cortical hyperexcitability in idiopathic scoliosis: could focal dystonia be a subclinical etiological factor?
2009-12-24

The aetiology of idiopathic scoliosis (IS) remains unknown; however, there is a growing body of evidence suggesting that the spine deformity could be the expression of a subclinical nervous system disorder. A defective sensory input or an anomalous sensorimotor integration may lead to an abnormal postural tone and therefore the development of a spine deformity. Inhibition of ...

PubMed

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141
Contribution of chronic pain and neuroticism to abnormal forebrain gray matter in patients with temporomandibular disorder.
2010-12-13

Cortical plasticity is thought to occur following continuous barrage of nociceptive afferent signals to the brain. Hence, chronic pain is presumed to induce anatomical and physiological changes in the brain over time. Inherent factors, some pre-dating the onset of chronic pain, may also contribute to brain abnormalities present in patients. In this study ...

PubMed

142
Approaching the Bad and Avoiding the Good: Lateral Prefrontal Cortical Asymmetry Distinguishes between Action and Valence
2010-09-01

Goal pursuit in humans sometimes involves approaching unpleasant and avoiding pleasant stimuli, such as when a dieter chooses to eat vegetables (although he does not like them) instead of doughnuts (which he greatly prefers). Previous neuroscience investigations have established a left�right prefrontal asymmetry between approaching pleasant and avoiding unpleasant stimuli, ...

PubMed Central

143
Price impact asymmetry of block trades: An institutional trading explanation
1998-01-01

American Finance Association meetings for helpful comments. Empirical research in finance documented the existence of a permanent price impact asym-metry between buyer and seller-initiated block trades: the permanent price impact of buys is larger than that of sells. This paper develops a theoretical model to explain and investigate the asymmetry ...

E-print Network

144
Regional cerebral blood flow in mood disorders. I. Comparison of major depressives and normal controls at rest
1990-01-01

We measured regional cerebral blood flow with the xenon 133 inhalation technique in 41 patients with major depressive disorder and 40 matched, normal controls during an eyes-closed, resting condition. The depressed group had a marked reduction in global cortical blood flow. To examine topographic abnormalities, traditional multivariate analyses were ...

Energy Citations Database

145
Cytoskeletal abnormalities in relation with meiotic competence and ageing in porcine and bovine oocytes during in vitro maturation.
2011-05-04

With 4 figures SUMMARY: We investigated the frequencies of cytoskeletal anomalies in metaphase-II (M-II) and incompetent [arrested at an immature metaphase (IM) stage] porcine and bovine oocytes during in vitro maturation (IVM) in relation with ageing by immunostaining and confocal microscopy. In porcine oocytes, meiotic arrest at the IM stage was associated with abnormalities ...

PubMed

146
Abnormal tactile discrimination and somatosensory plasticity in familial primary hyperhidrosis.
2008-06-12

Abnormal sensory processing seems to be involved in hyperhidrosis. To test this hypothesis, we investigated tactile acuity and cortical plastic changes in patients with primary hyperhidrosis (PH) and their asymptomatic relatives. We studied thirteen subjects belonging to two families with PH and thirteen age-matched healthy controls using Johnson-Van ...

PubMed

147
Projection profile analysis for automated detection of abnormalities in chest radiographs
2006-01-15

Abnormalities in chest images often present as abnormal opacity or abnormal asymmetry. We have developed a novel method for automated detection of abnormalities in chest radiographs by use of these features. Our method is based on an analysis of the projection profile obtained by projecting the ...

Energy Citations Database

148
Classification of chromosome segregation errors in cancer.
2008-06-06

Abnormal chromosome segregation at mitosis is one way by which neoplastic cells accumulate the many genetic abnormalities required for tumour development. In this paper, a straightforward morphology-based classification of chromosome segregation errors in cancer is suggested. This classification distinguishes between abnormalities in ...

PubMed

149
Pulmonary ventilation and perfusion abnormalities and ventilation perfusion imbalance in children with pulmonary atresia or extreme tetralogy of Fallot
1990-08-01

Xenon-133 lung ventilation and perfusion scans were done preoperatively after cardiac catheterization and cineangiocardiography in 19 children; 6 had pulmonary atresia with an intact ventricular septum and hypoplastic right ventricle, 4 pulmonary atresia with associated complex univentricular heart, and 9 extreme Tetralogy of Fallot. The four patients with discrepancies in the sizes of the left ...

Energy Citations Database

150
Detecting Asymmetries in Hippocampal Shape and Receptor Distribution using Statistical Appearance Models and Linear Discriminant Analysis
1998-01-01

Neurological studies are often concerned with identifying abnormalities in brain structure affecting asymmetry between left and right hemispheres. This paper presents techniques which allow measurement and characterisation of differences between neuroanatomic structures due to variation in both shape and receptor distribution. This provides a ...

E-print Network

151
A search asymmetry for interocular conflict.
2011-05-01

When two different images are presented to the two eyes, the percept will alternate between the images (a phenomenon called binocular rivalry). In the present study, we investigate the degree to which such interocular conflict is conspicuous. By using a visual search task, we show that search for interocular conflict is near efficient (15�ms/item) and can lead to a search ...

PubMed

152
Identification of neural circuits underlying P300 abnormalities in schizophrenia
1999-05-01

Event-related potentials (ERPs) provide a noninvasive method to evaluate neural activation and cognitive processes in schizophrenia. The pathophysiological significance of these findings would be greatly enhanced if scalp-recorded ERP abnormalities could be related to specific neural circuits and/or regions of the brain. Using quantitative approaches in which scalp-recorded ...

PubMed Central

153
The asymmetry of the heliospheric current sheet during solar cycle 23: The last dance of the bashful ballerina?
2010-05-01

The heliospheric magnetic field has long been hemispherically asymmetric so that the field in the northern hemisphere is weaker and the area larger than in the south. This asymmetry, also called the bashful ballerina, has existed during three-year intervals in the late declining to minimum phase of solar cycles 16-22. We study here the HMF and its hemispheric ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

154
mGluR5 in cortical excitatory neurons exerts both cell autonomous and nonautonomous influences on cortical somatosensory circuit formation
2010-12-15

Glutamatergic neurotransmission plays important roles in sensory map formation. The absence of the group I metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGluR5) leads to abnormal sensory map formation throughout the mouse somatosensory pathway. To examine the role of cortical mGluR5 expression on barrel map formation, we generated cortex-specific mGluR5 KO mice. ...

PubMed Central

155
Differential activation patterns of occipital and prefrontal cortices during motion processing
2008-09-01

Visual motion perception is normally mediated by neural processing in the posterior cortex. Focal damage to the Middle Temporal Area (MT), a posterior extrastriate region, induces motion perception impairment. It is unclear, however, how more broadly distributed cortical dysfunction affects this visual behavior and its neural substrates. Schizophrenia manifests itself in a ...

PubMed Central

156
Abnormalities of hippocampal-cortical connectivity in temporal lobe epilepsy patients with hippocampal sclerosis
2011-03-01

Hippocampal sclerosis (HS) is the most common damage seen in the patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). In the present study, the hippocampal-cortical connectivity was defined as the correlation between the hippocampal volume and cortical thickness at each vertex throughout the whole brain. We aimed to investigate the differences of ipsilateral ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

157
Amphetamine Dependence and Co-Morbid Alcohol Abuse: Associations to Brain Cortical Thickness
2010-05-20

BackgroundLong-term amphetamine and methamphetamine dependence has been linked to cerebral blood perfusion, metabolic, and white matter abnormalities. Several studies have linked methamphetamine abuse to cortical grey matter reduction, though with divergent findings. Few publications investigate unmethylated amphetamine's potential effects on ...

PubMed Central

158
The last dance of the bashful ballerina?
2011-01-01

Aims: The heliospheric magnetic field (HMF) has long been hemispherically asymmetric so that the field in the northern hemisphere is weaker and the area larger than in the south. This asymmetry, also called the bashful ballerina, has existed during roughly three-year intervals of the late declining to minimum phase of solar cycles 16-22. We study the HMF and its hemispheric ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

159
unknown title
2006-01-01

Some evidence suggests that sex, handedness and disease processes associated with schizophrenia affect the magnitude and/or direction of structural brain asymmetries. There are mixed findings, however, on how these factors influence cerebral torque, when torque is assessed with linear or volumetric measurements. We obtained MRI data from 67 healthy (30 males, 10 non-dextrals) ...

E-print Network

160
Neurophysiological measures of reading difficulty in very-low-birthweight children.
1999-01-01

Twenty-four 8-10-year-old children (13 very low birthweight, 11 control) performed a lexical decision and a semantic classification task while event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded. Both groups were within normal range on standardized reading tests, but the very-low-birthweight group had lower scores. There were no differences between groups in reaction times or accuracy for ERP tasks. On ...

PubMed

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161
Handedness Is Associated with Asymmetries in Gyrification of the Cerebral Cortex of Chimpanzees
2006-09-29

Gyrification of the cerebral cortex reflects complexity in cortical folding during development of the brain. In this paper, we evaluated whether chimpanzees show asymmetries in gyrification and if variation in gyrification asymmetries were associated with handedness. Magnetic resonance images were obtained in a sample of 76 ...

PubMed Central

162
The transcription factor, Pax6, is required for cell proliferation and differentiation in the developing cerebral cortex.
1999-09-01

The cerebral cortex develops from the dorsal telencephalon, at the anterior end of the neural tube. Neurons are generated by cell division at the inner surface of the telencephalic wall (in the ventricular zone) and migrate towards its outer surface, where they complete their differentiation. Recent studies have suggested that the transcription factor Pax6 is important for regulation of cell ...

PubMed

163
Structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging of autism spectrum disorders.
2010-12-03

The neurobiology of autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) has become increasingly understood since the advent of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Initial observations of an above-average head circumference were supported by structural MRI studies that found evidence of increased total brain volume and early rapid brain overgrowth in affected individuals. Subsequent research revealed consistent ...

PubMed

164
Sleep Spindle Alterations in Patients with Malformations of Cortical Development
2008-07-29

Malformations of cortical development are disorders of altered brain anatomy and architecture that arise from abnormalities in the usual processes of cerebral cortical development. Although they often lead to epilepsy, cognitive delay, and motor impairment, little is known about their effect on sleep. Since malformations may ...

PubMed Central

165
Effects of spaceflight conditions on fertilization and embryogenesis in the sea urchin Lytechinus pictus.
1999-01-01

Calcium loss and muscle atrophy are two of the main metabolic changes experienced by astronauts and crew members during exposure to microgravity in space. Calcium and cytoskeletal events were investigated within sea urchin embryos which were cultured in space under both microgravity and 1 g conditions. Embryos were fixed at time-points ranging from 3 h to 8 days after fertilization. Investigative ...

PubMed

166
Cerebral structure on MRI, Part II: Specific changes in Alzheimer's and Huntington's diseases.
1991-01-01

Using magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and morphometric techniques, groups of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and Huntington's disease (HD) were compared with a large group of normal control subjects. Measures of volume loss in specific subcortical nuclei and eight cortical regions as well as an index of white matter abnormality were obtained. ...

PubMed

167
Qualitative MRI findings in patients with schizophrenia: a controlled study.
2000-04-10

A variety of brain structural abnormalities, which can be identified only by qualitative methods, have been shown to correlate with clinical presentation and course of schizophrenia. In the present study, MRI scans of 122 patients with DSM-IV schizophrenia and 81 non-psychiatric controls were evaluated. Among males, the frequency of CNS developmental ...

PubMed

168
[Pathophysiology of dystonia].
2005-06-01

Dystonia is a diverse movement disorder characterized by involuntary muscle co-contraction of the agonist and antagonist, which may cause twisting and repetitive movements or abnormal posture. Dystonia is the least understood movement disorder associated with the basal ganglia dysfunction. While dysfunction of cortico-striatal-thalamo-cortical motor ...

PubMed

169
Identification of abnormal motor cortex activation patterns in children with cerebral palsy by functional near-infrared spectroscopy
2010-05-01

We demonstrate the utility of functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) as a tool for physicians to study cortical plasticity in children with cerebral palsy (CP). Motor cortex activation patterns were studied in five healthy children and five children with CP (8.4+/-2.3 years old in both groups) performing a finger-tapping protocol. Spatial (distance from center and area ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

170
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE MAMMALIAN NERVOUS SYSTEM. I. MALFORMATIONS OF THE BRAIN, ESPECIALLY THE CEREBRAL CORTEX, INDUCED IN RATS BY RADIATION. II. SOME MECHANISMS OF THE MALFORMATIONS OF THE CORTEX
1959-12-01

Radiation can be used to induced series of developmentall malformations in the brains of rats The degree of reproducibility of the patterns has suggested their use in studies relating certain attributes of behavior with cerebral cortical structure. The patterns of brain malformiation induced by giving 150 to 200 r on each of the days of gestation. 12 to 20. are ...

Energy Citations Database

171
Neurophysiology of dystonia: The role of inhibition.
2010-09-15

The pathophysiology of dystonia has been best studied in patients with focal hand dystonia. A loss of inhibitory function has been demonstrated at spinal, brainstem and cortical levels. Many cortical circuits seem to be involved. One consequence of the loss of inhibition is a failure of surround inhibition, and this appears to directly lead to overflow and ...

PubMed

172
An unusual case of craniofacial fibrous dysplasia presenting in early infancy.
1990-01-01

Fibrous dysplasia (FD) of bone is one of the most frequently encountered anomalies of skeletal development. It may involve one or more bones and, particularly when polyostotic, is sometimes associated with abnormal skin pigmentation and endocrine abnormalities. FD occurs mainly in large limb bones, ribs, and craniofacial bones in older children and young ...

PubMed

173
Cortical folding abnormalities in autism revealed by surface-based morphometry.
2007-10-24

We tested for cortical shape abnormalities using surface-based morphometry across a range of autism spectrum disorders (7.5-18 years of age). We generated sulcal depth maps from structural magnetic resonance imaging data and compared typically developing controls to three autism spectrum disorder subgroups: low-functioning autism, high-functioning autism, ...

PubMed

174
Effect of aerobic training on EEG alpha asymmetry and depressive symptoms in the elderly: a 1-year follow-up study.
2010-05-14

The effect of physical exercise on the treatment of depressive elderly adults has not been investigated thus far in terms of changes in cortical hemispheric activity. The objective of the present study was to identify changes in depressive symptoms, quality of life, and cortical asymmetry produced by aerobic activity. Elderly subjects ...

PubMed

175
Resting state cortical electroencephalographic rhythms in subjects with normal and abnormal body weight.
2011-06-17

It is well known that resting state regional cerebral blood flow is abnormal in obese when compared to normal-weight subjects but the underlying neurophysiological mechanisms are poorly known. To address this issue, we tested the hypothesis that amplitude of resting state cortical electroencephalographic (EEG) rhythms differ among underweight, ...

PubMed

176
Redox regulation of neuronal migration in a Down Syndrome model.
2003-09-15

Down Syndrome (DS), one of the major genetic causes of mental retardation, is characterized by disrupted corticogenesis produced, in part, by an abnormal layering of neurons in cortical laminas II and III. Because defects in the normal migration of neurons during corticogenesis can result in delayed cortical radial expansion and ...

PubMed

177
Anatomical Alterations of the Visual Motion Processing Network in Migraine with and without Aura
2006-10-17

BackgroundPatients suffering from migraine with aura (MWA) and migraine without aura (MWoA) show abnormalities in visual motion perception during and between attacks. Whether this represents the consequences of structural changes in motion-processing networks in migraineurs is unknown. Moreover, the diagnosis of migraine relies on patient's history, and finding differences in ...

PubMed Central

178
Gray and normal-appearing white matter in multiple sclerosis: an MRI perspective.
2007-03-01

Besides focal white matter lesions, multiple sclerosis brain tissue also displays abnormalities in the gray matter and the normal-appearing white matter. Recent advances in magnetic resonance imaging studies of both types of tissue are discussed. Herein, normal-appearing white matter abnormalities are being found in quantitative magnetic resonance ...

PubMed

179
Linguistic performance and regional cerebral blood flow in persons who stutter.
1994-12-01

In a series of studies regarding CNS dysfunction in stuttering, we have examined linguistic and motoric performance in the context of measures of brain function. Previous studies of adults with developmental stuttering identified alterations in brain function (metabolic and electrophysiologic) in cortical regions implicated in models of speech motor control and language ...

PubMed

180
Exploring the extent and function of higher-order auditory cortex in rhesus monkeys
2007-01-16

Just as cortical visual processing continues far beyond the boundaries of early visual areas, so too does cortical auditory processing continue far beyond the limits of early auditory areas. In passively listening rhesus monkeys examined with metabolic mapping techniques, cortical areas reactive to auditory stimulation were found to ...

PubMed Central

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181
Asymmetric cortical extension shifts cleavage furrow position in Drosophila neuroblasts.
2011-09-21

The cytokinetic cleavage furrow is typically positioned symmetrically relative to the cortical cell boundaries but can also be asymmetric. The mechanisms that control furrow site specification have been intensively studied but how polar cortex movements influence ultimate furrow position remains poorly understood. We measured the position of the apical and the basal cortex in ...

PubMed

182
Is 'hand preference' coded in the hominin skeleton? An in-vivo study of bilateral morphological variation.
2011-08-10

The presumed link between bilateral asymmetry and lateralized habitual activity in extinct hominins is the basis upon which inferences of 'hand preference' often derive. While this presumption is reasonable, in-vivo comparisons of skeletal asymmetries and self-reported handedness are rare, and as a result the accuracy of these inferences is questionable. ...

PubMed

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