14 research outputs found

    Evaluating the links between schizophrenia and sleep and circadian rhythm disruption

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    Electroweak measurements in electron–positron collisions at w-boson-pair energies at lep

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    Contains fulltext : 121524.pdf (preprint version ) (Open Access

    Measurement of the dipion mass spectrum in X(3872)toJ/psipi+piX(3872) to J/psi pi^+ pi^- decays

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    Measurement of the tbartt bar{t} Production Cross Section in pbarpp bar{p} collisions at sqrtssqrt{s} = 1.96-TeV in the All Hadronic Decay Mode

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    Search for H to b anti-b produced in association with W bosons in pbarppbar{p} collisions at sqrts=sqrt{s} = 1.96-TeV

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    Measurement of the electron structure function F e 2 at LEP energies DELPHI Collaboration

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    The hadronic part of the electron structure function F e 2 has been measured for the first time, using e + e − data collected by the DELPHI experiment at LEP, at centre-of-mass energies of The data analysis is simpler than that of the measurement of the photon structure function. The electron structure function F e 2 data are compared to predictions of phenomenological models based on the photon structure function. It is shown that the contribution of large target photon virtualities is significant. The data presented can serve as a cross-check of the photon structure function F γ 2 analyses and help in refining existing parameterisations

    Direct search for Dirac magnetic monopoles in pbarppbar{p} collisions at sqrts=1.96sqrt{s} = 1.96 TeV

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    Convergent functional genomics of schizophrenia: from comprehensive understanding to genetic risk prediction

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    We have used a translational convergent functional genomics (CFG) approach to identify and prioritize genes involved in schizophrenia, by gene-level integration of genome-wide association study data with other genetic and gene expression studies in humans and animal models. Using this polyevidence scoring and pathway analyses, we identify top genes (DISC1, TCF4, MBP, MOBP, NCAM1, NRCAM, NDUFV2, RAB18, as well as ADCYAP1, BDNF, CNR1, COMT, DRD2, DTNBP1, GAD1, GRIA1, GRIN2B, HTR2A, NRG1, RELN, SNAP-25, TNIK), brain development, myelination, cell adhesion, glutamate receptor signaling, G-protein–coupled receptor signaling and cAMP-mediated signaling as key to pathophysiology and as targets for therapeutic intervention. Overall, the data are consistent with a model of disrupted connectivity in schizophrenia, resulting from the effects of neurodevelopmental environmental stress on a background of genetic vulnerability. In addition, we show how the top candidate genes identified by CFG can be used to generate a genetic risk prediction score (GRPS) to aid schizophrenia diagnostics, with predictive ability in independent cohorts. The GRPS also differentiates classic age of onset schizophrenia from early onset and late-onset disease. We also show, in three independent cohorts, two European American and one African American, increasing overlap, reproducibility and consistency of findings from single-nucleotide polymorphisms to genes, then genes prioritized by CFG, and ultimately at the level of biological pathways and mechanisms. Finally, we compared our top candidate genes for schizophrenia from this analysis with top candidate genes for bipolar disorder and anxiety disorders from previous CFG analyses conducted by us, as well as findings from the fields of autism and Alzheimer. Overall, our work maps the genomic and biological landscape for schizophrenia, providing leads towards a better understanding of illness, diagnostics and therapeutics. It also reveals the significant genetic overlap with other major psychiatric disorder domains, suggesting the need for improved nosology

    Search for neutral MSSM Higgs bosons decaying to tau pairs in pbarppbar{p} collisions at sqrts=1.96sqrt{s} = 1.96 TeV

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