Publications by authors named "Amanda L Rodrigue"

Background: Structural brain differences in the thalamus and the cortex have been widely reported in schizophrenia (SCZ) relative to neurotypical control individuals (NCs). Most previous studies examined the thalamus as a whole as a single region of interest. In addition, findings in individuals at familial high risk for SCZ (FHRs) remain inconclusive.

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Age-related white matter (WM) microstructure maturation and decline occur throughout the human lifespan, complementing the process of gray matter development and degeneration. Here, we create normative lifespan reference curves for global and regional WM microstructure by harmonizing diffusion MRI (dMRI)-derived data from ten public datasets (N = 40,898 subjects; age: 3-95 years; 47.6% male).

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Phenotypic and genetic relationships between white matter microstructure (i.e., fractional anisotropy [FA]) and peripheral inflammatory responses (i.

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  • This study used machine learning to classify subtypes of schizophrenia by analyzing brain images from over 4,000 patients and healthy individuals through international collaboration.* -
  • Researchers identified two neurostructural subgroups: one with predominant cortical loss and enlarged striatum, and another with significant subcortical loss in areas like the hippocampus and striatum.* -
  • The findings suggest this new imaging-based classification could redefine schizophrenia based on biological similarities, enhancing our understanding and treatment of the disorder.*
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  • - We conducted a study on 7,140 Hispanic and Latino adults to identify genetic regions linked to cognitive abilities through admixture and fine-mapping analyses.
  • - We found nine regions in the genome associated with cognitive function, and three of these regions showed strong statistical evidence for supporting genes related to cognitive functioning and dementia.
  • - Our findings enhance the understanding of how ancestry influences cognitive abilities, showcasing the effectiveness of admixture mapping in identifying unique genetic variants relevant to cognitive function.
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  • The study investigates how white matter (WM) microstructure develops and declines with age, creating reference curves to track these changes throughout the human lifespan using data from 40,898 subjects aged 3 to 95.
  • They employed diffusion MRI (dMRI) techniques and found that the ComBat-GAM method harmonized data most effectively, aligning with known WM maturation patterns.
  • The research also revealed that the ApoE4 gene, linked to dementia risk, affects WM microstructure even in healthy individuals, highlighting significant interactions between age and genetic factors across different brain regions.
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Machine learning can be used to define subtypes of psychiatric conditions based on shared clinical and biological foundations, presenting a crucial step toward establishing biologically based subtypes of mental disorders. With the goal of identifying subtypes of disease progression in schizophrenia, here we analyzed cross-sectional brain structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data from 4,291 individuals with schizophrenia (1,709 females, age=32.5 years±11.

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Background And Hypothesis: Structural brain alterations are well-established features of schizophrenia but they do not effectively predict disease/disease risk. Similar to polygenic risk scores in genetics, we integrated multifactorial aspects of brain structure into a summary "Neuroscore" and examined its potential as a marker of disease.

Study Design: We extracted measures from T1-weighted scans and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) models from three studies with schizophrenia and healthy individuals.

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Introduction: The cocktail-party problem refers to the difficulty listeners face when trying to attend to relevant sounds that are mixed with irrelevant ones. Previous studies have shown that solving these problems relies on perceptual as well as cognitive processes. Previously, we showed that speech-reception thresholds (SRTs) on a cocktail-party listening task were influenced by genetic factors.

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  • Previous research indicates a link between lower mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) copy number and neurodegenerative diseases, prompting investigation into the relationship between mtDNA CN in blood and Alzheimer disease endophenotypes.
  • The study involved dementia-free individuals from various community cohorts, measuring mtDNA CN and analyzing its association with cognitive function and brain MRI markers over specified timeframes.
  • Findings showed that higher mtDNA CN correlates with better cognitive performance, independent of several confounding factors, with consistent results observed in both cross-sectional and prospective analyses, although the latter showed a weaker association.
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  • Communicating in busy places, like at a party, can be hard because there are many sounds mixed together, and people have different abilities to focus on what they want to hear.
  • A study measured how well 425 people can understand speech in noisy environments and found that genes play a big role in this ability.
  • The results also showed that older age and money-related factors affect how well people can hear in noisy situations, pointing to a potential link to "hidden hearing loss."
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Schizophrenia is frequently associated with obesity, which is linked with neurostructural alterations. Yet, we do not understand how the brain correlates of obesity map onto the brain changes in schizophrenia. We obtained MRI-derived brain cortical and subcortical measures and body mass index (BMI) from 1260 individuals with schizophrenia and 1761 controls from 12 independent research sites within the ENIGMA-Schizophrenia Working Group.

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Background: Polygenic risk scores (PRSs) are indices of genetic liability for illness, but their clinical utility for predicting risk for a specific psychiatric disorder is limited. Genetic overlap among disorders and their effects on allied phenotypes may be a possible explanation, but this has been difficult to quantify given focus on singular disorders and/or allied phenotypes.

Methods: We constructed PRSs for 5 psychiatric disorders (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, autism spectrum disorder, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder) and 3 nonpsychiatric control traits (height, type II diabetes, irritable bowel disease) in the UK Biobank ( = 31,616) and quantified associations between PRSs and phenotypes allied with mental illness: behavioral (symptoms, cognition, trauma) and brain measures from magnetic resonance imaging.

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Anatomical organization of the primate cortex varies as a function of total brain size, where possession of a larger brain is accompanied by disproportionate expansion of associative cortices alongside a relative contraction of sensorimotor systems. However, equivalent scaling maps are not yet available for regional white matter anatomy. Here, we use three large-scale neuroimaging datasets to examine how regional white matter volume (WMV) scales with interindividual variation in brain volume among typically developing humans (combined = 2391: 1247 females, 1144 males).

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Background: Progress in precision psychiatry is predicated on identifying reliable individual-level diagnostic biomarkers. For psychosis, measures of structural and functional connectivity could be promising biomarkers given consistent reports of dysconnectivity across psychotic disorders using magnetic resonance imaging.

Methods: We leveraged data from four independent cohorts of patients with psychosis and control subjects with observations from approximately 800 individuals.

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Background: Antisaccade tasks can be used to index cognitive control processes, e.g. attention, behavioral inhibition, working memory, and goal maintenance in people with brain disorders.

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Although previous studies have highlighted associations of cannabis use with cognition and brain morphometry, critical questions remain with regard to the association between cannabis use and brain structural and functional connectivity. In a cross-sectional community sample of 205 African Americans (age 18-70) we tested for associations of cannabis use disorder (CUD, n = 57) with multi-domain cognitive measures and structural, diffusion, and resting state brain-imaging phenotypes. Post hoc model evidence was computed with Bayes factors (BF) and posterior probabilities of association (PPA) to account for multiple testing.

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Brain structural networks have been shown to consistently organize in functionally meaningful architectures covering the entire brain. However, to what extent brain structural architectures match the intrinsic functional networks in different functional domains remains under explored. In this study, based on independent component analysis, we revealed 45 pairs of structural-functional (S-F) component maps, distributing across nine functional domains, in both a discovery cohort (n = 6005) and a replication cohort (UK Biobank, n = 9214), providing a well-match multimodal spatial map template for public use.

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  • Identifying genetic factors influencing brain structure is challenging, especially using traditional methods that do not align well with brain function and regional connections.
  • The study suggests using network-based phenotypes from source-based morphometry (SBM) for a more accurate genetic analysis of brain anatomy, emphasizing the relationships between different brain regions.
  • The research identified 27 novel genetic loci related to brain networks and found genetic similarities between a network tied to the default mode and schizophrenia, highlighting intricate genetic relationships common in complex traits.
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White matter microstructure is affected by immune system activity via the actions of circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines. Although white matter microstructure and inflammatory measures are significantly heritable, it is unclear if overlapping genetic factors influence these traits in humans. We conducted genetic correlation analyses of these traits using randomly ascertained extended pedigrees from the Genetics of Brain Structure and Function Study (N = 1862, 59% females, ages 18-97 years; 42 ± 15.

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  • * This study used diffusion-weighted imaging to compare the white matter structure in 11 individuals with aniridia against 11 healthy participants, focusing on how white matter density differs between the two groups.
  • * Results showed that individuals with aniridia had lower white matter tract density in key areas related to vision, suggesting significant alterations in both visual pathways and broader brain connectivity.
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Combining statistical parametric maps (SPM) from individual subjects is the goal in some types of group-level analyses of functional magnetic resonance imaging data. Brain maps are usually combined using a simple average across subjects, making them susceptible to subjects with outlying values. Furthermore, t tests are prone to false positives and false negatives when outlying values are observed.

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Background: Cognitive and structural brain abnormalities range from mild to severe in psychosis. The relationships of specific cognitive functions to specific brain structures across the psychosis spectrum is less certain.

Methods: Participants (n = 678) with bipolar, schizoaffective, or schizophrenia psychoses and healthy control subjects were recruited via the Bipolar-Schizophrenia Network for Intermediate Phenotypes.

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