BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Significant advances have been made in understanding the origin of brain m... more BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Significant advances have been made in understanding the origin of brain manifestations associated with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC), most recently the idea that cortical tubers and subependymal nodules are a disorder of neocortical formation. The present study was designed to test the hypothesis that MR proton spectra of cortical tubers are abnormal because of the developmental immaturity of
Journal of the neurological sciences, Jan 15, 2015
Cognitive impairment is a common clinical feature of multiple sclerosis (MS) at both the earlier ... more Cognitive impairment is a common clinical feature of multiple sclerosis (MS) at both the earlier and later stages of the disease, and has a significant impact on patients' functional status and quality of life. The need to address this deficit should be taken into account in clinical practice and research studies. To conduct an updated systematic review of all published studies of cognitive rehabilitation interventions in people with MS, including studies with methodological shortcomings, to highlight major strengths and weaknesses in the field and to provide directions for future research. We searched electronic databases (PubMed and Web of Science) for articles published in English up until January 2014. The reference lists of all identified articles were also searched to complete the initial list of references. Articles were categorized into outcome measures: cognition, imaging, mood, fatigue, quality of life and self-perceived cognitive deficits. All articles were reviewed i...
The cerebral hemodynamic sequelae of interventions in patients with severe internal carotid arter... more The cerebral hemodynamic sequelae of interventions in patients with severe internal carotid artery (ICA) stenoses are not fully understood. In this study, we sought to determine the immediate changes in cerebral perfusion characteristics, determined by MR imaging in patients who have undergone unilateral transluminal angioplasty and stent placement. Eleven patients with symptomatic high-grade ICA stenosis underwent MR imaging within 4 hours before and within 3 hours after carotid stent placement. First-pass gadolinium-enhanced imaging of perfusion was performed by using a gradient-recalled echo-planar technique. Localized relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV) and bolus first-moment transit time (TT(FM)) were calculated for different vascular territories (middle, anterior, and posterior cerebral arteries) in each hemisphere. Significantly longer TT(FM) (P <.005) was observed in the symptomatic territory of the middle cerebral artery before intervention. After intervention, TT(FM) ...
Recirculating and detached flow patterns close to the carotid bifurcation are thought to play an ... more Recirculating and detached flow patterns close to the carotid bifurcation are thought to play an important role in the development of carotid stenoses by promoting atherosclerosis. The aim of this study was to investigate a flow regime with strong transient characteristics, including vortex shedding and transport to develop methodologies appropriate to the analysis of carotid stenoses. The existence of a regular periodic vortex street behind a cylindrical flow obstruction was predicted and analysed in detail by Theodore van Karman in the early 20th century. This model was chosen in our study for both ease of phantom construction and of theoretical modelling using finite element computational fluid dynamics (CFD). The results of the theoretical calculations have been compared with two methods of flow visualization-laser sheet imaging and real-time echo planar magnitude MR imaging. Flow was investigated over a range of Reynold's number from 40 through 400 through which vortex shed...
In adults the cranium is a rigid bony vault of fixed size and therefore the intra-cranial volume ... more In adults the cranium is a rigid bony vault of fixed size and therefore the intra-cranial volume is a constant which equals the sum of the volume of the brain, the intra-cranial volume of CSF and the intra-cranial volume of blood. There can be marked changes in the volumes of these three intra-cranial compartments which may influence susceptibility to brain damage after head injury. This is the first study to investigate the relationship between dehydration and changes in the volume of the brain and the cerebral ventricles. Six healthy control subjects underwent magnetic resonance imaging of the brain before and after a period of exercise in an environmental chamber. The subjects lost between 2.1 % and 2.6 % of their body mass due to water loss through sweating. We found a correlation between the degree of dehydration and the change in ventricular volume (r=0.932, p=0.007). The changes in ventricular volume caused by dehydration were much larger than those seen in day-to-day fluctua...
Proton MR spectroscopy of the brain allows noninvasive in vivo assessment of metabolites, which m... more Proton MR spectroscopy of the brain allows noninvasive in vivo assessment of metabolites, which may be useful in understanding the biology of malformations of cortical development. The aim of this study was to determine the MR spectroscopic characteristics of polymicrogyria and heterotopia compared with those of normal frontal lobe white matter. We recruited 22 patients with radiographic findings characteristic of polymicrogyria, nine patients with radiographic findings characteristic of heterotopia, and 10 control subjects into the study. The MR imaging technique consisted of high-spatial-resolution axial dual-echo and gradient-echo 3D volume imaging. A single-voxel point-resolved technique (1600/135 [TR/TE]) was used to acquire spectra from the region of neocortical malformation and from frontal lobe white matter in control subjects. The differences in N-acetyl moieties (NA)/creatine (Cr), NA/choline (Cho), and Cho/Cr ratios among patients with heterotopia, those with polymicrogyr...
Changes in the public perception of postmortem procedures in the United Kingdom have led to reduc... more Changes in the public perception of postmortem procedures in the United Kingdom have led to reduced numbers of autopsies being performed in the fetus and neonate. When autopsy is performed in this group, the brain is now usually studied without being formalin-fixed, which limits the available information. We evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of postmortem MR imaging of the fetal brain and spine when compared with the reference standard, autopsy. We obtained high-spatial-resolution T2-weighted images (in-plane resolution approximately 0.4 mm) of the brain and spine in 40 fetuses and stillborn neonates (14-42 weeks gestational age) who were referred for autopsy. The MR findings were compared with those of autopsy, the reference standard, which had been performed independently. In eight cases, the autopsy did not provide structural information of the brain or spine, because assessment of the unfixed tissue was impossible. There was agreement between MR and autopsy findings in 31 (97%) ...
Conventional catheter angiography (CCA) is the current reference standard for the diagnosis, asse... more Conventional catheter angiography (CCA) is the current reference standard for the diagnosis, assessment, and management of pial brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs). The purpose of this study was to develop an MR angiographic technique that produces dynamic images comparable to those provided by CCA and to apply the technique to the investigation of pial brain AVMs. Twenty patients with brain AVMs referred for stereotactic radiosurgery were recruited. All patients had CCA performed on a 1.5-T superconducting system. Sixty images were obtained at a rate of one image per second. Slices were orientated to produce Towne, lateral, and anteroposterior projections. A set of mask images was taken and then a series during the passage of a bolus of contrast material. MR examinations were assessed independently by neuroradiologists blinded to the conventional catheter angiographic findings. The nidus of the AVMs was depicted in 19 of the 20 patients, and correlation with CCA was excellent ...
Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry, 2015
Self-harm, such as self-cutting, self-poisoning or jumping from height, regardless of intentions,... more Self-harm, such as self-cutting, self-poisoning or jumping from height, regardless of intentions, is common among people with schizophrenia. We wished to investigate brain activations relating to self-harm, in order to test whether these activations could differentiate between schizophrenia patients with self-harm and those without. We used event-related functional MRI with a go/no-go response inhibition paradigm. Fourteen schizophrenia patients with a history of self-harm were compared with 14 schizophrenia patients without a history of self-harm and 17 healthy control participants. In addition, we used standard clinical measures and neuropsychological tests to assess risk factors associated with self-harm. The right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and the left posterior cingulate cortex differentiated all three groups; brain activation in these regions being greatest in the control group, and the self-harm patient group being greater than in the non-self-harm patient group. In the self-harm patient group, right DLPFC activity was positively correlated with severity of suicidal thinking. In addition, both patient groups showed less activation in the right orbitofrontal cortex, left ventral anterior cingulate cortex and right thalamus. This is the first study to report right DLPFC activation in association with self-harm and suicidal thinking in patients with schizophrenia. This area could be a target for future neuromodulation studies to treat suicidal thinking and self-harm behaviors in patients with schizophrenia.
Amelioration of such impairments might improve the quality of life, therefore we improve the qual... more Amelioration of such impairments might improve the quality of life, therefore we improve the quality of life, therefore we studied the effects of a putative cognitive studied the effects of a putative cognitive enhancer, modafinil, upon prefrontal func- enhancer, modafinil, upon prefrontal func- tion in people with chronic schizophrenia. tion in people with chronic schizophrenia. Modafinil (2-((diphenylmethyl)sulphinyl) Modafinil (2-((diphenylmethyl)sulphinyl) acetamide)
This study assesses the integrity of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in human immunodeficiency viru... more This study assesses the integrity of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) seropositive individuals to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agent Gd-DTPA. Twelve HIV seropositive patients and six control subjects had T2-weighted and serial pre- and post-contrast TI-weighted MRI. Ten of the twelve seropositive patients demonstrated white matter hyperintensity with or without atrophy on T2-weighted MRI and
Studies investigating the neurophysiological basis of intrapersonal emotion regulation (control o... more Studies investigating the neurophysiological basis of intrapersonal emotion regulation (control of one's own emotional experience) report that the frontal cortex exerts a modulatory effect on limbic structures such as the amygdala and insula. However, no imaging study to date has examined the neurophysiological processes involved in interpersonal emotion regulation, where the goal is explicitly to regulate another person's emotion. Twenty healthy participants (10 males) underwent fMRI while regulating their own or another person's emotions. Intrapersonal and interpersonal emotion regulation tasks recruited an overlapping network of brain regions including bilateral lateral frontal cortex, pre-supplementary motor area, and left temporo-parietal junction. Activations unique to the interpersonal condition suggest that both affective (emotional simulation) and cognitive (mentalizing) aspects of empathy may be involved in the process of interpersonal emotion regulation. These...
Discerning a speaker&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;... more Discerning a speaker&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;#39;s gender from their voice is a basic and crucial aspect of human communication. Voice pitch height, the perceptual correlate of fundamental frequency, is higher in females and provides a cue for gender discrimination. However, male and female voices are also differentiated by multiple other spectral and temporal characteristics, including mean formant frequency and spectral flux. The robust perceptual segregation of male and female voices is thought to result from processing the combination of discriminating features, which in neural terms may correspond to early sound object analysis occurring in non-primary auditory cortex. However, the specific mechanism for gender perception has been unclear. Here, using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we show that discrete sites in non-primary auditory cortex are differentially activated by male and female voices, with female voices consistently evoking greater activation in the upper bank of the superior temporal sulcus and posterior superior temporal plane. This finding was observed at the individual subject-level in all 24 subjects. The neural response was highly specific: no auditory regions were more activated by male than female voices. Further, the activation associated with female voices was 1) larger than can be accounted for by a sole effect of fundamental frequency, 2) not due to psychological attribution of female gender and 3) unaffected by listener gender. These results demonstrate that male and female voices are represented as distinct auditory objects in the human brain, with the mechanism for gender discrimination being a gender-dependent activation-level cue in non-primary auditory cortex.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: To develop an MR imaging method that improves detection of leptomeningeal... more BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: To develop an MR imaging method that improves detection of leptomeningeal disease when compared with the current reference standard, contrast- enhanced T1-weighted imaging. METHODS: We investigated the cases of 10 children who were at high risk of intracranial leptomeningeal disease (Sturge-Weber syndrome and medulloblastoma). The cases of Sturge- Weber syndrome were investigated by using one MR imaging
Journal of artificial organs : the official journal of the Japanese Society for Artificial Organs, 2005
An in vitro model of blood clotting is presented using hypercoaguable milk as an analog for blood... more An in vitro model of blood clotting is presented using hypercoaguable milk as an analog for blood. Milk clot formation was studied for periods of 2, 5, 10, 20, and 30 min within an idealized stenosis geometry. Clot formation was recorded using photography, clot casting, and clot mass calculation. The distribution of clot within the fluid was seen to be in good agreement with a previous study that used a residence time model to predict areas of clot formation in thrombin solution. A numerical model was formulated within computational fluid dynamics package CFX that allowed local activation of blood clotting to be simulated. This model was applied to the analysis of an idealized cerebral aneurysm geometry. An idealized coil geometry was included within the aneurysm and clotting fluid concentration and fluid residence time were modeled using transport equations within CFX. The viscosity of the fluid was defined as a function of both residence time and clotting fluid concentration. The ...
The neural basis of progress monitoring has received relatively little attention compared to othe... more The neural basis of progress monitoring has received relatively little attention compared to other sub-processes that are involved in goal directed behavior such as motor control and response inhibition. Studies of error-monitoring have identified the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) as a structure that is sensitive to conflict detection, and triggers corrective action. However, monitoring goal progress involves monitoring correct as well as erroneous events over a period of time. In the present research, 20 healthy participants underwent functional magnetic resonance imagining (fMRI) while playing a game that involved monitoring progress toward either a numerical or a visuo-spatial target. The findings confirmed the role of the dACC in detecting situations in which the current state may conflict with the desired state, but also revealed activations in the frontal and parietal regions, pointing to the involvement of processes such as attention and working memory (WM) in monit...
Journal of vascular and interventional neurology, 2010
Hemodynamic changes in the cerebral circulation in presence of coarctation of aorta (CoA) and the... more Hemodynamic changes in the cerebral circulation in presence of coarctation of aorta (CoA) and their significance in the increased intracranial aneurysms (IAs) formation in these patients remain unclear. In the present study, we measured the flow-rate waveforms in the cerebral arteries of a patient with CoA, followed by an analysis of different hemodynamic indices in a coexisting IA. Phase-contrast Magnetic Resonance (pc-MR) volumetric flow-rate (VFR) measurements were performed in cerebral arteries of a 51 years old woman with coexisting CoA, and five healthy volunteers. Numerical predictions of a number of relevant hemodynamic indices were performed in an IA located in sub-clinoid part of left internal carotid artery (ICA) of the patient. Computations were performed using Ansys(®)-CFX(™) solver using the VFR values measured in the patient as boundary conditions (BCs). A second analysis was performed using the average VFR values measured in healthy volunteers. The VFR waveforms meas...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is a common and serious neurologic emergent ... more BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is a common and serious neurologic emergent condition. We tested the hypothesis that multimodality MR imaging de- picts changes in cerebral blood flow SAH, before any surgical or endovascular intervention, and that the frequency of these changes increases with time after ictus. METHODS: We prospectively examined 37 patients with suspected SAH and three with symptoms
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Significant advances have been made in understanding the origin of brain m... more BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Significant advances have been made in understanding the origin of brain manifestations associated with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC), most recently the idea that cortical tubers and subependymal nodules are a disorder of neocortical formation. The present study was designed to test the hypothesis that MR proton spectra of cortical tubers are abnormal because of the developmental immaturity of
Journal of the neurological sciences, Jan 15, 2015
Cognitive impairment is a common clinical feature of multiple sclerosis (MS) at both the earlier ... more Cognitive impairment is a common clinical feature of multiple sclerosis (MS) at both the earlier and later stages of the disease, and has a significant impact on patients' functional status and quality of life. The need to address this deficit should be taken into account in clinical practice and research studies. To conduct an updated systematic review of all published studies of cognitive rehabilitation interventions in people with MS, including studies with methodological shortcomings, to highlight major strengths and weaknesses in the field and to provide directions for future research. We searched electronic databases (PubMed and Web of Science) for articles published in English up until January 2014. The reference lists of all identified articles were also searched to complete the initial list of references. Articles were categorized into outcome measures: cognition, imaging, mood, fatigue, quality of life and self-perceived cognitive deficits. All articles were reviewed i...
The cerebral hemodynamic sequelae of interventions in patients with severe internal carotid arter... more The cerebral hemodynamic sequelae of interventions in patients with severe internal carotid artery (ICA) stenoses are not fully understood. In this study, we sought to determine the immediate changes in cerebral perfusion characteristics, determined by MR imaging in patients who have undergone unilateral transluminal angioplasty and stent placement. Eleven patients with symptomatic high-grade ICA stenosis underwent MR imaging within 4 hours before and within 3 hours after carotid stent placement. First-pass gadolinium-enhanced imaging of perfusion was performed by using a gradient-recalled echo-planar technique. Localized relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV) and bolus first-moment transit time (TT(FM)) were calculated for different vascular territories (middle, anterior, and posterior cerebral arteries) in each hemisphere. Significantly longer TT(FM) (P <.005) was observed in the symptomatic territory of the middle cerebral artery before intervention. After intervention, TT(FM) ...
Recirculating and detached flow patterns close to the carotid bifurcation are thought to play an ... more Recirculating and detached flow patterns close to the carotid bifurcation are thought to play an important role in the development of carotid stenoses by promoting atherosclerosis. The aim of this study was to investigate a flow regime with strong transient characteristics, including vortex shedding and transport to develop methodologies appropriate to the analysis of carotid stenoses. The existence of a regular periodic vortex street behind a cylindrical flow obstruction was predicted and analysed in detail by Theodore van Karman in the early 20th century. This model was chosen in our study for both ease of phantom construction and of theoretical modelling using finite element computational fluid dynamics (CFD). The results of the theoretical calculations have been compared with two methods of flow visualization-laser sheet imaging and real-time echo planar magnitude MR imaging. Flow was investigated over a range of Reynold's number from 40 through 400 through which vortex shed...
In adults the cranium is a rigid bony vault of fixed size and therefore the intra-cranial volume ... more In adults the cranium is a rigid bony vault of fixed size and therefore the intra-cranial volume is a constant which equals the sum of the volume of the brain, the intra-cranial volume of CSF and the intra-cranial volume of blood. There can be marked changes in the volumes of these three intra-cranial compartments which may influence susceptibility to brain damage after head injury. This is the first study to investigate the relationship between dehydration and changes in the volume of the brain and the cerebral ventricles. Six healthy control subjects underwent magnetic resonance imaging of the brain before and after a period of exercise in an environmental chamber. The subjects lost between 2.1 % and 2.6 % of their body mass due to water loss through sweating. We found a correlation between the degree of dehydration and the change in ventricular volume (r=0.932, p=0.007). The changes in ventricular volume caused by dehydration were much larger than those seen in day-to-day fluctua...
Proton MR spectroscopy of the brain allows noninvasive in vivo assessment of metabolites, which m... more Proton MR spectroscopy of the brain allows noninvasive in vivo assessment of metabolites, which may be useful in understanding the biology of malformations of cortical development. The aim of this study was to determine the MR spectroscopic characteristics of polymicrogyria and heterotopia compared with those of normal frontal lobe white matter. We recruited 22 patients with radiographic findings characteristic of polymicrogyria, nine patients with radiographic findings characteristic of heterotopia, and 10 control subjects into the study. The MR imaging technique consisted of high-spatial-resolution axial dual-echo and gradient-echo 3D volume imaging. A single-voxel point-resolved technique (1600/135 [TR/TE]) was used to acquire spectra from the region of neocortical malformation and from frontal lobe white matter in control subjects. The differences in N-acetyl moieties (NA)/creatine (Cr), NA/choline (Cho), and Cho/Cr ratios among patients with heterotopia, those with polymicrogyr...
Changes in the public perception of postmortem procedures in the United Kingdom have led to reduc... more Changes in the public perception of postmortem procedures in the United Kingdom have led to reduced numbers of autopsies being performed in the fetus and neonate. When autopsy is performed in this group, the brain is now usually studied without being formalin-fixed, which limits the available information. We evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of postmortem MR imaging of the fetal brain and spine when compared with the reference standard, autopsy. We obtained high-spatial-resolution T2-weighted images (in-plane resolution approximately 0.4 mm) of the brain and spine in 40 fetuses and stillborn neonates (14-42 weeks gestational age) who were referred for autopsy. The MR findings were compared with those of autopsy, the reference standard, which had been performed independently. In eight cases, the autopsy did not provide structural information of the brain or spine, because assessment of the unfixed tissue was impossible. There was agreement between MR and autopsy findings in 31 (97%) ...
Conventional catheter angiography (CCA) is the current reference standard for the diagnosis, asse... more Conventional catheter angiography (CCA) is the current reference standard for the diagnosis, assessment, and management of pial brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs). The purpose of this study was to develop an MR angiographic technique that produces dynamic images comparable to those provided by CCA and to apply the technique to the investigation of pial brain AVMs. Twenty patients with brain AVMs referred for stereotactic radiosurgery were recruited. All patients had CCA performed on a 1.5-T superconducting system. Sixty images were obtained at a rate of one image per second. Slices were orientated to produce Towne, lateral, and anteroposterior projections. A set of mask images was taken and then a series during the passage of a bolus of contrast material. MR examinations were assessed independently by neuroradiologists blinded to the conventional catheter angiographic findings. The nidus of the AVMs was depicted in 19 of the 20 patients, and correlation with CCA was excellent ...
Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry, 2015
Self-harm, such as self-cutting, self-poisoning or jumping from height, regardless of intentions,... more Self-harm, such as self-cutting, self-poisoning or jumping from height, regardless of intentions, is common among people with schizophrenia. We wished to investigate brain activations relating to self-harm, in order to test whether these activations could differentiate between schizophrenia patients with self-harm and those without. We used event-related functional MRI with a go/no-go response inhibition paradigm. Fourteen schizophrenia patients with a history of self-harm were compared with 14 schizophrenia patients without a history of self-harm and 17 healthy control participants. In addition, we used standard clinical measures and neuropsychological tests to assess risk factors associated with self-harm. The right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and the left posterior cingulate cortex differentiated all three groups; brain activation in these regions being greatest in the control group, and the self-harm patient group being greater than in the non-self-harm patient group. In the self-harm patient group, right DLPFC activity was positively correlated with severity of suicidal thinking. In addition, both patient groups showed less activation in the right orbitofrontal cortex, left ventral anterior cingulate cortex and right thalamus. This is the first study to report right DLPFC activation in association with self-harm and suicidal thinking in patients with schizophrenia. This area could be a target for future neuromodulation studies to treat suicidal thinking and self-harm behaviors in patients with schizophrenia.
Amelioration of such impairments might improve the quality of life, therefore we improve the qual... more Amelioration of such impairments might improve the quality of life, therefore we improve the quality of life, therefore we studied the effects of a putative cognitive studied the effects of a putative cognitive enhancer, modafinil, upon prefrontal func- enhancer, modafinil, upon prefrontal func- tion in people with chronic schizophrenia. tion in people with chronic schizophrenia. Modafinil (2-((diphenylmethyl)sulphinyl) Modafinil (2-((diphenylmethyl)sulphinyl) acetamide)
This study assesses the integrity of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in human immunodeficiency viru... more This study assesses the integrity of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) seropositive individuals to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agent Gd-DTPA. Twelve HIV seropositive patients and six control subjects had T2-weighted and serial pre- and post-contrast TI-weighted MRI. Ten of the twelve seropositive patients demonstrated white matter hyperintensity with or without atrophy on T2-weighted MRI and
Studies investigating the neurophysiological basis of intrapersonal emotion regulation (control o... more Studies investigating the neurophysiological basis of intrapersonal emotion regulation (control of one's own emotional experience) report that the frontal cortex exerts a modulatory effect on limbic structures such as the amygdala and insula. However, no imaging study to date has examined the neurophysiological processes involved in interpersonal emotion regulation, where the goal is explicitly to regulate another person's emotion. Twenty healthy participants (10 males) underwent fMRI while regulating their own or another person's emotions. Intrapersonal and interpersonal emotion regulation tasks recruited an overlapping network of brain regions including bilateral lateral frontal cortex, pre-supplementary motor area, and left temporo-parietal junction. Activations unique to the interpersonal condition suggest that both affective (emotional simulation) and cognitive (mentalizing) aspects of empathy may be involved in the process of interpersonal emotion regulation. These...
Discerning a speaker&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;... more Discerning a speaker&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;#39;s gender from their voice is a basic and crucial aspect of human communication. Voice pitch height, the perceptual correlate of fundamental frequency, is higher in females and provides a cue for gender discrimination. However, male and female voices are also differentiated by multiple other spectral and temporal characteristics, including mean formant frequency and spectral flux. The robust perceptual segregation of male and female voices is thought to result from processing the combination of discriminating features, which in neural terms may correspond to early sound object analysis occurring in non-primary auditory cortex. However, the specific mechanism for gender perception has been unclear. Here, using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we show that discrete sites in non-primary auditory cortex are differentially activated by male and female voices, with female voices consistently evoking greater activation in the upper bank of the superior temporal sulcus and posterior superior temporal plane. This finding was observed at the individual subject-level in all 24 subjects. The neural response was highly specific: no auditory regions were more activated by male than female voices. Further, the activation associated with female voices was 1) larger than can be accounted for by a sole effect of fundamental frequency, 2) not due to psychological attribution of female gender and 3) unaffected by listener gender. These results demonstrate that male and female voices are represented as distinct auditory objects in the human brain, with the mechanism for gender discrimination being a gender-dependent activation-level cue in non-primary auditory cortex.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: To develop an MR imaging method that improves detection of leptomeningeal... more BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: To develop an MR imaging method that improves detection of leptomeningeal disease when compared with the current reference standard, contrast- enhanced T1-weighted imaging. METHODS: We investigated the cases of 10 children who were at high risk of intracranial leptomeningeal disease (Sturge-Weber syndrome and medulloblastoma). The cases of Sturge- Weber syndrome were investigated by using one MR imaging
Journal of artificial organs : the official journal of the Japanese Society for Artificial Organs, 2005
An in vitro model of blood clotting is presented using hypercoaguable milk as an analog for blood... more An in vitro model of blood clotting is presented using hypercoaguable milk as an analog for blood. Milk clot formation was studied for periods of 2, 5, 10, 20, and 30 min within an idealized stenosis geometry. Clot formation was recorded using photography, clot casting, and clot mass calculation. The distribution of clot within the fluid was seen to be in good agreement with a previous study that used a residence time model to predict areas of clot formation in thrombin solution. A numerical model was formulated within computational fluid dynamics package CFX that allowed local activation of blood clotting to be simulated. This model was applied to the analysis of an idealized cerebral aneurysm geometry. An idealized coil geometry was included within the aneurysm and clotting fluid concentration and fluid residence time were modeled using transport equations within CFX. The viscosity of the fluid was defined as a function of both residence time and clotting fluid concentration. The ...
The neural basis of progress monitoring has received relatively little attention compared to othe... more The neural basis of progress monitoring has received relatively little attention compared to other sub-processes that are involved in goal directed behavior such as motor control and response inhibition. Studies of error-monitoring have identified the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) as a structure that is sensitive to conflict detection, and triggers corrective action. However, monitoring goal progress involves monitoring correct as well as erroneous events over a period of time. In the present research, 20 healthy participants underwent functional magnetic resonance imagining (fMRI) while playing a game that involved monitoring progress toward either a numerical or a visuo-spatial target. The findings confirmed the role of the dACC in detecting situations in which the current state may conflict with the desired state, but also revealed activations in the frontal and parietal regions, pointing to the involvement of processes such as attention and working memory (WM) in monit...
Journal of vascular and interventional neurology, 2010
Hemodynamic changes in the cerebral circulation in presence of coarctation of aorta (CoA) and the... more Hemodynamic changes in the cerebral circulation in presence of coarctation of aorta (CoA) and their significance in the increased intracranial aneurysms (IAs) formation in these patients remain unclear. In the present study, we measured the flow-rate waveforms in the cerebral arteries of a patient with CoA, followed by an analysis of different hemodynamic indices in a coexisting IA. Phase-contrast Magnetic Resonance (pc-MR) volumetric flow-rate (VFR) measurements were performed in cerebral arteries of a 51 years old woman with coexisting CoA, and five healthy volunteers. Numerical predictions of a number of relevant hemodynamic indices were performed in an IA located in sub-clinoid part of left internal carotid artery (ICA) of the patient. Computations were performed using Ansys(®)-CFX(™) solver using the VFR values measured in the patient as boundary conditions (BCs). A second analysis was performed using the average VFR values measured in healthy volunteers. The VFR waveforms meas...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is a common and serious neurologic emergent ... more BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE:Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is a common and serious neurologic emergent condition. We tested the hypothesis that multimodality MR imaging de- picts changes in cerebral blood flow SAH, before any surgical or endovascular intervention, and that the frequency of these changes increases with time after ictus. METHODS: We prospectively examined 37 patients with suspected SAH and three with symptoms
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