keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36481530/weakly-supervised-detection-of-amd-related-lesions-in-color-fundus-images-using-explainable-deep-learning
#41
JOURNAL ARTICLE
José Morano, Álvaro S Hervella, José Rouco, Jorge Novo, José I Fernández-Vigo, Marcos Ortega
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a degenerative disorder affecting the macula, a key area of the retina for visual acuity. Nowadays, AMD is the most frequent cause of blindness in developed countries. Although some promising treatments have been proposed that effectively slow down its development, their effectiveness significantly diminishes in the advanced stages. This emphasizes the importance of large-scale screening programs for early detection...
December 1, 2022: Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36479554/negative-symptoms-in-alcohol-use-disorder-a-pilot-study-applying-the-two-factor-model-of-negative-symptoms-to-patients-with-alcohol-use-disorder
#42
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maximilian Buschner, Kenneth M Dürsteler, Gina Fischli, Jelena Hess, Matthias Kirschner, Stefan Kaiser, Marcus Herdener
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) is characterized by a reduction in goal-directed behavior, with alcohol use taking precedence over other areas of life. These features in AUD resemble negative symptoms in schizophrenia, especially the reduction in motivation and pleasure (MAP). Given the clinical similarities of negative symptoms across diagnostic categories, it comes as a surprise that there are few investigations on negative symptoms in alcohol and other substance use disorders...
2022: Frontiers in Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36338879/early-life-adversity-increases-anxiety-like-behavior-and-modifies-synaptic-protein-expression-in-a-region-specific-manner
#43
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jameel N Hamdan, Jorge A Sierra-Fonseca, Rodolfo J Flores, Sigifredo Saucedo, Manuel Miranda-Arango, Laura E O'Dell, Kristin L Gosselink
Early-life adversity (ELA) can induce persistent neurological changes and increase the risk for developing affective or substance use disorders. Disruptions to the reward circuitry of the brain and pathways serving motivation and emotion have been implicated in the link between ELA and altered adult behavior. The molecular mechanisms that mediate the long-term effects of ELA, however, are not fully understood. We examined whether ELA in the form of neonatal maternal separation (MatSep) modifies behavior and synaptic protein expression in adults...
2022: Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36268602/rhesus-monkey-sociality-is-stable-across-time-and-linked-to-variation-in-the-initiation-but-not-receipt-of-prosocial-behavior
#44
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Catherine F Talbot, Jesus E Madrid, Laura A Del Rosso, John P Capitanio, Joseph P Garner, Karen J Parker
Rhesus monkeys and humans are highly social primates, yet both species exhibit pronounced variation in social functioning, spanning a spectrum of sociality. Naturally occurring low sociality in rhesus monkeys may be a promising construct by which to model social impairments relevant to human autism spectrum disorder (ASD), particularly if low sociality is found to be stable across time and associated with diminished social motivation. Thus, to better characterize variation in sociality and social communication profiles, we performed quantitative social behavior assessments on N = 95 male rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) housed in large, outdoor groups...
October 21, 2022: American Journal of Primatology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36252615/accumbal-adenosine-a-2a-receptor-inactivation-biases-for-large-and-costly-rewards-in-the-effort-but-not-delay-based-decision-making
#45
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xiaoting Sun, Min Liu, Xinyu Xu, Chennan Shi, Liping Zhang, Zhimo Yao, Jiangfan Chen, Qin Wang
The cost-benefit decision-making (CBDM) is critical to normal human activity and a diminished willingness to expend effort to obtain rewards is a prevalent/noted characteristic of neuropsychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia, Parkinson's disease. Numerous studies have identified nucleus accumbens (NAc) as an important locus for CBDM control but their neuromodulatory and behavioral mechanisms remain largely under-explored. Adenosine A2A receptors (A2A Rs), which are highly concentrated in the striatopallidal neurons, can integrate glutamate and dopamine signals for controlling effort-related choice behaviors...
October 14, 2022: Neuropharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36173203/the-effect-of-forming-implementation-intentions-on-alcohol-consumption-a-systematic-review-and-meta-analysis
#46
REVIEW
Richard Cooke, Helen McEwan, Paul Norman
ISSUES: Meta-analysis was used to estimate the effect of forming implementation intentions (i.e., if-then plans) on weekly alcohol consumption and heavy episodic drinking (HED). Sample type, mode of delivery, intervention format and timeframe were tested as moderator variables. APPROACH: Cochrane, EThOS, Google Scholar, PsychArticles, PubMed and Web of Science were searched for relevant publications to 31 March 2021. Random-effects meta-analysis was used to estimate the effect size difference (d) between individuals forming versus not forming implementation intentions on weekly consumption and HED...
September 29, 2022: Drug and Alcohol Review
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36048066/commodity-discounting-obstacles-and-solutions
#47
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew L Locey, Natalie R Buddiga, Laura Barcelos Nomicos, Courtney A Smith
Addictive behaviors involve patterns of impulsive choices. Discount functions are a useful means of describing the behavioral contingencies involved in those impulsive choices. Although monetary discounting tasks have proven useful, most impulsive behaviors of interest involve nonmonetary consequences. OBJECTIVE: Developing effective commodity discounting tasks is critical for assessing how delay (and other variables) influences choice with respect to meaningful real-world commodities (e...
September 1, 2022: Psychology of Addictive Behaviors
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36036402/-primary-and-secondary-negative-disorders-in-schizophrenia-as-an-actual-problem-of-modern-clinical-psychiatry
#48
JOURNAL ARTICLE
D A Chugunov, A A Shmilovich
Negative symptoms of schizophrenia represent, at the present stage of their study, a certain group of mental pathology. They include motivation disorders or volitional disorders (anhedonia, abulia, asociality) and disorders of reduced expression or emotional disorders (alogia/poverty of speech and emotional decline/flattening). Negative symptoms are key disorders in schizophrenia, often appear at the pre-manifest stage of the disease, and significantly affect the prognosis and response to therapy. From a scientific and practical point of view, it is important to distinguish between primary and secondary negative symptoms, where the primary symptoms are nuclear, inherent in schizophrenia, and the secondary ones are the result of the influence of positive symptoms (delusions, hallucinations), depression, side-effects of medications, social isolation and hospitalism...
2022: Zhurnal Nevrologii i Psikhiatrii Imeni S.S. Korsakova
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35972745/involvement-of-lateral-habenula-dysfunction-in-repetitive-mild-traumatic-brain-injury-induced-motivational-deficits
#49
JOURNAL ARTICLE
William J Flerlage, Ludovic D Langlois, Milan Rusnak, Sarah C Simmons, Shawn Gouty, Regina C Armstrong, Brian M Cox, Aviva Symes, Mumeko C Tsuda, Fereshteh Nugent
Affective disorders including depression (characterized by reduced motivation, social withdrawal and anhedonia), anxiety and irritability are frequently reported as long-term consequences of mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI)1 in addition to cognitive deficits, suggesting a possible dysregulation within mood/motivational neural circuits. One of the important brain regions that control motivation and mood is the lateral habenula (LHb) whose hyperactivity is associated with depression2. Here we used a repetitive closed head injury mTBI model that is associated with social deficits in adult male mice3 and explored the possible long-term alterations in LHb activity and motivated behavior 10-18 days post-injury...
August 16, 2022: Journal of Neurotrauma
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35948258/economic-choice-and-heart-rate-fractal-scaling-indicate-that-cognitive-effort-is-reduced-by-depression-and-boosted-by-sad-mood
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrew Westbrook, Xiao Yang, Lauren M Bylsma, Shimrit Daches, Charles J George, Andrew J Seidman, J Richard Jennings, Maria Kovacs
BACKGROUND: People with depression typically exhibit diminished cognitive control. Control is subjectively costly, prompting speculation that control deficits reflect reduced cognitive effort. Evidence that people with depression exert less cognitive effort is mixed, however, and motivation may depend on state affect. METHODS: We use a cognitive effort discounting task to measure propensity to expend cognitive effort and fractal structure in the temporal dynamics of inter-beat intervals to assess on-task effort exertion for 49 healthy controls, 36 people with current depression, and 67 people with remitted depression...
August 7, 2022: Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35848286/are-people-with-obsessive-compulsive-disorder-under-confident-in-their-memory-and-perception-a-review-and-meta-analysis
#51
REVIEW
Reuven Dar, Noam Sarna, Gal Yardeni, Amit Lazarov
People with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) tend to distrust their memory, perception, and other cognitive functions, and many OCD symptoms can be traced to diminished confidence in one's cognitive processes. For example, poor confidence in recall accuracy can cause doubt about one's memory and motivate repeated checking. At the same time, people with OCD also display performance deficits in a variety of cognitive tasks, so their reduced confidence must be evaluated in relation to their actual performance...
July 18, 2022: Psychological Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35804379/effects-of-a-smartphone-app-augmented-treatment-for-children-with-oppositional-defiant-disorder-conduct-disorder-and-peer-related-aggressive-behavior-a-pilot-study
#52
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anja Görtz-Dorten, Marlin Frank, Anja Fessel, Leonie Hofmann, Manfred Döpfner
BACKGROUND: Social competence training interventions, especially child-focused ones, have proven to be effective in the treatment of children with conduct disorder. Therapy homework assignments implemented between the therapy sessions are essential for practicing strategies developed during treatment sessions and transferring them to everyday life. However, clinical experience shows that patients' adherence regarding these assignments is often low, thus diminishing the treatment success...
July 8, 2022: Trials
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35766543/wanting-liking-and-missing-out-exploring-the-role-of-reward-functioning-in-the-overlap-between-ptsd-and-depression
#53
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cecilia C Olin, Meghan E McDevitt-Murphy, Samuel J Leonard, Samuel F Acuff
Diminished reward functioning (anhedonia) is an aspect of multiple psychiatric diagnoses and is a critical component of depression, yet it has rarely been examined in the context of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Deficits in reward function may be a transdiagnostic factor contributing to the high rate of comorbidity between PTSD and depression. The present study examined the commonality and distinction between PTSD and depression and their relationship to reward functioning using a bifactor model in a sample of 106 trauma-exposed undergraduates...
July 1, 2022: Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35714533/a-qualitative-study-of-smokers-assessments-of-four-smoking-cessation-interventions-delivered-in-a-hospital-emergency-department
#54
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lauretta E Grau, Elizabeth Jurczak, Mahrukh Zahid, Avis Harper Brooks, June Weiss, Teresa K O'Leary, Timothy Pham, Steven L Bernstein
BACKGROUND: A recent clinical trial of 1056 adults who smoke tested the efficacy of four components of a treatment intervention initiated in a hospital emergency department (ED) and found two of them to be clinically effective. This paper explores study participants' attitudes towards the four components, whether they identified important interactions, and suggestions for further tailoring. METHODS: Telephone interviews were conducted with participants at the end of the three-month study period...
August 1, 2022: Drug and Alcohol Dependence
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35711601/defining-autonomy-in-psychiatry
#55
REVIEW
Jessy Bergamin, Judy Luigjes, Julian Kiverstein, Claudi L Bockting, Damiaan Denys
Mental illness undermines a patient's personal autonomy: the capacities of a person that enables them to live a meaningful life of their own making. So far there has been very little attention given to personal autonomy within psychiatry. This is unfortunate as personal autonomy is disturbed in different ways in psychiatric disorders, and understanding how autonomy is affected by mental illness is crucial for differential diagnosis and treatment, and also for understanding personal recovery. We will argue that disturbance of personal autonomy is related to patient's diminished quality of life and suffering that motivates seeking treatment...
2022: Frontiers in Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35533518/modifiable-predictors-of-self-reported-and-performance-based-functioning-in-individuals-with-schizophrenia-spectrum-disorders-and-high-levels-of-negative-symptoms
#56
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zanjbeel Mahmood, Emma M Parrish, Amber V Keller, Hannah C Lykins, Delaney Pickell, Eric Granholm, Elizabeth W Twamley
Individuals with schizophrenia who have high negative symptoms are at high risk for poor functional outcomes. However, the determinants of psychosocial functioning in this group are not well understood. We aimed to examine modifiable predictors of both objective, performance-based functional capacity and social skills, and self-reported functioning in individuals with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder and high negative symptoms. Fifty-five adults with moderate-to-severe negative symptoms were administered measures of neuropsychological performance, performance-based functional capacity and social competence, self-reported functioning, psychiatric symptom severity, defeatist/asocial beliefs, and intrinsic motivation...
July 2022: Journal of Psychiatric Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34998254/positive-alcohol-expectancy-and-resting-state-functional-connectivity-of-the-insula-in-problem-drinking
#57
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thang M Le, Tessa Malone, Chiang-Shan R Li
Positive alcohol expectancy (AE), a significant predictor of excessive alcohol consumption, is associated with heightened drinking motivation and reduced control. As the insula interacts with the limbic and prefrontal structures to integrate stimulus saliency, interoception, and cognitive control, the region may play a unique role in modulating AE. Here, we examined resting-state functional connectivity of the right and left insula in relation to AE in 180 adult drinkers. Whole-brain multiple regressions and path analysis were performed to delineate the inter-relationship between AE, insular connectivity, and drinking severity...
February 1, 2022: Drug and Alcohol Dependence
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34788623/sterols-lower-energetic-barriers-of-membrane-bending-and-fission-necessary-for-efficient-clathrin-mediated-endocytosis
#58
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ruthellen H Anderson, Kem A Sochacki, Harika Vuppula, Brandon L Scott, Elizabeth M Bailey, Maycie M Schultz, Jason G Kerkvliet, Justin W Taraska, Adam D Hoppe, Kevin R Francis
Clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME) is critical for cellular signal transduction, receptor recycling, and membrane homeostasis in mammalian cells. Acute depletion of cholesterol disrupts CME, motivating analysis of CME dynamics in the context of human disorders of cholesterol metabolism. We report that inhibition of post-squalene cholesterol biosynthesis impairs CME. Imaging of membrane bending dynamics and the CME pit ultrastructure reveals prolonged clathrin pit lifetimes and shallow clathrin-coated structures, suggesting progressive impairment of curvature generation correlates with diminishing sterol abundance...
November 16, 2021: Cell Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34749220/social-motivation-and-behavior-in-first-episode-psychosis-unique-contributions-to-social-quality-of-life-and-social-functioning
#59
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aubrey M Moe, David M Weiss, Jacob G Pine, Heather M Wastler, Nicholas J K Breitborde
Social functioning is diminished among people early in the course of psychotic illnesses, and is likely influenced by the negative symptoms that accompany these disorders, including changes in motivation and experience of pleasure. Though social impairments have a deleterious impact on functioning, socialization is a multifaceted behavior and little is known about how the various aspects may influence social functioning and social quality of life among people with first-episode psychosis. In the present study, we investigated the associations of specific aspects of social motivation and behavior with social functioning and social quality of life in a group of 54 young people (aged 15 to 35) with first-episode psychosis...
December 2021: Journal of Psychiatric Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34746489/lumateperone-tosylate-a-selective-and-concurrent-modulator-of-serotonin-dopamine-and-glutamate-in-the-treatment-of-schizophrenia
#60
REVIEW
Kunal Maini, Janice W Hollier, Haley Gould, Victoria Bollich, John John LaForge, Elyse M Cornett, Amber N Edinoff, Adam M Kaye, Alan D Kaye
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This is a comprehensive review of the literature regarding the use of Lumateperone tosylate for schizophrenia. This review presents the background, evidence, and indications for the use of lumateperone tosylate in the treatment of schizophrenia. RECENT FINDINGS: Schizophrenia is a chronic mental health disorder that affects approximately 3.3 million people in the United States. Its symptoms, which must be present more than six months, are comprised of disorganized behavior and speech, a diminished capacity to comprehend reality, hearing voices unheard by others, seeing things unseen by others, delusions, decreased social commitment, and decreased motivation...
2021: Health Psychology Research
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