11 research outputs found

    A network linking scene perception and spatial memory systems in posterior cerebral cortex

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    The neural systems supporting scene-perception and spatial-memory systems of the human brain are well-described. But how do these neural systems interact? Here, using fine-grained individual-subject fMRI, we report three cortical areas of the human brain, each lying immediately anterior to a region of the scene perception network in posterior cerebral cortex, that selectively activate when recalling familiar real-world locations. Despite their close proximity to the scene-perception areas, network analyses show that these regions constitute a distinct functional network that interfaces with spatial memory systems during naturalistic scene understanding. These “place-memory areas” offer a new framework for understanding how the brain implements memory-guided visual behaviors, including navigation

    Socio-cultural context of eating disorders in Poland

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    BACKGROUND: The goal of this study was to assess the relationship between sociocultural factors and clinical eating disorders during the intensive process of Westernisation in Poland that occurred after 1989. The study population included girls diagnosed with an eating disorder according to DSM-IV criteria (n = 47 anorexia nervosa restrictive type [ANR], n = 16 anorexia binge/purge type [ANBP], n = 34 bulimia nervosa [BN], n = 19 eating disorder not otherwise specified [EDNOS]) who received consultation for the first time between 2002 and 2004 in the Department of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University Hospital, Kraków, Poland. The study included an age-matched normal control group [NOR] of 85 schoolgirls from Kraków. METHODS: Relationships between two given qualitative features were investigated using the chi-square test or Fisher’s exact test. Correspondence analysis was applied to graphically explore the relationship. The Kruskal-Wallis test with the Bonferroni was performed to compare quantitative results across groups. RESULTS: Objective sociodemographic variables and responses to the 62-item Questionnaire of Socio-cultural Context were measured. The mothers of ANBP and BN patients were less professionally active than mothers of ANR patients and NOR subjects. Subjective socio-cultural factors were more relevant for the BN group than the ANR group. Questionnaire responses in the ANBP group were more similar to those in the BN group than to those in the ANR group. The most unambiguous and specific characteristic of the ANR group was a sense of belonging to the middle class. Variables that differentiated the BN group from the NOR group included the importance attached to thinness treated as an expression of power and control over one’s self, as well as a multifaceted negative evaluation of one’s own family, including a negative assessment of the position of women and parental lack of concern for appearance and principles of nutrition. All patients, regardless of diagnosis, identified with other people with similar problems and considered anorexia and bulimia to be a major issue of their generation and social environment. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this first in Poland exploratory study of socio-cultural context of eating disorders indicate the importance of both objective and subjective socio-cultural factors in eating disorders in the group studied

    Systems Biology approach to metabolomics in cancer studies

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    The astonishing development of high-throughput techniques in the last decades has fostered a renewed, dynamical comprehension of cell and tissue metabolism, giving unexpected insights into the ‘systemic aspects’ of cancer, namely pointing out that metabolism should be considered a truly “systems property. Both internal and microenvironmental cues tightly cooperate in shaping tissue metabolomic fingerprint. tumour metabolome hardly could be mechanistically linked to the linear dynamics of few gene regulatory networks; otherwise it is likely to be the complex end point of several interacting non-linear pathways, involving both cells and their microenvironment. As such, tumour metabolism might be considered an emerging, “systems property”, arising at the integrated scale of the whole system and behaving like an “attractor” in a specific space phase defined by thermodynamic constraints . Therefore, metabolomics ‘strategies’ are settled in order to understand complex biological systems from an integrated (‘holistic’) point of view. Metabolomics measurements are hence correlated with the time-dependent changes in concentrations of other components (proteins, gene-expression data), in order to obtain an integrated model of the gene-protein-metabolite interactions. Such framework represents a meaningful discontinuity with respect to the reductionist and qualitative molecular biology, and discloses new perspective to scientific researc

    Intrinsic connectivity reveals functionally distinct cortico-hippocampal networks in the human brain

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    SMT and TOFT: Why and How They are Opposite and Incompatible Paradigms

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    Role of the parasympathetic nervous system in cancer initiation and progression

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