Searched for: school:SOM
Department/Unit:Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Accumulating evidence for epigenetic effects in schizophrenia [Meeting Abstract]
Malaspina, Dolores
ORIGINAL:0006313
ISSN: n/a
CID: 76059
Imaging activation of adult-generated granule cells in spatial memory
Kee, Nohjin; Teixeira, Cátia M; Wang, Afra H; Frankland, Paul W
New neurons are continuously generated in the subgranular zone of the hippocampus throughout adulthood, and there is increasing interest as to whether these new neurons become functionally integrated into memory circuits. This protocol describes the immunohistochemical procedures to visualize the recruitment of new neurons into circuits supporting spatial memory in intact mice. To label adult-generated granule cells, mice are injected with the proliferation marker 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU). At different delays after BrdU treatment, mice are trained to locate a hidden platform in the Morris water maze, and spatial memory can then be tested in a probe test with the platform removed from the pool. Ninety minutes after this probe test, mice are perfused and tissue is sectioned. Immunohistochemical procedures are used to quantify BrdU-labeled cells and expression of the immediate early gene, Fos. Because Fos expression is regulated by neuronal activity, the degree of overlap between BrdU-labeled and Fos-labeled neurons provides an indication of whether adult-generated granule neurons have been incorporated into spatial memory circuits.
PMID: 18079702
ISSN: 1750-2799
CID: 4625232
Collaborative treatment of traumatized children and teens : a trauma systems therapy approach
Saxe, Glenn N; Ellis, Beverley Heidi; Kaplow, Julie B
New York : Guildford Press, 2007
Extent: xiv, 338 p. ; 27cm
ISBN: 1593853157
CID: 2181
Celibacy and misogyny
Chapter by: Walker, Gillian
in: Predatory priests, silenced victims: The sexual abuse crisis and the Catholic church by Frawley-O'Dea, Mary Gail [Eds]
New York, NY, US: The Analytic Press/Taylor & Francis Group, 2007
pp. 213-230
ISBN: 0-88163-424-7
CID: 4640
Ectopic granule cells of the rat dentate gyrus
Scharfman, Helen; Goodman, Jeffrey; McCloskey, Daniel
Granule cells of the mammalian dentate gyrus normally form a discrete layer, and virtually all granule cells migrate to this location. Exceptional granule cells that are positioned incorrectly, in 'ectopic' locations, are rare. Although the characteristics of such ectopic granule cells appear similar in many respects to granule cells located in the granule cell layer, their rare occurrence has limited a full evaluation of their structure and function. More information about ectopic granule cells has been obtained by studying those that develop after experimental manipulations that increase their number. For example, after severe seizures, the number of ectopic granule cells located in the hilus increases dramatically. These experimentally-induced ectopic granule cells may not be equivalent to normal ectopic granule cells necessarily, but the vastly increased numbers have allowed much more information to be obtained. Remarkably, the granule cells that are positioned ectopically develop intrinsic properties and an axonal projection that are similar to granule cells that are located normally, i.e., in the granule cell layer. However, dendritic structure and synaptic structure/function appear to differ. These studies have provided new insight into a rare type of granule cell in the dentate gyrus, and the plastic characteristics of dentate granule cells that appear to depend on the location of the cell body
PMCID:1934347
PMID: 17148946
ISSN: 0378-5866
CID: 73469
Elevated sleep spindle density after learning or after retrieval in rats
Eschenko, Oxana; Molle, Matthias; Born, Jan; Sara, Susan J
Non-rapid eye movement sleep has been strongly implicated in consolidation of both declarative and procedural memory in humans. Elevated sleep-spindle density in slow-wave sleep after learning has been shown recently in humans. It has been proposed that sleep spindles, 12-15 Hz oscillations superimposed on slow waves (<1 Hz), in concert with high-frequency hippocampal sharp waves/ripples, promote neural plasticity underlying remote memory formation. The present study reports the first indication of learning-associated increase in spindle density in the rat, providing an animal model to study the role of brain oscillations in memory consolidation during sleep. An odor-reward association task, analogous in many respects to human paired-associate learning, is rapidly learned and leads to robust memory in rats. Rats learned the task over 10 massed trials within a single session, and EEG was monitored for 3 h after learning. Learning-induced increase in spindle density is reliably reproduced in rats in two different learning situations, differing primarily in the behavioral component of the task. This increase in spindle density is also present after reactivation of remote memory and in situations when memory update is required; it is not observed after noncontingent exposure to reward and training context. The latter results substantially extend findings in humans. The magnitude of increase (approximately 25%) and the time window of maximal effect (approximately 1 h after sleep onset) were remarkably similar to human data, making this a valid rodent model to study network interactions through the use of simultaneous unit recordings and local field potentials during postlearning sleep
PMID: 17167082
ISSN: 1529-2401
CID: 129997
Evidence for multiple manipulation processes in prefrontal cortex
Eldreth, Dana A; Patterson, Michael D; Porcelli, Anthony J; Biswal, Bharat B; Rebbechi, Donovan; Rypma, Bart
The prefrontal cortex (PFC) is known to subserve working memory (WM) processes. Brain imaging studies of WM using delayed response tasks (DRTs) have shown memory-load-dependent activation increases in dorsal prefrontal cortex (PFC) regions. These activation increases are believed to reflect manipulation of to-be-remembered information in the service of memory-consolidation. This speculation has been based on observations of similar activation increases in tasks that overtly require manipulation by instructing participants to reorder to-be-remembered list items. In this study, we tested the assumption of functional equivalence between these two types of WM tasks. Participants performed a DRT under two conditions with memory loads ranging from 3 to 6 letters. In an 'item-order' condition, participants were required to remember letters in the order in which they were presented. In a 'reordering' condition, participants were required to remember the letters in alphabetical order. Load-related activation increases were observed during the encoding and maintenance periods of the order maintenance condition, whereas load-related activation decreases were observed in the same periods of the reordering condition. These results suggest that (1) the neural substrates associated with long-list retention and those associated with reordering are not equivalent, (2) cognitive processes associated with long-list retention may be more closely approximated by item-order maintenance than by reordering, and (3) multiple forms of WM manipulation are dissociable on the basis of fMRI data
PMID: 17070786
ISSN: 0006-8993
CID: 92928
Treatment of the schizophrenia prodrome: Do antidepressants work? [Meeting Abstract]
Cornblatt, Barbara; Smith, Christopher W; Auther, Andrea; Shah, Manoj R; Foley, Carmel; Lencz, Todd; Correll, Christoph U; Kane, John M
ISI:000242215900316
ISSN: 0893-133x
CID: 2446032
Optimizing the expected overlap of survey samples via the northwest corner rule
Mach, L; Reiss, PT; Schiopu-Kratina I
In survey sampling there is often a need to coordinate the selection of pairs of samples drawn from two overlapping populations so as to maximize or minimize their expected overlap, subject to constraints on the marginal probabilities determined by the respective designs. For instance, maximizing the expected overlap between repeated samples can stabilize the resulting estimates of change and reduce the costs of first contacts; minimizing the expected overlap can avoid overburdening respondents with multiple surveys. We focus on the important special case in which both samples are selected by simple random sampling without replacement (SRSWOR) conducted independently within each stratum. Optimizing the expected sample overlap can be formulated as a linear programming problem known as a transportation problem (TP). We show that by appropriately grouping and ordering the possible samples in each survey, one can reduce the initial TP to a much smaller TP amenable to solution by an algorithm known as the Northwest Corner Rule (NWCR). The proposed NWCR method proceeds in two easily implemented steps: first selecting the numbers of births (new units) and deaths (deleted units) by a random selection from a hypergeometric distribution, and then selecting the births and deaths by SRSWOR. We formally prove properties of the NWCR solutions, including a minimal variance property of the minimal overlap solution. In a simulation study, the NWCR method compares favorably with a popular method based on assignment of permanent random numbers to each sampling unit. $$:
ISI:000242869700031
ISSN: 0162-1459
CID: 99264
Long-acting medications for the hyperkinetic disorders. A systematic review and European treatment guideline
Banaschewski, Tobias; Coghill, David; Santosh, Paramala; Zuddas, Alessandro; Asherson, Philip; Buitelaar, Jan; Danckaerts, Marina; Dopfner, Manfred; Faraone, Stephen V; Rothenberger, Aribert; Sergeant, Joseph; Steinhausen, Hans-Christoph; Sonuga-Barke, Edmund J S; Taylor, Eric
A systematic review of published and unpublished data on the use of long-acting medications in ADHD and hyperkinetic disorder is reported, giving effect sizes and numbers-to-treat for extended-release stimulant preparations and atomoxetine (ATX). A panel of experts from several European countries used the review to make recommendations about the use of these drugs in practice, and conclusions are reported: (1) Long-acting preparations should be available and used; (2) They should not replace short-acting drugs (which will be the initial treatment for many children for reasons of cost and flexibility of dosing). Individual clinical choice is needed. (3) Both ATX and extended-release preparations of stimulants should be available. The choice will depend upon the circumstances, and detailed recommendations are made
PMID: 16680409
ISSN: 1018-8827
CID: 145925