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Objectives/Goals: Patients with multiple chronic conditions (MCCs) face care coordination challenges and poorer health outcomes. Outpatient telehealth may be an effective way to enhance MCC patient care given the need for multiple visits and specialists. This study seeks to describe telehealth utilization between 2013 and 2023 in Arkansas. Methods/Study Population: We utilized the Arkansas All-Payer Claims Database (APCD) to identify patients diagnosed with high-prevalence MCCs comprising diabetes with comorbid hypertension, hyperlipidemia, or asthma. We then measured telehealth utilization defined as any claim associated with a telehealth modifier code, a place of service code defining the service as occurring in the patient’s home, or remote patient monitoring. Finally, we created payer-specific (e.g., commercial or Medicaid) yearly measures of the number of any telehealth claims among MCC patients divided by the number of MCC patients for that year. Linear regression was used to measure the difference in utilization during the COVID-19 pandemic (i.e., 2020–2023) versus prior to the pandemic (i.e., 2013–2019). Results/Anticipated Results: Overall, the COVID-19 pandemic era was associated with an increase of telehealth utilization among commercial patients by 1.01 telehealth claims per MCC patient (95% CI: 0.39 to 1.62, p Discussion/Significance of Impact: Variations in telehealth uptake among MCC patients suggest heterogeneity in its suitability and necessity. We will later evaluate whether telehealth use is associated with different levels of inpatient and emergency department utilization. We expect the findings to provide clarity on the suitability of telehealth use by MCC disease status.
3q29 deletion syndrome (3q29del) is a rare (~1:30 000) genomic disorder associated with a wide array of neurodevelopmental and psychiatric phenotypes. Prior work by our team identified clinically significant executive function (EF) deficits in 47% of individuals with 3q29del; however, the nuances of EF in this population have not been described.
Methods
We used the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function (BRIEF) to perform the first in-depth assessment of real-world EF in a cohort of 32 individuals with 3q29del (62.5% male, mean age = 14.5 ± 8.3 years). All participants were also evaluated with gold-standard neuropsychiatric and cognitive assessments. High-resolution structural magnetic resonance imaging was performed on a subset of participants (n = 24).
Results
We found global deficits in EF; individuals with 3q29del scored higher than the population mean on the BRIEF global executive composite (GEC) and all subscales. In total, 81.3% of study subjects (n = 26) scored in the clinical range on at least one BRIEF subscale. BRIEF GEC T scores were higher among 3q29del participants with a diagnosis of attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and BRIEF GEC T scores were associated with schizophrenia spectrum symptoms as measured by the Structured Interview for Psychosis-Risk Syndromes. BRIEF GEC T scores were not associated with cognitive ability. The BRIEF-2 ADHD form accurately (sensitivity = 86.7%) classified individuals with 3q29del based on ADHD diagnosis status. BRIEF GEC T scores were correlated with cerebellar white matter and subregional cerebellar cortex volumes.
Conclusions
Together, these data expand our understanding of the phenotypic spectrum of 3q29del and identify EF as a core feature linked to both psychiatric and neuroanatomical features of the syndrome.
In the UK there are 3500 individuals detained in medium secure forensic psychiatry units. Service users in such settings have complex and serious mental illness (SMI), often with co-morbid physical health problems and a life expectancy of at least 10 years shorter than the general population. They often have low levels of physical activity. There is little evidence about physical activity interventions for medium secure service users in the United Kingdom.
Objectives
Our objective is to co-produce, with medium secure service users, the content and delivery of an intervention to increase physical activity. We shall assess feasibility, acceptability, and pilot data collection methods for outcomes relevant for a future randomised controlled trial.
Methods
This is a 30-month mixed-methods project that will follow the Medical Research Council (MRC) framework Developing and Evaluating Complex Interventions. The study has 4 phases. Phases 1-2 will gather information required to co-develop an evidence-based intervention in Phase 3. Phase 4 will assess the intervention in a feasibility study, evaluating and testing the intervention for a future pilot study.
Study settings: Two NHS Medium Secure In-Patient Psychiatric Hospitals in the UK.
Results
This paper presents the preliminary findings from Phase 4 and also offers a highlight into the results from the Women’s Services from both study sites. A total of thirty-three service users from both study sites participated in Phase 4 of the study and twenty-six completed the physical activity intervention, known as the IMPACT Intervention. Between both study sites, there were two Women’s Standard Medium Secure Services and one Women’s Enhanced Medium Secure Service, involved in this study. A total of nine female service users participated in Phase 4.
Conclusions
The preliminary findings of Phases 4 are allowing the team to move forward and evaluate the effect of the IMPACT Intervention.
Early exposure to neighborhood social fragmentation has been shown to be associated with schizophrenia. The impact of social fragmentation and friendships on distressing psychotic-like experiences (PLE) remains unknown. We investigate the relationships between neighborhood social fragmentation, number of friends, and distressing PLE among early adolescents.
Methods
Data were collected from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study. Generalized linear mixed models tested associations between social fragmentation and distressing PLE, as well as the moderating role of the number of total and close friends.
Results
Participants included 11 133 adolescents aged 9 to 10, with 52.3% being males. Greater neighborhood social fragmentation was associated with higher levels of distressing PLE (adjusted β = 0.05; 95% CI: 0.01–0.09). The number of close but not total friends significantly interacted with social fragmentation to predict distressing PLE (adjusted β = −0.02; 95% CI: −0.04 to <−0.01). Among those with fewer close friends, the association between neighborhood social fragmentation and distressing PLE was significant (adjusted β = 0.07; 95% CI: 0.03–0.11). However, among those with more close friends, the association was non-significant (adjusted β = 0.03; 95% CI: −0.01 to 0.07).
Conclusions
Greater neighborhood social fragmentation is associated with higher levels of distressing PLE, particularly among those with fewer close friends. Further research is needed to disentangle aspects of the interaction between neighborhood characteristics and the quality of social interactions that may contribute to psychosis, which would have implications for developing effective interventions at the individual and community levels.
Waste generation and subsequent plastic pollution pose a major threat to both human and environmental health. Furthering our understanding of waste at individual levels can inform future waste reduction strategies, education and policies. This study explores the components and perceptions among individuals using survey data combined with a mini-review. An online Qualtrics survey was distributed pre-COVID-19 following a global social media challenge, Futuristic February, which directed participants to collect their nonperishable waste during February 2020. Participants were asked about their waste generation, perceptions toward waste and plastic pollution issues, and environmental worldview using the New Ecological Paradigm (NEP) scale (n = 50). We also conducted a mini-review of eight waste and plastic pollution statements from our survey in both popular media and scientific journal articles. Survey results indicated participants had an overall pro-ecological worldview (M = 4.32, SD = 0.88) and reported cardboard and paper (66%) as the most commonly occurring nonperishable waste category. Across categories, food packaging was the most common waste type. Participants were most uncertain about statements focusing on bioplastic or biodegradable plastic, respectively (44% and 30%), while the statement on microplastic toxicity obtained 100% mild or strong agreement among participants. Uncertainty for reviewed statements varied depending on the topic and group. Popular media and scholarly articles did not always agree, possibly due to differences in communication of uncertainty or terminology definitions. These results can inform future policy and educational campaigns around topics of misinformation.
Cohort studies demonstrate that people who later develop schizophrenia, on average, present with mild cognitive deficits in childhood and endure a decline in adolescence and adulthood. Yet, tremendous heterogeneity exists during the course of psychotic disorders, including the prodromal period. Individuals identified to be in this period (known as CHR-P) are at heightened risk for developing psychosis (~35%) and begin to exhibit cognitive deficits. Cognitive impairments in CHR-P (as a singular group) appear to be relatively stable or ameliorate over time. A sizeable proportion has been described to decline on measures related to processing speed or verbal learning. The purpose of this analysis is to use data-driven approaches to identify latent subgroups among CHR-P based on cognitive trajectories. This will yield a clearer understanding of the timing and presentation of both general and domain-specific deficits.
Participants and Methods:
Participants included 684 young people at CHR-P (ages 12–35) from the second cohort of the North American Prodromal Longitudinal Study. Performance on the MATRICS Consensus Cognitive Battery (MCCB) and the Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence (WASI-I) was assessed at baseline, 12-, and 24-months. Tested MCCB domains include verbal learning, speed of processing, working memory, and reasoning & problem-solving. Sex- and age-based norms were utilized. The Oral Reading subtest on the Wide Range Achievement Test (WRAT4) indexed pre-morbid IQ at baseline. Latent class mixture models were used to identify distinct trajectories of cognitive performance across two years. One- to 5-class solutions were compared to decide the best solution. This determination depended on goodness-of-fit metrics, interpretability of latent trajectories, and proportion of subgroup membership (>5%).
Results:
A one-class solution was found for WASI-I Full-Scale IQ, as people at CHR-P predominantly demonstrated an average IQ that increased gradually over time. For individual domains, one-class solutions also best fit the trajectories for speed of processing, verbal learning, and working memory domains. Two distinct subgroups were identified on one of the executive functioning domains, reasoning and problem-solving (NAB Mazes). The sample divided into unimpaired performance with mild improvement over time (Class I, 74%) and persistent performance two standard deviations below average (Class II, 26%). Between these classes, no significant differences were found for biological sex, age, years of education, or likelihood of conversion to psychosis (OR = 1.68, 95% CI 0.86 to 3.14). Individuals assigned to Class II did demonstrate a lower WASI-I IQ at baseline (96.3 vs. 106.3) and a lower premorbid IQ (100.8 vs. 106.2).
Conclusions:
Youth at CHR-P demonstrate relatively homogeneous trajectories across time in terms of general cognition and most individual domains. In contrast, two distinct subgroups were observed with higher cognitive skills involving planning and foresight, and they notably exist independent of conversion outcome. Overall, these findings replicate and extend results from a recently published latent class analysis that examined 12-month trajectories among CHR-P using a different cognitive battery (Allott et al., 2022). Findings inform which individuals at CHR-P may be most likely to benefit from cognitive remediation and can inform about the substrates of deficits by establishing meaningful subtypes.
Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is a risk factor for cognitive impairment/dementia and has been shown to modify the impact of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) biomarkers on cognition and everyday functioning. Studies examining amyloid-ß (Aß), one of the hallmark AD pathologies, have shown mixed results regarding associations of Aß biomarkers with cross-sectional cognition as well as T2D, though Aß is generally associated with future cognitive declines. The purpose of the present study is to examine whether T2D impacts the associations between amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) and cognition in older Veterans.
Participants and Methods:
The current study included 202 mostly male Vietnam-Era Veterans from the Department of Defense-Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (DOD ADNI) study (age M=69.38 years, SD=4.37; 40% with self-reported T2D) who completed neuropsychological testing and florbetapir PET imaging. The Aß PET standardized uptake variable ratio (SUVR) was measured using a previously-validated summary SUVR calculated by dividing the mean uptake across 4 AD-vulnerable cortical regions by whole cerebellar uptake. General linear models examined whether T2D moderated the relationship of Aß PET with memory, attention/executive functioning, and language composite scores. Models adjusted for age, education, apolipoprotein E e4 carrier status, vascular risk burden, depressive symptoms, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptom severity, and history of traumatic brain injury (TBI).
Results:
There was no main effect of diabetes on memory, attention/executive functioning, or language performance, and higher Aß PET SUVR was only associated with worse attention/executive functioning performance (ß=-.146, 95% CI [-.261, -.031], p=.013). The Aß PET x T2D interaction was significant for attention/executive functioning such that higher Aß PET SUVR was associated with lower attention/executive functioning scores, but only in those with T2D (ß=-.116, [-.225, -.006], p=.038). This interaction was not significant for language or memory.
Conclusions:
The results show that Aß may negatively impact attention/executive functioning, but this effect was only found in Veterans with T2D. Prior work has suggested that T2D may be more associated with tau biomarkers than markers of Aß, so it is possible that the current results are due to a compounding effect of Aß pathology plus microvascular and/or tau pathology. Notably, the sample was relatively young, a relatively large proportion had elevated PTSD symptoms and/or a TBI history (which have both been shown to relate to attention/executive function), and the measures that made up the attention/executive composite (Trail Making Test A and B) have been shown to be particularly sensitive - all of which may have contributed to the domain-specific effects. Future research is needed to investigate the role that tau and vascular pathology may play in cognition among individuals with T2D. Longitudinal studies are also needed to better understand the timing and progression of these relationships.
Given growing worry about dark money electoral spending and covert forms of business lobbying – neither of which generally require federal reporting – a shareholder-activist movement has emerged to pressure companies to increase their voluntary political disclosures. This chapter investigates how companies are pressured for greater disclosure and how they respond. I find that firms are likely to be targeted if they are larger and more prominent, and engage in higher levels of conventional lobbying and electoral spending. Additional qualitative evidence shows that targeting follows from a firm’s receptivity to engagement and also if their spending appears contradictory to corporate values. Lastly, I investigate the likelihood that shareholder activism is successful, finding that apparent concessions are more likely after repeated targeting and during years of S&P 500 index constituency. The chapter draws conclusions about the prospects for greater transparency of corporate political expenditures in a time of uncertain government oversight.
The androgen receptor (AR) is part of a superfamily of nuclear receptors. The AR has a diverse set of downstream effects on male phenotype and sexual function, muscle mass and strength, bone density, hematopoiesis, cognition, and metabolism. Testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) to treat male hypogonadism utilizes exogenously administered testosterone to activate the AR. However, TRT is known to have potential risks, including erythrocytosis, dyslipidemia, prostatic hypertrophy, hepatotoxicity, impaired fertility, aromatization of testosterone to estrogen, and testicular atrophy. Selective androgen receptor modulators, also known as SARMs, are compounds that have shown tissue-selective activation of the AR. These compounds potentially offer the ability to treat hypogonadal conditions where activating the AR in the bone, muscle, or brain is desired while sparing undesired effects in tissues such as the prostate, liver, or bone marrow. Currently, there is a dearth of data in human subjects regarding the treatment of male hypogonadism with SARMs. However, from animal models and preliminary studies of SARMs in humans, there appears to be a possible role for SARMs in the hypogonadal man, and their efficacy and safety warrant further study.
In this chapter, we will review how men’s health has evolved into a distinct subspecialty of medicine and changed over the past two decades. There exists a large disparity between men and women when it comes to health. However, as the drivers for men seeking health care are changing, the urologist is in a unique position to help quarterback men’s health initiatives. Men’s health advocacy and the creation of men’s health centers are on the rise. Areas of advancement in the field include prostate cancer diagnosis and treatment, erectile dysfunction therapies, surgical treatment for chronic testicular pain, and new approaches to male factor infertility. The burgeoning field of men’s health has seen many advancements in the past two decades and will continue to make significant gains in the years to come.
In the UK there are 3500 individuals detained in medium secure forensic psychiatry units. Service users in such settings have complex and serious mental illness (SMI), often with co-morbid physical health problems and a life expectancy of at least 10 years shorter than the general population. They often have low levels of physical activity. There is little evidence about physical activity interventions for medium secure service users in the United Kingdom.
Objectives
Our objective is to co-produce, with medium secure service users, the content and delivery of an intervention to increase physical activity. We shall assess feasibility, acceptability and pilot data collection methods for outcomes relevant for a future randomised controlled trial.
Methods
This is a 24-month mixed-methods project that will follow the Medical Research Council (MRC) framework Developing and Evaluating Complex Interventions. The study has 4 phases.
- Phases 1-2 will gather information required to co-develop an evidence based intervention in Phase 3.
- Phase 4 will assess the intervention in a feasibility study, evaluating and testing the intervention for a future pilot study.
Study settings: Two NHS Medium Secure In-Patient Psychiatric Hospitals in the UK.
Results
This paper presents the findings from the Phase 1 questionnaire and focus groups with service users and hospital staff that identified the barriers and facilitators to physical activity in such settings. The results are then discussed in relation to the Phase 2 qualitative results that explored stakeholders’ and service users’ opinions into how to increase physical activity among medium secure service users by identifying potential elements for inclusion in a physical activity intervention, to gain insight into how we can establish engagement of this group with the intervention, maintain commitment, avoid drop-out and develop the intervention design. All findings are presented using the Capability, Opportunity, and Motivation Model of Behaviour (COM-B model), which is widely used to identify what needs to change for a behaviour change intervention to be effective.
Conclusions
The findings of Phases 1-2 are allowing the team to move forward with Phase 3 that is currently developing an intervention to increase physical activity for adult inpatient service users in the medium secure units. This phase will be guided by the MRC framework and the COM-B model to define the target behaviours and select the most suitable intervention components (functions and techniques) and implementation approach.
Plastics pollute all environmental compartments because of human activities and mismanagement. Public perceptions and knowledge about plastic pollution differ among individuals and across different jurisdictions. Targeted survey-based research tools can help measure consumer awareness about the impacts of mismanaged plastics and help identify trends and solutions to reduce plastic use and plastic pollution. This review primarily focused on survey-based research from presenters at the scientific track session TS-2.15 Plastic Pulse of the Public at the 7th International Marine Debris Conference (www.7imdc.org) and supplemented by contemporary literature. Survey-based research helps provide new insights about public opinions related to the pervasiveness of plastic pollution. This review includes results about consumer use and perceptions of plastic pollution impacts from diverse studies from nine countries including Ghana, Kenya, Bangladesh, Pakistan, United States, Canada, Norway, Germany, and United Kingdom. Overwhelmingly, public perceptions and consumer awareness of the negative impacts of plastic pollution were extremely high, regardless of geographic location. Awareness about the environmental impacts of plastic waste and plastic pollution was highest within younger, white, female, and well-educated demographic groups. However, differences were observed in public attitudes toward willingness to pay for sustainable alternatives, end-of-life plastic uses, unintended consequences, recycling, and mismanagement.
OBJECTIVES/GOALS: To identify an electroencephalographic (EEG) signature of SOR in adults with TS METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: We will recruit 60 adults with CTD and 60 sex- and age-matched healthy controls to complete scales assessing severity of SOR (Sensory Gating Inventory, SGI), tics, and psychiatric symptoms. Subjects will then be monitored on dense-array scalp EEG during sequential auditory and tactile sensory gating paradigms, as such paradigms have been shown to correlate with self-report measures of SOR in other populations. Single-trial EEG data will be segmented into 100-ms epochs and spectrally deconvoluted into standard frequency bands (delta, theta, alpha, beta, gamma) for pre-defined regions of interest. We will conduct between-group contrasts (Wilcoxon rank-sum) of band-specific sensory gating indices and within-group correlations (Spearman rank correlations) between sensory gating indices and SGI scores. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: We hypothesize that, relative to controls, adults with CTD exhibit impaired sensory gating and that extent of impairment correlates with severity of SOR. 14 adults with CTD (9 men, 5 women) and 16 controls (10 men, 6 women) have completed the protocol to date. Within this sample, adults with CTD showed significantly reduced sensory gating compared to controls in frontal (CTD median 0.12 dB (interquartile range -0.15–0.70 dB); control -0.37 dB (-0.80–-0.13 dB); p = 0.01) and parietal (CTD 0.17 dB (-0.08–0.50 dB); control -0.20 dB (-0.43–0.10 dB); p = 0.01) gamma band during the 100-200 ms epoch in the tactile paradigm. No significant between-group differences were evident for the auditory paradigm. Among adults with CTD, multiple sensory gating indices significantly correlated with SGI scores. Enrollment continues. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE: Results aim to clarify the extent of sensory gating impairment in TS and identify a clinical correlate of neurophysiologic dysfunction in the disorder. Such knowledge has direct implications for identification of candidate neurophysiologic biomarkers, an express goal of the National Institutes of Health.
OBJECTIVES/GOALS: Motoric cognitive risk (MCR) is a pre-dementia syndrome characterized by slow gait and subjective cognitive complaints. In the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study, we aim to (1) identify plasma proteins and protein modules associated with MCR and (2) compare the proteomic signature of MCR to that of mild cognitive impairment (MCI). METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Nondemented ARIC participants were classified by MCR status (yes/no) according to a memory questionnaire and 4-meter walk. MCI status (yes/no) was classified by expert diagnosis using standardized criteria. We measured 4,877 proteins in plasma collected at ARIC Visit 5 (late-life) and Visit 2 (midlife) utilizing the SomaScan4 proteomic assay. Multivariable logistic regression”adjusted for demographic variables, kidney function, cardiovascular risk factors, and APOE4 status”related each protein to MCR at late-life. An FDR corrected P RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Proteome-wide association study among 4076 ARIC participants (mean age=75; 58% women, 17% Black, 4% MCR+, 21% MCI+; MCR+ and MCI+ groups overlapped) at late-life identified 26 MCR-associated proteins involved in metabolism, vascular/visceral smooth muscle, and extracellular matrix organization. At an uncorrected P DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE: This proteomic characterization of MCR identifies novel plasma proteins and networks, both distinct from and overlapping with those of MCI, thus highlighting the partially divergent mechanisms underlying these pre-dementia syndromes. These findings may be leveraged toward dementia prognostication and targeted therapeutic approaches.
Recent fossil discoveries from New Zealand have revealed a remarkably diverse assemblage of Paleocene stem group penguins. Here, we add to this growing record by describing nine new penguin specimens from the late Paleocene (upper Teurian local stage; 55.5–59.5 Ma) Moeraki Formation of the South Island, New Zealand. The largest specimen is assigned to a new species, Kumimanu fordycei n. sp., which may have been the largest penguin ever to have lived. Allometric regressions based on humerus length and humerus proximal width of extant penguins yield mean estimates of a live body mass in the range of 148.0 kg (95% CI: 132.5 kg–165.3 kg) and 159.7 kg (95% CI: 142.6 kg–178.8 kg), respectively, for Kumimanu fordycei. A second new species, Petradyptes stonehousei n. gen. n. sp., is represented by five specimens and was slightly larger than the extant emperor penguin Aptenodytes forsteri. Two small humeri represent an additional smaller unnamed penguin species. Parsimony and Bayesian phylogenetic analyses recover Kumimanu and Petradyptes crownward of the early Paleocene mainland NZ taxa Waimanu and Muriwaimanu, but stemward of the Chatham Island taxon Kupoupou. These analyses differ, however, in the placement of these two taxa relative to Sequiwaimanu, Crossvallia, and Kaiika. The massive size and placement of Kumimanu fordycei close to the root of the penguin tree provide additional support for a scenario in which penguins reached the upper limit of sphenisciform body size very early in their evolutionary history, while still retaining numerous plesiomorphic features of the flipper.
While unobscured and radio-quiet active galactic nuclei are regularly being found at redshifts
$z > 6$
, their obscured and radio-loud counterparts remain elusive. We build upon our successful pilot study, presenting a new sample of low-frequency-selected candidate high-redshift radio galaxies (HzRGs) over a sky area 20 times larger. We have refined our selection technique, in which we select sources with curved radio spectra between 72–231 MHz from the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-sky Murchison Widefield Array (GLEAM) survey. In combination with the requirements that our GLEAM-selected HzRG candidates have compact radio morphologies and be undetected in near-infrared
$K_{\rm s}$
-band imaging from the Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy Kilo-degree Infrared Galaxy (VIKING) survey, we find 51 new candidate HzRGs over a sky area of approximately
$1200\ \mathrm{deg}^2$
. Our sample also includes two sources from the pilot study: the second-most distant radio galaxy currently known, at
$z=5.55$
, with another source potentially at
$z \sim 8$
. We present our refined selection technique and analyse the properties of the sample. We model the broadband radio spectra between 74 MHz and 9 GHz by supplementing the GLEAM data with both publicly available data and new observations from the Australia Telescope Compact Array at 5.5 and 9 GHz. In addition, deep
$K_{\rm s}$
-band imaging from the High-Acuity Widefield K-band Imager (HAWK-I) on the Very Large Telescope and from the Southern Herschel Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey Regions
$K_{\rm s}$
-band Survey (SHARKS) is presented for five sources. We discuss the prospects of finding very distant radio galaxies in our sample, potentially within the epoch of reionisation at
$z \gtrsim 6.5$
.
Area-level residential instability (ARI), an index of social fragmentation, has been shown to explain the association between urbanicity and psychosis. Urban upbringing has been shown to be associated with decreased gray matter volumes (GMV)s of brain regions corresponding to the right caudal middle frontal gyrus (CMFG) and rostral anterior cingulate cortex (rACC).
Objectives
We hypothesize that greater ARI will be associated with reduced right posterior CMFG and rACC GMVs.
Methods
Data were collected at baseline as part of the North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study. Counties where participants resided during childhood were geographically coded using the US Censuses to area-level factors. ARI was defined as the percentage of residents living in a different house five years ago. Generalized linear mixed models tested associations between ARI and GMVs.
Results
This study included 29 HC and 64 CHR-P individuals who were aged 12 to 24 years, had remained in their baseline residential area, and had magnetic resonance imaging scans. ARI was associated with reduced right CMFG (adjusted β = -0.258; 95% CI = -0.502 – -0.015) and right rACC volumes (adjusted β = -0.318; 95% CI = -0.612 – -0.023). The interaction terms (ARI X diagnostic group) in the prediction of both brain regions were not significant, indicating that the relationships between ARI and regional brain volumes held for both CHR-P and HCs.
Conclusions
Like urban upbringing, ARI may be an important social environmental characteristic that adversely impacts brain regions related to schizophrenia.
We describe a new low-frequency wideband radio survey of the southern sky. Observations covering 72–231 MHz and Declinations south of
$+30^\circ$
have been performed with the Murchison Widefield Array “extended” Phase II configuration over 2018–2020 and will be processed to form data products including continuum and polarisation images and mosaics, multi-frequency catalogues, transient search data, and ionospheric measurements. From a pilot field described in this work, we publish an initial data release covering 1,447
$\mathrm{deg}^2$
over
$4\,\mathrm{h}\leq \mathrm{RA}\leq 13\,\mathrm{h}$
,
$-32.7^\circ \leq \mathrm{Dec} \leq -20.7^\circ$
. We process twenty frequency bands sampling 72–231 MHz, with a resolution of 2′–45′′, and produce a wideband source-finding image across 170–231 MHz with a root mean square noise of
$1.27\pm0.15\,\mathrm{mJy\,beam}^{-1}$
. Source-finding yields 78,967 components, of which 71,320 are fitted spectrally. The catalogue has a completeness of 98% at
${{\sim}}50\,\mathrm{mJy}$
, and a reliability of 98.2% at
$5\sigma$
rising to 99.7% at
$7\sigma$
. A catalogue is available from Vizier; images are made available via the PASA datastore, AAO Data Central, and SkyView. This is the first in a series of data releases from the GLEAM-X survey.