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44 Low Modularity Contributes to Reduced Semantic Network Organization in Multiple Sclerosis
- Sophia Lall, Joshua Sandry
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 557-558
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Objective:
Word finding difficulty is a prevalent cognitive symptom in multiple sclerosis (MS). Word finding relies on retrieving concepts and word forms from the long-term store. Neuropsychological assessment of word finding difficulty in persons with MS (pwMS) is typically characterized by semantic errors and decreased speed in naming tests, along with decreased semantic verbal fluency scores. Despite this, there is significant heterogeneity in the detection of verbal fluency deficits across studies in the MS literature. This may be partially due to disease-related heterogeneity and/or low sensitivity of commonly used scoring approaches. We investigate the latter in the present study. Semantic network analysis, derived from graph theory, provides a fine-grained approach to understanding semantic retrieval by utilizing information about the co-occurrence of words produced on semantic verbal fluency tasks. Analysis results in a graphical quantification of the conceptual-lexical store. A preliminary study found that semantic networks from Spanish-speaking pwMS had fewer associative connections and more central connective pathways, which if affected, may lead parts of the network to become inaccessible for retrieval. However, their investigation was limited in the generalizability of their findings, as they excluded pwMS who have cognitive impairment (CI), which represents a significant proportion of pwMS. We sought to investigate network differences in an English-speaking MS sample, without exclusion based on CI, using widely-used metrics of micro-, meso-, and macroscopic structure. We hypothesize the MS network will be less efficiently organized, thus characterized by higher average shortest path length (ASPL), lower clustering coefficient (CC) and lower modularity (Q).
Participants and Methods:53 persons with MS and 44 neurologically healthy controls (HC) were recruited as a part of an ongoing study (NMSS RG-1907-34364 & RG-1901-33304). As a part of a larger battery, participants were administered the semantic verbal fluency subtest of the Controlled Oral Word Association Test. Responses were analyzed using a network-analysis R suite.
Results:The MS and HC networks were characterized by having similar average shortest path lengths (ASPL MS =2.466, ASPL HC=2.463, F(1,1997)=0.281, p=0.596), indicating they require similar numbers of edges to be traversed to reach other nodes in the network. This suggests similar efficiency of information transfer. Clustering coefficient was not significantly different between the MS and HC networks (CC MS = 0.742, CC HC =0.742, F(1,1997)=0.10, p=0.919), suggesting similar local interconnectivity. The MS network had significantly lower modularity compared to the HC network (Q MS =0.497, Q HC = 0.502, F(1,1997)=16.678, p<0.001). This means that sub-communities of the network were less segregated into densely connected sub-graphs.
Conclusions:Contrary to expectation, ASPL and CC were not significantly different between groups. The absence of finding lower CC was consistent with prior findings. Consistent with our hypothesis, the MS network had lower modularity. This may suggest that pwMS were unable to use categorical clustering to aid in retrieval from the lexicon. Specifically, low modularity coupled with similar CC may suggest the structure of the MS lexicon is characterized by intact clustering on a microscopic scale but less strong organization into distinct clusters on a larger scale.
10 - Industrial Policy and Firms
- Jaymin Lee, Yonsei University, Seoul
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- Book:
- The Tortuous Path of South Korean Economic Development
- Published online:
- 07 December 2023
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- 21 December 2023, pp 315-356
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Summary
After the 1997 crisis, South Korea implemented the same industrial policy as before, promoting R&D as a major means. Yet moving labor from traditional to modern service industries came to mainly comprise the structural transformation. Some chaebol firms became true global players, but chaebol system has become less relevant for structural transformation while their corporate governance remains poor. Foreign ownership has not helped to improve it because of its own problems. The government promoted venture business aggressively, which was not so successful initially; however, venture business has become ever more important over the years. The inducement of foreign direct investment followed a similar pattern, but South Korea’s direct investment overseas came to outweigh foreign direct investment. The labor productivity and financial soundness of small and medium-sized enterprises fell in relation to large enterprises while they came to account for a higher share of employment, deepening the labor market dualism.
44 Can Clinical Trial data Inform our Understanding of the role of Depressive Symptoms in Alzheimer's Disease?
- Munira Z Urmi, Dejania Cotton-Samuel, Clarissa D Morales, Kay C Igwe, Julia F Chang, Amirreza Sedaghat, Patrick J Lao, Rafael V Lippert, Adam M Brickman
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 252-253
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Objective:
Neuropsychiatric symptoms concerning mood are common in Alzheimer's disease (AD), but it is unclear if they are etiologically related to AD pathophysiology or due to factors considered to be non-pathogenic, such as small vessel cerebrovascular disease. New generation clinical trials for AD often enroll participants with evidence of AD pathophysiology, indexed by amyloid PET scanning, but who are cognitively asymptomatic. We used screening data from the Anti-Amyloid Treatment in Asymptomatic Alzheimer's (A4) study to examine the extent to which depressive symptoms are associated with amyloid pathophysiology and small vessel cerebrovascular disease, in the form of white matter hyperintensities (WMH).
Participants and Methods:The A4 study randomizes cognitively healthy older adults with evidence of amyloid pathophysiology on PET scanning. We used screening data, which included amyloid status (positive, negative) by visual read, amyloid PET standard uptake value ratio (SUVR) in cortical regions, and MRI data acquired in a subset (n=1,197, mean age 71.6 +/- 4.8 years, 57% women) to quantitate total WMH volume. Depressive symptoms were evaluated with the 15-item Geriatric Depression Scale, which we used both as a continuous variable and to define 'depressed' and 'non-depressed' groups, based on a cut score of > 5. We examined whether 1) depressive symptoms and proportion of depressed individuals differed between amyloid positive and negative groups, 2) there is a relationship between amyloid SUVR and depressive symptoms that differs as a function of amyloid positivity status, and 3) there is a relationship between WMH volume and depressive symptoms that differs as a function of amyloid positivity status.
Results:Although depressive symptom severity did not differ between groups (t=0.14, p=0.88), a greater proportion of individuals were classified as depressed in the amyloid negative group than the amyloid positive group (3.5% vs. 1.9%, X2=4.60, p=0.032). Increased amyloid SUVR was associated with increased GDS scores among amyloid positive individuals (r=0.117, p=0.002) but not among amyloid negative individuals (r=0.006, p=0.68, Positivity Status x SUVR interaction on GDS: ß=0.817, p=0.029). Increased WMH was associated with higher GDS scores (ß=0.105, p=0.017) but not differentially in amyloid positive and negative participants (Positivity Status x WMH interaction on GDS: ß=-0.010, p=0.243).
Conclusions:These analyses have several implications. First, individuals who are screened to participate in a clinical trial but do not have evidence of amyloidosis may be misattributing concerns about underlying AD pathophysiology to depressive symptoms. Second, the severity of AD pathophysiology, indexed by amyloid PET SUVR, may drive a small increase in depressive symptomatology among individuals over visual diagnostic thresholds. Third, small vessel cerebrovascular changes are additionally associated with depressive symptoms but in a manner that is independent of AD pathophysiology. Overall, depressive symptoms and depression are likely multiply determined among prospective clinical trial participants for preclinical AD.
5 The Association of Neighborhood Socioeconomic Deprivation with Neurocognition in a Diverse Cohort of Middle- and Older-Aged Persons Living with and Without HIV
- Lily Kamalyan, Marta Jankowska, Anya Umlauf, Martha E Perez, Alonzo Mendoza, Lina Scandalis, Donald R Franklin, Matthew Allison, Igor Grant, Mariana Cherner, Maria J Marquine
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 685-687
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Objective:
Due to decades of structural and institutional racism, minoritized individuals in the US are more likely to live in low socioeconomic neighborhoods, which may underlie the observed greater risk for neurocognitive impairment as they age. However, these relationships have not been examined among people aging with HIV. To investigate neurocognitive disparities among middle- and older-aged Latino and non-Latino White people living with HIV (PWH), and whether neighborhood socioeconomic deprivation may partially mediate these relationships.
Participants and Methods:Participants were 372 adults ages 40-85 living in southern California, including 186 Latinos (94 PWH, 92 without HIV) and 186 non-Latino (NL) Whites (94 PWH, 92 without HIV) age-matched to the Latino group (for the overall cohort: Age M=57.0, SD=9.1, Education: M=12.7, SD=3.9, 38% female; for the group of PWH: 66% AIDS, 88% on antiretroviral therapy [ART]; 98% undetectable plasma RNA [among those on ART]). Participants completed psychiatric and neuromedical evaluations and neuropsychological tests of verbal fluency, learning and memory in person or remotely. Neuropsychological results were converted to demographically-unadjusted global scaled scores for our primary outcome. A neighborhood socioeconomic deprivation variable (SESDep) was generated for census tracts in San Diego County using American Community Survey 2013-2017 data. Principal components analysis was used to create one measure using nine variables comprising educational (% with high school diploma), occupational (% unemployed), economic (rent to income ratio, % in poverty, (% female-headed households with dependent children, % with no car, % on public assistance), and housing (% rented housing, % crowded rooms) factors. Census tract SESDep values were averaged for a 1km radius buffer around participants’ home addresses.
Results:Univariable analyses (independent samples t-tests and Chi-square tests) indicated Latinos were more likely to be female and had fewer years of formal education than NL-Whites (ps<.05). Latino PWH had higher nadir CD4 than White PWH (p=.02). Separate multivariable regression models in the overall sample, controlling for demographics and HIV status, showed Latinos had significantly lower global scaled scores than Whites (b=-0.59; 95%CI-1.13, -0.06; p=.03) and lived in more deprived neighborhoods (b=0.62; 95%CI=0.36, 0.88; p<.001). More SES deprivation was significant associated with worse global neurocognition in an unadjusted linear regression (b=-0.55; 95%CI=-0.82, -0.28; p<.001), but similar analyses controlling for demographics and HIV status, showed SESDep was not significantly related to global scaled scores (b=-0.11; 95%CI= -0.36, 0.14; p=.40). Exploratory analyses examined primary language (i.e., English vs Spanish) as a marker of Hispanic heterogeneity and its association with neurocognition and SESDep. Controlling for demographics and HIV status, both English-speaking (b=0.33; 95%CI=0.01. 0.64; p=.04) and Spanish-speaking Latinos (b=0.88; 95%CI=0.58, 1.18; p<.001) lived in significantly greater SESDep neighborhoods than Whites, with SESDep greater for Spanish-speakers than English-speakers (p<.001). However, only English-speaking Latinos had significantly lower neurocognition than Whites (b=-0.91; 95%CI=0-1.57, -0.26; p<.01; Spanish-speakers: b=-0.27; 95%CI=-0.93, 0.38; p=.41).
Conclusions:Among our sample of diverse older adults living with and without HIV, English-speaking Latinos showed worse neurocognition than Whites. Though SES neighborhood deprivation was worse among Latinos (particularly Spanish-speakers) it was not associated with neurocognitive scores after adjusting for demographics. Further studies investigating other neighborhood characteristics and more nuanced markers of Hispanic heterogeneity (e.g., acculturation) are warranted to understand factors underlying aging and HIV-related neurocognitive disparities among diverse older adults.
31 The ADHD Dissimulation Scale (Ds- ADHD) on the MMPI-2-RF versus Established MMPI-2-RF Validity Scales
- Katie M Califano, Timothy J Arentsen, Holly R Winiarski, Christopher T Burley, Marcy C Adler, Jennifer S Seeley McGee, Brad L Roper
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 712-713
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Objective:
The MMPI-2-RF contains scales that assess different types of invalid response styles, especially potential symptom over-reporting (e.g., F-r, Fs, Fp-r, FBS-r, RBS). However, these scales are not designed to specifically capture noncredible symptoms reports associated with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). Robinson & Rogers (2018) proposed the experimental Dissimulation ADHD validity scale (Ds-ADHD) on the MMPI-2-RF that was effective in distinguishing credible and non-credible ADHD diagnoses via a simulator-based study. Within the current study, the Ds-ADHD scale was compared to the established MMPI-2-RF validity scales within a mixed sample of U.S. Military Veterans.
Participants and Methods:173 Veterans (Mage = 36.18, SDage = 11.10, Medu = 14.01, SDedu = 2.11, 88% male, 81% White, 17% Black) completed a neuropsychological evaluation which included an internally consistent MMPI-2-RF profile and up to 10 performance validity tests (PVTs) as well as a question about a possible ADHD diagnosis. The credible group was determined if participants passed all PVTs (n=146) and completed at least 2 PVTs. The non-credible group was determined by failing two or more PVTs (n=27). Group assignment was clinically confirmed. The Ds-ADHD scale was calculated according to Robinson & Rogers’ (2018); responses of “true” (i.e., erroneous stereotypes) were coded as 1 and “false” answers were coded 2, creating a 10- to 20-point scale. Thus, lower scores would be associated with a higher likelihood of a feigned ADHD presentation. Other MMPI-2-RF validity scales of interest included F-r, Fs, Fp-r, FBS-r, and RBS.
Results:The established MMPI-2-RF validity scales were significantly correlated with PVT group membership, but correlations were weak to moderately strong (rS ranged from -.43 to -.18; ps < .05). A series of stepwise regression models were completed with the Ds-ADHD scale and one of the MMPI-2-RF validity scales as independent variables, with group membership as the dependent variable. Ds-ADHD) contributed uniquely to each model (CÜ ranged from .03 to .04, ps < .05). The established MMPI-2-RF validity scales effectively classified group membership (AUC values ranged from .57 to .68), and the Ds-ADHD scale had a marginally higher AUC (.69); however, it was not statistically significantly stronger than any of the established scales (ps > .05).
Conclusions:Clinicians interested in identifying potentially simulated ADHD presentations with the MMPI-2-RF may desire to calculate the Ds-ADHD scale, which previously only had support from a simulator-based study. The Ds-ADHD scale significantly contributed to each model, suggesting that it helped explain groups over and above each of the traditional MMPI-2-RF validity scales. However, it only had a marginally stronger ability to classify participants, indicating that there may be diminishing returns for clinicians. Among the traditional validity scales, RBS and F-r best classified groups, and FBS-r was the least effective. This study employed a cross-sectional design in a mixed sample of Veterans undergoing a neuropsychological evaluation. Future research should focus on replicating the findings using a credible sample that was limited to an independently verified diagnosis of ADHD.
78 The Effects of Hypertension and Obstructive Sleep Apnea on Auditory Learning and Memory in Veterans with PTSD Symptomology
- Valerie Z. Alipio Jocson, Julie Gretler, Marcel Chen, Jerome A. Yesavage, Lisa M. Kinoshita
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 586-587
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Objective:
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) has been associated with cognitive deficits as evidenced by neuropsychological testing in the domains of attention/working memory, verbal memory, processing speed, and executive function. OSA is often comorbid with hypertension and has been considered a risk factor for hypertension (Kareem et al., 2018; Tietjens et al., 2019). Both hypertension and OSA have been shown to be independent predictors of memory (Kinoshita et al., 2012). OSA and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are also frequently co-occurring, especially among veterans. In a group of veterans with a history of PTSD, we seek to explore the effects of sleep apnea and hypertension on cognitive functioning, particularly auditory learning/memory.
Participants and Methods:One hundred and three male and female participants with comorbid OSA and PTSD symptomology were screened as part of a larger VA Palo Alto Health Care System study. Participants (age: x=56.3, a=13.8, 24-81 years; education: x=14.6, a=2.3, 8-20 years; 9.6% female, 89.6% male) completed a neuropsychological battery, including the CVLT-II and WMS-IV Logical Memory. Presence or absence of hypertension was dichotomously coded and AHI severity was categorically coded. An auditory learning/memory composite variable was created using the z-score transformation method (Dodge et al., 2020). Variables and covariates were entered into a hierarchical regression.
Results:The initial regression model revealed hypertension and OSA severity to be independent predictors of performance on auditory learning/memory (hypertension: ß= -0.71, p<0.01; OSA: ß= -0.42, p<0.01), where presence of hypertension or increased severity of OSA resulted in worse performance on the auditory learning/memory composite.
Conclusions:Results suggest that hypertension and OSA may independently and negatively affect performance on measures of auditory learning/memory in veterans with PTSD symptomology and OSA. Such findings underscore the importance of assessing and treating both hypertension and OSA among veterans with PTSD to improve not only physical health, but also cognitive health. Further research demonstrating similar findings is recommended along with studies investigating whether or not the treatment of hypertension and OSA can improve auditory learning/memory.
2 Contributions of Cardiovascular Disease Burden and Concussion History on Cognitive Function in Older Former National Football League Players.
- Benjamin L Brett, Alyssa Leitzke, Zachary Y Kerr, Neelum T Aggarwal, Avinash Chandran, Samuel R Walton, Rebekah Mannix, Landon B Lempke, J.D. DeFreese, Ruben J Echemendia, Kevin M Guskiewicz, William P Meehan III, Michael A McCrea
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 302-303
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Objective:
Traumatic brain injury and cardiovascular disease (CVD) are modifiable risk factors for cognitive decline and dementia. Greater concussion history can potentially increase risk for cerebrovascular changes associated with cognitive decline and may compound effects of CVD. We investigated the independent and dynamic effects of CVD/risk factor burden and concussion history on cognitive function and odds of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) diagnoses in older former National Football League (NFL) players.
Participants and Methods:Former NFL players, ages 50-70 (N=289; mean age=61.02±5.33 years), reported medical history and completed the Brief Test of Adult Cognition by Telephone (BTACT). CVD/risk factor burden was characterized as ordinal (0-3+) based on the sum of the following conditions: coronary artery disease/myocardial infarction, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, sleep apnea, type-I and II diabetes. Cognitive outcomes included BTACT Executive Function and Episodic Memory Composite Z-scores (standardized on age- and education-based normative data), and the presence of physician diagnosed (self-reported) MCI. Concussion history was discretized into five groups: 0, 1-2, 3-5, 6-9, 10+. Linear and logistic regression models were fit to test independent and joint effects of concussion history and CVD burden on cognitive outcomes and odds of MCI. Race (dichotomized as White and Non-white due to sample distribution) was included in models as a covariate.
Results:Greater CVD burden (unstandardized beta [standard error]; B=-0.10[0.42], p=.013, and race (B=0.622[0.09], p<.001), were associated with lower executive functioning. Compared to those with 0 prior concussions, no significant differences were observed for those with 1-2, 3-5, 6-9, or 10+ prior concussions (ps >.05). Race (B=0.61[.13], p<.001), but not concussion history or CVD burden, was associated with episodic memory. There was a trend for lower episodic memory scores among those with 10+ prior concussion compared to those with no prior concussions (B=-0.49[.25], p=.052). There were no significant differences in episodic memory among those with 1-2, 3-5, or 6-9 prior concussions compared to those with 0 prior concussions (ps>.05). CVD burden (B=0.35[.13], p=.008), race (greater odds in Non-white group; B=0.82[.29], p=.005), and greater concussion history (higher odds of diagnosis in 10+ group compared to those with 0 prior concussions; B=2.19[0.78], p<.005) were associated with higher odds of MCI diagnosis. Significant interaction effects between concussion history and CVD burden were not observed for any outcome (ps >.05).
Conclusions:Lower executive functioning and higher odds of MCI diagnosis were associated with higher CVD burden and race. Very high concussion history (10+) was selectively associated with higher odds of MCI diagnosis. Reduction of these modifiable factors may mitigate adverse outcomes in older contact sport athletes. In former athletes, consideration of CVD burden is particularly pertinent when assessing executive dysfunction, considered to be a common cognitive feature of traumatic encephalopathy syndrome, as designated by the recent diagnostic criteria. Further research should investigate the social and structural determinants contributing to racial disparities in long-term health outcomes within former NFL players.
53 Does the Corpus Callosum Recover from Concussion? Longitudinal Evidence from a Diffusion Tensor Imaging Study
- Jennifer Aldana, Kaylie A Carbine, Alexandra M Muir, Ariana Hedges-Muncy, Erin D Bigler, Michael J Larson
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 158-159
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Objective:
Given that at least 75% of traumatic brain injuries in the U.S. are mild, concussions are a serious public health concern that cause significant neurological damage and negatively impact individuals’ quality of life. Due to the rotational forces that occur during a concussion, immediate damage to the corpus callosum is common, resulting in neurological and behavioral deficits. However, the longitudinal damage to the integrity of the corpus callosum is unclear and may differ across sections of the corpus callosum. Our primary aim was to compare the white matter integrity across eight corpus callosum tracts in concussed individuals to healthy controls 3-4 weeks after injury and at a 10-month follow-up.
Participants and Methods:Seventeen concussed participants completed a diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) scan 3-4 weeks after receiving a concussion and again 10 months after injury. Nineteen control participants completed a single DTI scan. DTI data were analyzed using the automated fiber quantification (AFQ) pipeline, which extracts fractional anisotropy (FA) values from 100 nodes in eight tracts of the corpus callosum (listed anterior to posterior): orbital frontal, anterior frontal, superior frontal, motor, superior parietal, posterior parietal, occipital, and temporal. Given the non-linearity, high multicollinearity, and large number of data points, a cubic smoothing spline was used to fit a penalized regression to the FA values in each tract, allowing us to compare the FA values of each node in each tract between groups and across time. To assess acute damage, a spline model for the concussed participants at 3-4 weeks was compared to a spline model for the control participants in each tract. To assess longitudinal damage, a spline model of the FA difference value (10-month minus acute visit) in concussed participants was compared to a spline model of the FA difference value for controls (zero, representative of a theoretical no change in FA values). Significant nodes were defined as p-values less than 0.006 (alpha of .05/8, given 8 tracts).
Results:Acutely following injury, concussed participants showed lower FA values than controls in the anterior frontal, posterior parietal, occipital, and temporal tracts. In the orbital frontal tract, concussed participants had higher FA values on the left, but decreased FA values compared to controls in the middle. Longitudinally, concussed participants showed continued decreased white matter integrity in the orbital frontal, superior parietal, and occipital tracts, but improved white matter integrity in the anterior frontal and superior frontal tracts. The motor, posterior parietal, and temporal tracts showed mixed longitudinal results of decreased or improved white matter integrity within each tract.
Conclusions:Concussed individuals show decreased white matter integrity across the corpus callosum acutely after injury. Longitudinally, the most anterior and posterior portions of the corpus callosum (i.e., genu and splenium) show continued damaged while the more medial sections of the corpus callosum may show some recovery. Results suggest the corpus callosum displays differential patterns of damage acutely and longitudinally following concussion, with some tracts improving while others continue to deteriorate.
54 Exploring the Impact of Stria Terminalis Connectivity and Family Income on Depressive Symptoms Throughout Development
- Sophie I Leib, Whitney I Mattson, Eric E Nelson, Young Jin Kim, Kristen R Hoskinson
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 463-464
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Objective:
The stria terminalis (ST) is a white matter tract with connections to limbic and autonomic brain structures that is implicated in affective functioning. Recent works suggests that ST functional integrity and connectivity is associated with faster responses to emotional cues (Dzafic et al., 2019) and may be influenced by environmental factors including socioeconomic status (SES) and childhood adversity (Banihashemi et al., 2020). The role of the ST in the experience of more daily affective experiences, such as depressive symptoms, remains unexplored. Therefore, the present study examined the role of the ST and SES, as assessed by household income, in the relationship between age and depressive symptoms in typically developing children and adolescents.
Participants and Methods:Participants include 64 typically developing children and adolescents age 8-21 (Mage=13.27, SD=3.15) who participated in an ongoing study of development of neurocognitive and social-cognitive skills. Participants completed imaging on a 3Tesla MR Siemens PRISMA scanner. Tractography was executed via ENIGMA tract-based spatial statistics to quantify WM integrity and provided values for mean fractional anisotropy (mFA) of the ST. Depressive symptoms were measured with the Behavior Assessment Scale for Children-Third Edition (BASC-3) parent report scale, and annual family income was obtained per parent report. Mediation and moderation analyses were conducted using Process version 4.1 (Hayes, 2022) in SPSS version 28. As depression symptoms are often higher in early adolescence than later, we examined the indirect effect of age on depressive symptoms through ST mFA and evaluated this relationship at different levels of family income.
Results:Age was associated with lower levels of depressive symptoms (b=-.98, t=-2.18, p<.05), whereas greater right ST mFA was associated with higher levels of depressive symptoms (b=42.05, t=2.50, p<.05). Right ST mFA explained significant variance in the relationship between age and parent-reported depression (ab=.13, 95% CI [.02, .29]). The conditional indirect effect of family income was significant for children with annual family incomes between 25-50k (effect=.16, 95% CI [.01, .38]) and 75-100k (effect=.13, 95% CI [.001, .31]), but not for 100k+ (effect=.11, 95% CI [-.05, .33]).
Conclusions:The present study revealed a significant, positive relationship between white matter integrity in the right ST and parent-reported depressive symptoms in healthy children and young adults. Finding extend on prior work implicating the ST in threat responsivity (Dzafic et al., 2019). Moreover,results suggest the role of the ST in the relationship between age and depression depends on level of family income, such that ST mFA explains more variance at lower income levels, and is no longer significant for children from families with income greater than 100k. These findings support the notion that environmental stressors (such as lower family income) may strengthen ST pathways via activity-dependent plasticity and repeated, coordinated activation (Rinaman et al., 2011). Future studies should examine these brain-behavior associations, as they may replicate in a larger sample, with more nuanced indicators of environmental stress.
11 Using the Chinese Version of Computerized Tower Test and Teacher-Filled BRIEF-2 to Assess the Executive Functions of Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder in Taiwan
- TZU-CHING LIN, HSUEH-CHIH CHEN, Meng-Ting Chen, Jao-Shwann Liang
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 621-622
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Objective:
Many studies supported that children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have worse executive functions (EFs) when compared to typically developmental (TD) children in many domains, such as planning, flexibility, inhibition, and self-monitoring. The current study aims to use an adapted version of the computerized tower test to investigate the EFs of children with ASD. Furthermore, the researcher also assessed children's EFs-related behaviors in their schools using a teacher-filled behavior rating inventory of executive function, 2nd edition (BRIEF-2).
Participants and Methods:61 Children aged 7 to 12 years old (M = 9.23) were included in the current study. 29 of them were in the ASD group, and 31 of them were in the TD group. All participants conducted an adapted computerized tower test. All participants' teachers completed BRIEF-2 to investigate their EFs-related behaviors in their schools.
Results:The results indicated that there were no significant differences in the tower test between the ASD group and TD group in all indexes. Therefore, it implied that the current indexes might not be sensitive enough to distinguish whether a child has ASD or not. In addition, we further investigate the correlations between the tower test and the teacher-filled BRIEF-2. We found the different patterns in the two groups. In the ASD group, we found that the task-monitor index was positively correlated with total-number-of-rule-violations, total-complete-time, and total-rule-violations-per-item-ratio. The task-monitor index was negatively correlated with total-achievement-score, implying that poorer ability to monitor tasks leads to a longer completion time, more rule violations, and a lower total achievement score. Moreover, we also found a high correlation between the organization-of-materials in BRIEF-2 and total-complete-time in the tower test, suggesting the long problem-solving time in ASD groups is highly related to the disability of keeping working space ordered. In addition, we found that the shift index is positively correlated with total-complete-time and total-rule-violations-per-item-ratio. Hence, it indicates that those with poor flexibility in solving problems tend to need more time to complete tasks and violate more rules in ASD groups. In the TD group, we only found the correlation effects were significant between inhibition and self-monitor in the BRIEF-2 and the total-rule-violations-per-item-ratio in the tower test. It suggested that individuals with behavioral regulation problems, such as impulse control and monitoring problems are more likely to make rule violations. The result indicated that behavioral regulations play a more significant role in the TD group. In contrast, cognitive and emotional regulations are more critical in ASD children.
Conclusions:Our findings found no significant difference in the computerized tower test between children with and without ASD, suggesting that the current indexed might not be sensitive enough to differentiate children with or without ASD. However, the results of the correlation between the tower test and teacher-filled BRIEF-2 showed that different patterns might be the cause of the EF performances between the two groups, indicating that there might be a different domain of EFs the children used in the tower test between two groups.
Therefore, further research could focus on developing new indexes in the Tower test and finding the EF mechanism of ASD children with different approaches.
62 Moral Reasoning Through the Eyes of Behavioral Variant Frontotemporal Dementia
- Rea Antoniou, Tobias Haeusermann, Alissa Bernstein Sideman, Celeste Fong, Patrick Callahan, Sherry Chen, Bruce L. Miller, Winston Chiong, Katherine P. Rankin
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 267-268
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Objective:
Persons with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) have been shown to exhibit altered morality, manifested as atypical utilitarian tendencies towards sacrificial moral dilemmas. This takes the form of endorsing harmful actions towards single individuals, including vulnerable or relationally close individuals (e.g. children, loved ones), in order to promote the greater good for the community or society as a whole. The dual process model of moral cognition interprets such tendencies as deriving from a lack of emotional engagement, whereas moral emotion theory views them as selective impairment in prosocial sentiments. We hypothesized that both the widespread neuropsychological practice of using sacrificial moral dilemmas to evaluate moral reasoning, and these tests' overreliance on quantitative results, inadequately represent how persons with bvFTD reason and feel while responding to moral dilemmas. To evaluate this hypothesis, we applied a mixed-methods approach to identify the reasoning, motivations, and emotional experiences of bvFTD persons during their deliberation about moral scenarios.
Participants and Methods:We conducted semi-structured interviews with 14 participants: 7 persons with bvFTD & 7 older healthy controls. Transcripts were coded in Atlas 5.0 to characterize the underlying reasoning, emotions, response processes, and values that emerged when responding to a structured set of moral dilemmas. Our dilemmas measured utilitarian reasoning holistically by incorporating both sacrificial and impartial/altruistic components, as suggested by the 2-dimensional model of utilitarianism.
Results:Unexpectedly, bvFTD persons articulated a prosocial compass when asked about their values, stating they were organizing their choices predominantly around kindness and altruism, even when they were making choices to harm loved ones or vulnerable individuals to promote the greater good. During moral deliberation, persons with bvFTD showed significantly less metacognition (bvFTD = 10%, HC = 90%) but reported more positive emotions (joy; bvFTD = 83%, HC = 17%) than negative (frustration; bvFTD = 30 %, HC = 70 %) compared to controls. Qualitatively, this observed emotional outlook was typically coupled with a more rigid, simplistic viewpoint (e.g., "I felt great, it was a no brainer"), suggesting a moral understanding lacking emotional nuance and complexity.
Conclusions:Our data showed that bvFTD persons' utilitarian responses to moral dilemmas did not arise from an emotionally flat or antisocial cognitive perspective, but instead were guided by positive emotionality, simplistic reasoning, and prosocial values. These findings challenge the current understanding of the reasoning processes and experiences of persons with bvFTD and highlight the importance of incorporating mixed method approaches in dementia research that take into consideration the viewpoint of the cognitively compromised individual.
Bibliography
- Terry D. Gill, Universiteit van Amsterdam, Kinga Tibori-Szabó, Universiteit van Amsterdam
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- Book:
- The Use of Force and the International Legal System
- Published online:
- 07 December 2023
- Print publication:
- 21 December 2023, pp 413-442
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Very long chain fatty acid–inhibiting herbicides: Current uses, site of action, herbicide-resistant weeds, and future
- Amit J. Jhala, Mandeep Singh, Lovreet Shergill, Rishabh Singh, Mithila Jugulam, Dean E. Riechers, Zahoor A. Ganie, Thomas P. Selby, Rodrigo Werle, Jason K. Norsworthy
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- Journal:
- Weed Technology / Volume 38 / 2024
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, e1
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The herbicides that inhibit very-long-chain fatty acid (VLCFA) elongases are primarily used for residual weed control in corn, barley, oat, sorghum, soybean, sugarcane, certain vegetable crops, and wheat production fields in the United States. They act primarily by inhibiting shoot development of susceptible species, preventing weed emergence and growth. The objectives of this review were to summarize 1) the chemical family of VLCFA-inhibiting herbicides and their use in the United States, 2) the VLCFA biosynthesis in plants and their site of action, 3) VLCFA-inhibitor resistant weeds and their mechanism of resistance, and 4) the future of VLCFA-inhibiting herbicides. After their reclassification as Group 15 herbicides to include shoot growth-inhibiting herbicides (Group 8), the VLCFA-inhibiting herbicides are currently represented by eight chemical families (benzofurans, thiocarbamates, α-chloroacetamides, α-oxyacetamides, azolyl-carboxamides, isoxazolines, α-thioacetamides, and oxiranes). On average, VLCFA-inhibiting herbicides are applied once a year to both corn and soybean crops in the United States with acetochlor and S-metolachlor being the most used VLCFA-inhibiting herbicides in corn and soybean production, respectively. The site of action of Group 15 herbicides results from inhibition of the VLCFA synthase, which is encoded by several fatty acid elongase (FAE1)-like genes in VLCFA elongase complex in an endoplasmic reticulum. The VLCFA synthase is a condensing enzyme, and relies on a conserved, reactive cysteinyl sulfur in its active site that performs a nucleophilic attack on either the natural substrate (fatty acyl-CoA) or the herbicide. As of August 2023, 13 weed species have been documented to be resistant to VLCFA inhibitors, including 11 monocot weeds and two dicot weeds (Palmer amaranth and waterhemp). The isoxazolines (pyroxasulfone and fenoxasulfone) are the most recently (2014) discovered VLCFA-inhibiting herbicides. Although the intensity of VLCFA-inhibitor-directed discovery efforts has decreased over the past decade, this biochemical pathway remains a viable mechanistic target for the discovery of herbicide premixes and a valuable component of them.
The use of UV-C radiation for terminal disinfection of pathogenic Gram-negative rods: a pilot study
- Joseph Tholany, Hiroyuki Suzuki, Amy R. Frank, Steven H. Bryant, Cassie Cunningham Goedken, Daniel Suh, Michael S. Stevens, Stacey M. Hockett Sherlock, Eli N. Perencevich
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- Journal:
- Antimicrobial Stewardship & Healthcare Epidemiology / Volume 3 / Issue 1 / 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, e247
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In this controlled study, we found that exposure to ultraviolet-C (UV-C) radiation was able to arrest the growth of selected pathogenic enteric and nonfermenting Gram-negative rods. Further studies are needed to confirm the clinical efficacy and determine optimal implementation strategies for utilizing UV-C terminal disinfection.
Chapter 1 - The Platonic Heritage
- Marilù Papandreou, Universitetet i Bergen, Norway
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- Aristotle's Ontology of Artefacts
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- 14 December 2023
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- 21 December 2023, pp 31-57
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Summary
This chapter outlines Plato’s metaphysics of artefacts on the basis of his explicit references to Ideas of artefacts in the Cratylus and Republic X, his discussion of the eidetic cosmos presented in the Parmenides and the description of the material world as a product of the divine artisan in the Timaeus. The second section presents the shortcomings of Plato’s account detected by Aristotle and addressed through artefacts: these are Plato’s failure to recognise final causes and the concept of imitation. The third section outlines the metaphysical intuitions upon which Aristotle builds by taking artefacts into account. The roots of certain metaphysical problems are not explicitly identified as Platonic, but they are arguably to be found in the Platonic corpus. These problems concern the range of things that have a form, the separation between axiology and metaphysics, the concept of real kinds and the relation between parts and whole.
Acknowledgements
- Edited by Patrick Brandful Cobbinah, University of Melbourne, Eric Gaisie, University of Melbourne
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- Reimagining Urban Planning in Africa
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- 07 December 2023
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- 21 December 2023, pp xxiii-xxiii
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3 The Aesthetics of Empathy in Agenesis of the Corpus Callosum
- Kutter D Callaway, Kaitlyn A Nogales, Lynn K Paul, Warren S Brown
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- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 6-7
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Objective:
Previous research suggests that individuals with isolated Agenesis of the Corpus Callosum (AgCC) have cognitive and psychosocial deficiencies that include impaired recognition of the emotions of others (Symington et al., 2010) and a diminished ability to infer and describe the emotions of others (Paul et al., 2021; Turk et al., 2010). In addition, galvanic skin responses effectively discriminated between emotional images despite atypical emotion ratings (Paul et al, 2006), supporting a dissociation between cognitive and affective empathy in AgCC. Likewise, atypical patterns of visual attention to faces corresponded with impaired emotion recognition in AgCC (Bridgman et al, 2014), suggesting that atypical visual attention in AgCC negatively impacts the ability to identify others’ emotions. This study used the Multifaceted Empathy Test [MET] (Foell et al., 2018) to examine the impact of visual aesthetics (photo composition) on empathetic feelings (affective empathy) and situational emotion recognition (cognitive empathy) in persons with AgCC. Both cognitive and affective empathy scores are typically higher on MET stimuli composed according to the “Golden Spiral” (Callaway, 2022).
Participants and Methods:Results from 50 control participants recruited from Cloud Research were compared to responses from 19 participants with AgCC and normal-range FSIQ (>80). Data was gathered through an online version of the MET, which uses a series of photographs of individuals displaying an emotion, half of which adhere to the compositional technique known as “The Golden Spiral.” To measure cognitive empathy, the participants are asked to pick the correct emotion being displayed with three distractors for each item. To measure affective empathy, they are then asked on a sliding scale, “how much do you empathize with the person shown” (1 = Not at all, 7 = Very much).
Results:Repeated measures mixed ANOVAs revealed no difference between AgCC and control groups on affective empathy, and as expected on the MET, both groups had significantly higher ratings for photos composed according to the Golden Spiral (AgCC, np2 = .071; control, np2 = .136). In contrast, the AgCC group scored significantly lower than controls overall on cognitive empathy, np2 =.065. Exploratory post-hoc found a significant group difference in cognitive empathy only on photos composed according to the Golden Spiral, np2 = .090, with the scores in the AgCC group unimpacted by composition type while the control group exhibiting significantly higher scores Golden Spiral images, np2 = .254.
Conclusions:Empathic deficits in AgCC were restricted to the cognitive component, while affective empathy was not impaired. Visual aesthetics of photo composition influenced affective empathy ratings in both AgCC and control groups. However, adults with AgCC had diminished ability to give cognitive labels to the emotional states of others, which was not enhanced by the formal aesthetics of stimuli. Thus the corpus callosum seems to facilitate the ability to cognitively label emotions by facilitating visual attention. It also suggests that the corpus callosum does not facilitate affective empathy, in part because it does not appear to determine whether formal aesthetics influences the processing of visual stimuli in AgCC or neurotypical controls.
95 Handedness as a Consideration for Computerized Neuromotor Performance Testing
- Sarah L. Kohnen, Xanthia Saganis, George Kondraske, Anthony J. Goreczny, Paul Nussbaum
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 497-498
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Objective:
The COVID-19 pandemic created barriers to healthcare that necessitated changes in services to meet needs of individuals. With these changes, technological advances in computerized cognitive testing became critical. As researchers and clinicians accelerated adaptation of computerized testing formats, considerations for development and interpretation of such tools have proved imperative. One such computerized tool, RC21X, utilizes performance measurement software comprising 15 modules to evaluate an individual’s processing speed, memory, executive functions, and neuromotor coordination. Although initial data has revealed strong psychometric properties (Saganis et al., 2020), a need to explore various attributes of this web-based tool has emerged. The current study examined impact of dominant handedness on an RC21X neuromotor task.
Participants and Methods:The sample consisted of 602 participants: 553 (91.86%) were right-hand dominant and 49 (8.14%) were left-hand dominant. Of participants who identified their sex, 81.2% were male, 18.3% were female; 0.5% chose not to identify. Age ranged from 7-95 years (M = 41.21, SD = 18.81). This study focused on the RC21X Eye-Hand Coordination subtest. Using a Fitts’ Law paradigm, the module provided instruction for participants to alternately press the “A” and “L” keys on a keyboard as quickly and accurately as possible using only one upper extremity (UE) at a time (tested separately for right then left UE). We computed a one-way between groups multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) to investigate handedness differences on task performance. Dependent variables were individuals’ performances on right- and left-UE tasks; the independent variable was dominant handedness. We conducted preliminary assumption testing with no serious violations noted. We also separated the sample by dominant handedness to compare right versus left-hand performance using paired samples t-tests within each group. There were no significant differences between the two groups on either age or sex.
Results:There was a statistically significant difference between right-hand dominant and left-hand dominant participants on the dependent variables, F (2, 599) = 8.84, p < .001, Wilks’ Lambda = .971. Mean scores indicated that right-hand dominant participants (M = 52.87, SD = 20.42) outperformed their left-hand dominant counterparts (M = 46.30, SD = 12.79) when using their right UE, though both groups performed similarly when using their left UE (right-hand dominant M = 48.55, SD = 17.81; left-hand dominant M = 49.70, SD = 14.13). These findings were present despite expected results from paired samples t-tests that revealed individuals performed best with their dominant hand.
Conclusions:Results revealed that handedness is necessary to consider in design and utilization of computerized neuropsychological tests. The large proportion of right-hand dominant individuals may have affected our results; however, our sample is representative of handedness distribution in the general population. Although our paired samples t-tests support validity of RC21X, continued investigation of computerized performance measurement tools is necessary. Future research must explore the possibility of an ordering effect (i.e., right-handed participants starting with their dominant UE, but left-handed participants starting with their nondominant UE) or due to construction of everyday items (e.g., computer keyboards) primarily for right-hand dominant people.
2 - The Politics of Class
- from Part I - Histories of the Present
- Edited by Yogita Goyal, University of California, Los Angeles
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- Book:
- The Cambridge Companion to Contemporary African American Literature
- Published online:
- 14 December 2023
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- 21 December 2023, pp 46-62
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Summary
This chapter assesses the interplay among social class and the growing centralization of African American literature in the marketplace. Since the 1980s the production of black literature has been increasingly shaped by the economic and aesthetic priorities of commercial bookselling. Contemporary African American writers have expressed their awareness of the ways that the commodification of black literary expression has both imposed limits and created new possibilities for literary art. These authors have been particularly attentive to new patterns of consumption and reception that emphasize class distinctions among consumers and genres of writing. These changes have prompted writers to rethink traditional assumptions about the social and aesthetic obligations of black middle-class writers in forging alliances with the working class. The chapter considers these shifting social relations with reference to literary works by Paul Beatty, Trey Ellis, Percival Everett, Mat Johnson, Claudia Rankine, and Colson Whitehead.
Index
- Matthew A. Sears, University of New Brunswick
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- Sparta and the Commemoration of War
- Published online:
- 08 December 2023
- Print publication:
- 21 December 2023, pp 267-274
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