Publications by authors named "Aurelie Labbe"

Importance: Although early signs of autism are often observed between 18 and 36 months of age, there is considerable uncertainty regarding future development. Clinicians lack predictive tools to identify those who will later be diagnosed with co-occurring intellectual disability (ID).

Objective: To predict ID in children diagnosed with autism.

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Genomic Copy Number variants (CNVs) increase risk for neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) and affect cognition, but their impact on sleep remains understudied despite the well-established link between sleep disturbances, NDDs, and cognition. We investigated the relationship between CNVs, sleep traits, cognitive ability, and executive function in 498,852 individuals from an unselected population in the UK Biobank. We replicated the U-shape relationship between measures of cognitive ability and sleep duration.

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Copy-number variants (CNVs) that increase the risk for neurodevelopmental disorders also affect cognitive ability. However, such CNVs remain challenging to study due to their scarcity, limiting our understanding of gene-dosage-sensitive biological processes linked to cognitive ability. We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) in 258,292 individuals, which identified-for the first time-a duplication at 2q12.

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Although the first signs of autism are often observed as early as 18-36 months of age, there is a broad uncertainty regarding future development, and clinicians lack predictive tools to identify those who will later be diagnosed with co-occurring intellectual disability (ID). Here, we developed predictive models of ID in autistic children (n=5,633 from three cohorts), integrating different classes of genetic variants alongside developmental milestones. The integrated model yielded an AUC ROC=0.

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Background: The regulation of the circadian clock genes, which coordinate the activity of the immune system, is disturbed in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Emerging evidence suggests that butyrate, a short-chain fatty acid produced by the gut microbiota is involved in the regulation of inflammatory responses as well as circadian-clock genes. This study was conducted to investigate the effects of sodium-butyrate supplementation on the expression of circadian-clock genes, inflammation, sleep and life quality in active ulcerative colitis (UC) patients.

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Motivated by a DNA methylation application, this article addresses the problem of fitting and inferring a multivariate binomial regression model for outcomes that are contaminated by errors and exhibit extra-parametric variations, also known as dispersion. While dispersion in univariate binomial regression has been extensively studied, addressing dispersion in the context of multivariate outcomes remains a complex and relatively unexplored task. The complexity arises from a noteworthy data characteristic observed in our motivating dataset: non-constant yet correlated dispersion across outcomes.

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DNA methylation is an important epigenetic mark that modulates gene expression through the inhibition of transcriptional proteins binding to DNA. As in many other omics experiments, the issue of missing values is an important one, and appropriate imputation techniques are important in avoiding an unnecessary sample size reduction as well as to optimally leverage the information collected. We consider the case where relatively few samples are processed via an expensive high-density whole genome bisulfite sequencing (WGBS) strategy and a larger number of samples is processed using more affordable low-density, array-based technologies.

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Article Synopsis
  • Maternal smoking during pregnancy (MSDP) is linked to an increased risk of ADHD, potentially affecting the developing brain's structures, although the exact mechanisms remain unclear.
  • The study utilized maternal recall and epigenetic markers to assess prenatal smoking exposure and measured cortical brain structures in children diagnosed with ADHD.
  • While no significant differences were found between groups based on maternal recall, children with positive epigenetic markers displayed smaller cortical areas in specific brain regions, indicating that molecular markers could be more reliable than maternal recall for identifying environmental risks.
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Background: Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a highly prevalent childhood disorder. Maternal smoking during pregnancy is a replicated environmental risk factor for this disorder. It is also a robust modifier of gene methylation during the prenatal developmental period.

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Capturing the conditional covariances or correlations among the elements of a multivariate response vector based on covariates is important to various fields including neuroscience, epidemiology and biomedicine. We propose a new method called Covariance Regression with Random Forests (CovRegRF) to estimate the covariance matrix of a multivariate response given a set of covariates, using a random forest framework. Random forest trees are built with a splitting rule specially designed to maximize the difference between the sample covariance matrix estimates of the child nodes.

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Electroencephalography measures are of interest in developmental neuroscience as potentially reliable clinical markers of brain function. Features extracted from electroencephalography are most often averaged across individuals in a population with a particular condition and compared statistically to the mean of a typically developing group, or a group with a different condition, to define whether a feature is representative of the populations as a whole. However, there can be large variability within a population, and electroencephalography features often change dramatically with age, making comparisons difficult.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how different genetic factors, including oligogenic and polygenic variants, affect brain connectivity related to psychiatric disorders, aiming to better understand these complex relationships.
  • The research utilized resting-state functional MRI data from multiple datasets, conducting extensive connectome-wide association studies on various genetic risk factors and psychiatric conditions involving thousands of subjects.
  • Results showed that the impact on brain connectivity is strongest with psychiatric copy number variants (CNVs), while polygenic risk scores (PRSs) had relatively low effects, highlighting the challenges posed by genetic diversity in studying psychiatric conditions.
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Crash data observed on a road network often exhibit spatial correlation due to unobserved effects with inherent spatial correlation following the structure of the road network. It is important to model this spatial correlation while accounting for the road network structure. In this study, we introduce the network process convolution (NPC) model.

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Converting minor-approach-only stop (MAS) intersections to all-way-stop (AWS) intersections is a prevailing safety countermeasure in North American urban areas. Although the general population positively perceives the installation of stop-signs in residential areas, little research has investigated the impact of AWS on road safety and road user behaviour. This paper investigated the safety effectiveness of converting MAS to AWS intersections using an observational before and after approach and surrogate measures of safety.

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Mobile sensors are a useful data source with applications in several transportation fields. Though cost of collection, transmission, and storage has limited studies on driving data and safety, this can be overcome through usage-based insurance (UBI). In UBI programs, drivers are monitored, and their premiums are adjusted based on driver-level surrogate safety measures (SSMs) related to exposure and driving style.

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Article Synopsis
  • Stop signs are commonly used in North America to control vehicle speeds and enhance pedestrian safety, but their effectiveness is debated, particularly in cities like Montreal where they are frequently installed.
  • This study utilizes advanced statistical models and high-resolution video data from 100 intersections in Montreal to evaluate how stop signs and other factors influence road safety, specifically focusing on vehicle speed, time-to-collision, and post-encroachment time.
  • Results indicate that stop signs significantly decrease vehicle speeds but fail to provide clear evidence of improved safety for pedestrians, making it challenging to draw firm conclusions about their impact on pedestrian interactions.
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In the last few years, a significant amount of work has aimed to characterize maturational trajectories of cortical development. The role of pericortical microstructure putatively characterized as the gray-white matter contrast (GWC) at the pericortical gray-white matter boundary and its relationship to more traditional morphological measures of cortical morphometry has emerged as a means to examine finer grained neuroanatomical underpinnings of cortical changes. In this work, we characterize the GWC developmental trajectories in a representative sample (n = 394) of children and adolescents (~4 to ~22 years of age), with repeated scans (1-3 scans per subject, total scans n = 819).

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Objective: By using machine learning, our study aimed to build a model to predict risk and time to total knee replacement (TKR) of an osteoarthritic knee.

Methods: Features were from the Osteoarthritis Initiative (OAI) cohort at baseline. Using the lasso method for variable selection in the Cox regression model, we identified the 10 most important characteristics among 1,107 features.

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Motivation: Investigating the relationships between two sets of variables helps to understand their interactions and can be done with canonical correlation analysis (CCA). However, the correlation between the two sets can sometimes depend on a third set of covariates, often subject-related ones such as age, gender or other clinical measures. In this case, applying CCA to the whole population is not optimal and methods to estimate conditional CCA, given the covariates, can be useful.

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Background: Tryptophan hydroxylase 2 (TPH2) is a key enzyme in the biosynthesis of serotonin in the brain. This study aims to investigate the role of a functional variant in TPH2 (rs17110747) in the pathophysiology of ADHD. This variant has been implicated in mood disorders in recent meta-analysis.

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Background: COMT had been considered a promising candidate gene in pharmacogenetic studies in ADHD; yet the findings from these studies have been inconsistent. Part of these inconsistencies could be related to epigenetic mechanisms (including DNA methylation). Here we investigated the role of genetic variants of the COMT gene on the methylation levels of CpG sites in the same gene and explored the effect of methylation on methylphenidate (MPH) and placebo (PBO) response in children with ADHD.

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Article Synopsis
  • Genomic copy number variants (CNVs), particularly deletions and duplications, have been linked to cognitive ability, but their specific effects on intelligence are still not fully understood, especially for duplications.
  • The study involved analyzing CNVs from over 24,000 individuals and used statistical models to show that deletions decrease intelligence more significantly than duplications, with certain genes being intolerant to haploinsufficiency playing a key role.
  • The findings indicate that while a small fraction of genes has a significant negative impact on intelligence, the overall effects on cognition may stem from complex interactions within the genome rather than just a few specific pathways.
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Neurofilament light (NfL) is a marker of neuroaxonal injury, a prominent feature of Alzheimer's disease. It remains uncertain, however, how it relates to amyloid and tau pathology or neurodegeneration across the Alzheimer's disease continuum. The aim of this study was to investigate how plasma NfL relates to amyloid and tau PET and MRI measures of brain atrophy in participants with and without cognitive impairment.

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16p11.2 and 22q11.2 Copy Number Variants (CNVs) confer high risk for Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), schizophrenia (SZ), and Attention-Deficit-Hyperactivity-Disorder (ADHD), but their impact on functional connectivity (FC) remains unclear.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Analyzed CNVs from autism and unselected populations using specific statistical models, finding that "probability of loss-of-function intolerance" (pLI) largely predicts the impacts on IQ and autism vulnerability.
  • * Concluded that deletions of CNVs significantly lower IQ and increase autism risk, while duplications have a smaller effect on IQ and are less related to autism susceptibility; the study highlights the complex genetic contributions to autism.
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