2,319 research outputs found
Emotional response inhibition in bipolar disorder: a functional magnetic resonance imaging study of trait- and state-related abnormalities
BACKGROUND:
Impaired response inhibition and poor impulse control are hallmarks of the manic phase of bipolar disorder but are also present during depressive and, to a lesser degree, euthymic periods. The neural mechanisms underlying these impairments are poorly understood, including how mechanisms are related to bipolar trait or state effects.
METHODS:
One-hundred four unmedicated participants with bipolar mania (BM) (n = 30), bipolar depression (BD) (n = 30), bipolar euthymia (BE) (n = 14), and healthy control subjects (n = 30) underwent functional magnetic resonance imaging during emotional and nonemotional go/no-go tasks. The go/no-go task requires participants to press a button for go stimuli, while inhibiting the response to no-go trials. In separate blocks, participants inhibited the response to happy faces, sad faces, or letters.
RESULTS:
The BE group had higher insula activity during happy face inhibition and greater activity in left inferior frontal gyrus during sad face inhibition, demonstrating bipolar trait effects. Relative to the BE group, BD and BM groups demonstrated lower insula activity during inhibition of happy faces, though the depressed sample had lower activity than manic patients. The BD and BM groups had a greater response to inhibiting sad faces in emotion processing and regulation regions, including putamen, insula, and lateral prefrontal cortex. The manic group also had higher activity in insula and putamen during neutral letter inhibition.
CONCLUSIONS:
These results suggest distinct trait- and state-related neural abnormalities during response inhibition in bipolar disorder, with implications for future research and treatment
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Deuterium and <sup>37</sup>Chlorine Rich Fluids on the Surface of Mars: Evidence from the Enriched Basaltic Shergottite Northwest Africa 8657
AbstractApatite, a major hydrous mineral in martian meteorites, has the potential to reveal history of volatiles on Mars. Here we report the H and Cl isotopic systematics of apatite from the enriched basaltic shergottite NWA 8657 to better understand the processes influencing volatiles at or near the martian (sub)surface. The apatite in NWA 8657 has the highest reported δD value (up to 6509 â°) of any phosphates in martian meteorites. The positive correlation between the H2O contents (72â2251 ppm) and δD values (3965â6509 â°) as well as between the Cl contents (1.28â6.17 wt%) and δ37Cl values (â1.7â4.0 â°) in NWA 8657 apatite are consistent with mixing between volatiles derived from the martian mantle and meteoric water/fluid. The Dâ and 37Clâenrichment of apatite in NWA 8657 implies isotopic exchange with subâsurficial fluids during postâcrystallization hydrothermal event(s). Plain Language Summary Mars was probably a wet and warm world during its earliest geological history, supported by many lines of evidence. Presentâday Mars is cold and arid although recent remote sensing data support the existence of subsurface glaciers and seasonal fluid activities at some locations. In this study, our aim was to use ground truth about the potential waterârock interaction on or nearâsurface environments on recent Mars via measuring the H and Cl isotopic compositions of apatite from a geologically young meteorite from Mars; the enriched basaltic shergottite NWA 8657. The petrography and mineral chemistry of apatite and other associated phases, e.g., merrillite, maskelynite, mesostasis, and pyroxene, were documented prior to in situ H and Cl isotopes analysis. The water contents of apatite, merrillite, maskelynite, mesostasis, and pyroxene are positively correlated with the δD values. All of the datasets can be reconciled in terms of mixing between two endmembers, a Dâpoor (~0 â°) mantle reservoir and a Dârich (5920 Âą 500 â°) nearâsurface/underground water reservoir. Moreover, apatite in NWA 8657 displays 37Clâenriched (~1 Âą 1 â° in average) characteristics. These signatures are consistent with Dâ and 37Clârich fluidâassisted isotopic exchange in recent nearâsurface environment on Mars
Convicts and coolies : rethinking indentured labour in the nineteenth century
This article seeks to shift the frame of analysis within which discussions of Indian indentured migration take place. It argues that colonial discourses and practices of indenture are best understood not with regard to the common historiographical framework of whether it was 'a new system of slavery', but in the context of colonial innovations in incarceration and confinement. The article shows how Indian experiences of and knowledge about transportation overseas to penal settlements informed in important ways both their own understandings and representations of migration and the colonial practices associated with the recruitment of indentured labour. In detailing the connections between two supposedly different labour regimes, it thus brings a further layer of complexity to debates around their supposed distinctions
On Propagation of Excitation Waves in Moving Media: The FitzHugh-Nagumo Model
BACKGROUND: Existence of flows and convection is an essential and integral feature of many excitable media with wave propagation modes, such as blood coagulation or bioreactors. METHODS/RESULTS: Here, propagation of two-dimensional waves is studied in parabolic channel flow of excitable medium of the FitzHugh-Nagumo type. Even if the stream velocity is hundreds of times higher that the wave velocity in motionless medium (), steady propagation of an excitation wave is eventually established. At high stream velocities, the wave does not span the channel from wall to wall, forming isolated excited regions, which we called "restrictons". They are especially easy to observe when the model parameters are close to critical ones, at which waves disappear in still medium. In the subcritical region of parameters, a sufficiently fast stream can result in the survival of excitation moving, as a rule, in the form of "restrictons". For downstream excitation waves, the axial portion of the channel is the most important one in determining their behavior. For upstream waves, the most important region of the channel is the near-wall boundary layers. The roles of transversal diffusion, and of approximate similarity with respect to stream velocity are discussed. CONCLUSIONS: These findings clarify mechanisms of wave propagation and survival in flow
What metabolic syndrome contributes to brain outcomes in African Americans and Caucasian cohorts
Metabolic syndrome (MetS), i.e., meeting criteria for any three of the following: hyperglycemia, hypertension, hypertriglyceridemia, low high-density lipoprotein and/or abdominal obesity, is associated with negative health outcomes. For example, MetS negatively impacts cognition; however, less is known about incremental MetS risk, i.e., meeting 1 or 2 as opposed to 3 or more criteria. We hypothesized incremental MetS risk would negatively contribute to cognition and relevant neuroanatomy, e.g., memory and hippocampal volumes, and that this risk extends to affective functioning. 119 non-demented/non-depressed participants (age=60.1+12.9;~50% African American) grouped by incremental MetS risk-no (0 criteria met), low (1-2 criteria met), or high (3+ criteria met)-were compared across cognition, affect and relevant neuroanatomy using multivariable linear regressions. Exploratory analyses, stratified by race, consider the role of health disparities in disease severity of individual MetS component (e.g., actual blood pressure readings) on significant results from primary analyses. Incremental MetS risk contributed to depressive symptomatology (nolow=high) after controlling for age, race (n.s.) and IQ. Different indices of disease severity contributed to different aspects of brain structure and function by race providing empirical support for future studies of the impact distinct health disparities in vascular risk have on brain aging. MetS compromised mood, cognition and hippocampal structure with incremental risk applying to some but not all of these outcomes. Care providers may wish to monitor a broader spectrum of risk including components of MetS like blood pressure and cholesterol levels when considering brain-behavior relationships in adults from diverse populations
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