14 results on '"Steven M. Hodge"'
Search Results
2. 6.30 Biological and Psychosocial Correlates of Social Cognition in Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)
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Dorothy P. Schafer, Philip A Feinberg, Steven M. Hodge, Isha Jalnapurkar, David M. Cochran, and Jean A. Frazier
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Social cognition ,Autism spectrum disorder ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,medicine.disease ,Psychology ,Psychosocial ,Clinical psychology - Published
- 2021
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3. 6.26 Lost in Translation: Expressed Emotion and Social Functioning in Youth With Autism Spectrum Disorder
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David M. Cochran, Steven M. Hodge, Alexandra C. Palmer, Jean A. Frazier, Adrian Fanucci-Kiss, and Isha Jalnapurkar
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Autism spectrum disorder ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Expressed emotion ,Translation (biology) ,medicine.disease ,Psychology ,Social functioning ,Developmental psychology - Published
- 2021
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4. 6.11 EMOTION PERCEPTION IN ADOLESCENT MALES WITH AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDER
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Sarah J. Palmer, Ella Kipervasser, Steven M. Hodge, Jean A. Frazier, and David Cochran
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Developmental and Educational Psychology - Published
- 2020
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5. O11. What Do We Know About the Power of Our Developmental Structural Neuroimaging Studies?
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Steven M. Hodge, J.B. Poline, and David W. Kennedy
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Cognitive science ,Power (social and political) ,Neuroimaging ,Psychology ,Biological Psychiatry - Published
- 2019
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6. Decreased cortical thickness in drug naïve first episode schizophrenia: In relation to serum levels of BDNF
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David N. Kennedy, Lijuan Pang, Xue Li, Luxian Lv, Amy Harrington, Xueqin Song, Meina Quan, Douglas M. Ziedonis, Steven M. Hodge, and Xiaoduo Fan
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Imaging biomarker ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,First episode schizophrenia ,Young Adult ,Superior temporal gyrus ,Neurotrophic factors ,Internal medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Biological Psychiatry ,Cerebral Cortex ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Left insula ,Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Drug-naïve ,Endocrinology ,Schizophrenia ,Correlation analysis ,Female ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Biomarkers ,medicine.drug - Abstract
This study was to examine cortical thickness in drug naive, first episode schizophrenia patients, and to explore its relationship with serum levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF). Forty-five drug naive schizophrenia patients and 28 healthy controls were enrolled in the study. Freesurfer was used to parcellate cortical regions, and vertex-wise group analysis was used for whole brain cortical thickness. The clusters for the brain regions that demonstrated group differences were extracted, and the mean values of thickness were calculated. Serum levels of BDNF were measured using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). After controlling for age and gender, significantly thinner cortical thickness was found in left insula and superior temporal gyrus in the patient group compared with the healthy control group (HC group) (p's < 0.001). Lower serum levels of BDNF were also found in the patient group compared with the HC group (p = 0.001). Correlation analysis showed a significant positive relationship between thickness of left insula and serum levels of BDNF within the HC group (r = 0.396, p = 0.037) but there was no such relationship within the patient group (r = 0.035, p = 0.819). Cortical thinning is present in drug naive, first episode schizophrenia patients, indicating neurodevelopmental abnormalities at the onset of schizophrenia. Left insula might be an imaging biomarker in detecting the impaired protective role of neurotrophic factor for the brain development in schizophrenia.
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- 2015
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7. 7.2 THE CIRCUIT-LEVEL ANALYSIS OF SOCIAL COGNITION PROCESSES USING STRUCTURAL AND FUNCTIONAL NEUROIMAGING IN ASD
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Jean A. Frazier, Steven M. Hodge, David W. Kennedy, and David M. Cochran
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Functional neuroimaging ,Social cognition ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Published
- 2019
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8. Regional prefrontal cortex gray matter volumes in youth at familial risk for schizophrenia from the Harvard Adolescent High Risk Study
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Stephen V. Faraone, Nikos Makris, Steven M. Hodge, Larry J. Seidman, Ariel Brown, Verne S. Caviness, Heidi W. Thermenos, David N. Kennedy, Isabelle M. Rosso, and Ming T. Tsuang
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Adult ,Male ,Psychosis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Grey matter ,Brain mapping ,Article ,Young Adult ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Family ,Young adult ,Family history ,Prefrontal cortex ,Psychiatry ,Biological Psychiatry ,Family Health ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Analysis of Variance ,Brain Mapping ,Anhedonia ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Schizophrenia ,Female ,Analysis of variance ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology - Abstract
Background: Regional prefrontal cortex gray matter reductions have been identified in schizophrenia, likely reflecting a combination of genetic vulnerability and disease effects. Few morphometric studies to date have examined regional prefrontal abnormalities in non-psychotic biological relatives who have not passed through the age range of peak risk for onset of psychosis. We conducted a region-of-interest morphometric study of prefrontal subregions in adolescent and young adult relatives of schizophrenia patients. Methods: Twenty-seven familial high-risk (FHR) first-degree relatives of schizophrenia patients and forty-eight control subjects without a family history of psychosis (ages 13–28) underwent high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging at 1.5 Tesla. The prefrontal cortex was parcellated into polar, dorsolateral, ventrolateral, ventromedial and orbital subregions. The Chapman scales measured subpsychotic symptoms. General linear models examined associations of prefrontal subregion volumes with familial risk and subpsychotic symptoms. Results: FHR subjects had significantly reduced bilateral ventromedial prefrontal and frontal pole gray matter volumes compared with controls. Ventromedial volume was significantly negatively correlated with magical ideation and anhedonia scores in FHR subjects. Conclusions: Selective, regional prefrontal gray matter reductions may differentially mark genetic vulnerability and early symptom processes among non-psychotic young adults at familial risk for schizophrenia.
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- 2010
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9. 25. Combining Data Resources to Elucidate Subtle Details of Brain Development
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Steven M. Hodge, J.B. Poline, Jean A. Frazier, and David W. Kennedy
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Cognitive science ,Brain development ,Computer science ,Biological Psychiatry ,Data resources - Published
- 2018
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10. Cortical Thickness Abnormalities in Cocaine Addiction—A Reflection of Both Drug Use and a Pre-existing Disposition to Drug Abuse?
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Hans C. Breiter, Myung Joo Lee, Anne J. Blood, Claudia Baxter, David N. Kennedy, Steven M. Hodge, Jordan W. Smoller, Roy H. Perlis, Nikos Makris, Gregory P. Gasic, Larry J. Seidman, Jonathan Kaiser, Sang Lee, Maurizio Fava, Dan V. Iosifescu, Byoung Woo Kim, and A. Eden Evins
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Male ,Drug ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Neuroscience(all) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,HUMDISEASE ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Cohort Studies ,Nicotine ,Cocaine-Related Disorders ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Attention ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Prefrontal cortex ,030304 developmental biology ,media_common ,Cerebral Cortex ,0303 health sciences ,General Neuroscience ,Addiction ,Cognition ,Disposition ,medicine.disease ,Behavior, Addictive ,Substance abuse ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cerebral cortex ,Female ,SYSNEURO ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
SummaryThe structural effects of cocaine on neural systems mediating cognition and motivation are not well known. By comparing the thickness of neocortical and paralimbic brain regions between cocaine-dependent and matched control subjects, we found that four of 18 a priori regions involved with executive regulation of reward and attention were significantly thinner in addicts. Correlations were significant between thinner prefrontal cortex and reduced keypresses during judgment and decision making of relative preference in addicts, suggesting one basis for restricted behavioral repertoires in drug dependence. Reduced effortful attention performance in addicts also correlated with thinner paralimbic cortices. Some thickness differences in addicts were correlated with cocaine use independent of nicotine and alcohol, but addicts also showed diminished thickness heterogeneity and altered hemispheric thickness asymmetry. These observations suggest that brain structure abnormalities in addicts are related in part to drug use and in part to predisposition toward addiction.
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- 2008
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11. Frontal connections and cognitive changes in normal aging rhesus monkeys: A DTI study
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Nikos Makris, Lawrence L. Wald, Verne S. Caviness, Thomas Benner, Steven M. Hodge, Douglas L. Rosene, David S. Tuch, Anders M. Dale, Andre van der Kouwe, Mark B. Moss, David N. Kennedy, Ona Wu, George Papadimitriou, Ronald J. Killiany, and Tara L. Moore
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Male ,Aging ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Corpus callosum ,Corpus Callosum ,White matter ,Association fiber ,Neural Pathways ,Fractional anisotropy ,medicine ,Animals ,Brain Mapping ,General Neuroscience ,Superior longitudinal fasciculus ,Macaca mulatta ,Frontal Lobe ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Frontal lobe ,Forebrain ,Anisotropy ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Cognition Disorders ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Developmental Biology ,Diffusion MRI - Abstract
Recent anatomical studies have found that cortical neurons are mainly preserved during the aging process while myelin damage and even axonal loss is prominent throughout the forebrain. We used diffusion tensor imaging (DT-MRI) to evaluate the hypothesis that during the process of normal aging, white matter changes preferentially affect the integrity of long corticocortical association fiber tracts, specifically the superior longitudinal fasciculus II and the cingulum bundle. This would disrupt communication between the frontal lobes and other forebrain regions leading to cognitive impairments. We analyzed DT-MRI datasets from seven young and seven elderly behaviorally characterized rhesus monkeys, creating fractional anisotropy (FA) maps of the brain. Significant age-related reductions in mean FA values were found for the superior longitudinal fasciculus II and the cingulum bundle, as well as the anterior corpus callosum. Comparison of these FA reductions with behavioral measures demonstrated a statistically significant linear relationship between regional FA and performance on a test of executive function. These findings support the hypothesis that alterations to the integrity of these long association pathways connecting the frontal lobe with other forebrain regions contribute to cognitive impairments in normal aging. To our knowledge this is the first investigation reporting such alterations in the aging monkey.
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- 2007
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12. Decreased volume of left and total anterior insular lobule in schizophrenia
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Nikos Makris, David N. Kennedy, Larry J. Seidman, Jill M. Goldstein, Steven M. Hodge, Verne S. Caviness, Ming T. Tsuang, and Stephen V. Faraone
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Adult ,Male ,Psychosis ,Adolescent ,Statistics as Topic ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Insular cortex ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Brain mapping ,Functional Laterality ,Limbic system ,mental disorders ,Limbic System ,medicine ,Humans ,Biological Psychiatry ,Demography ,Retrospective Studies ,Cerebral Cortex ,Brain Mapping ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Anatomy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Schizophrenia ,Case-Control Studies ,Endophenotype ,Female ,Psychology ,Insula ,Neuroscience ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
The insula is anatomically situated to be critically involved in many bio-behavioral functions impaired in schizophrenia. Furthermore, its total volume has been shown to be reduced in schizophrenia. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that in schizophrenia it is the anterior insular lobule (aINS(lbl)) rather than the posterior insular lobule (pINS(lbl)) that is smaller, given that limbic system abnormalities are central in schizophrenia and that the affiliations of the limbic system are principally with the anterior insular lobule. We used T1-weighted high resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to measure the cortical volume of the left and right anterior and posterior insular subdivisions. The subjects included a sample of healthy community controls (N=40) and chronic patients with DSM-III-R schizophrenia (N=41). We correlated insula volumes with positive and negative symptoms. We found that the total aINS(lbl), and the left aINS(lbl) in particular, were significantly volumetrically smaller in schizophrenia compared to controls, and significantly correlated with bizarre behavior. Given that the anterior insular lobule offers anatomic features that allow for MRI-based morphometric analysis, namely its central and circular sulci, this brain structure provides a useful model to test hypotheses regarding genotype-phenotype relationships in schizophrenia using the anterior insular lobule as a candidate endophenotype.
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- 2006
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13. Overt propositional speech in chronic nonfluent aphasia studied with the dynamic susceptibility contrast fMRI method
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Perry F. Renshaw, Marjorie Nicholas, Margaret A. Naeser, Paula I. Martin, Gordon J. Harris, Steven M. Hodge, Abigail A. Baird, Harold Goodglass, Susan E. Sczerzenie, Carole L. Palumbo, Arthur Wingfield, Errol Baker, Deborah A. Yurgelun-Todd, and Ranji Samaraweera
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Audiology ,Somatosensory system ,Functional Laterality ,Aphasia ,medicine ,Humans ,Speech ,Aphasia, Broca ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Supplementary motor area ,Verbal Behavior ,Motor Cortex ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Somatosensory Cortex ,Middle Aged ,SMA ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Oxygen ,Stroke ,Functional imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Chronic Disease ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology ,Dynamic susceptibility ,Motor cortex - Abstract
This study examined activation levels in the left (L) supplementary motor area (SMA) and the right (R) SMA (separately), and activation in nine R perisylvian language homologues during overt, propositional speech in chronic nonfluent aphasia patients. Previous functional imaging studies with a variety of chronic aphasia patients have reported activation in these regions during different language tasks, however, overt propositional speech has not been examined. In the present research, four nonfluent aphasia patients were studied during overt elicited propositional speech at 4-9 years post-single L hemisphere stroke, which spared the SMA. The dynamic susceptibility contrast (DSC) method of functional MRI was used to calculate relative cerebral blood volume (relCBV) for cortical regions of interest (ROIs) during the first-pass bolus of gadolinium during two conditions: (1) pattern (silent viewing of checkerboard patterns) and (2) story (overt, elicited propositional speech describing sequential pictures, which formed a story). During the story condition, controls had significantly higher relCBV in L SMA than in R SMA; aphasics, however, had significantly higher relCBV in R SMA than in L SMA. During the pattern condition, no significant differences were observed between the L SMA and the R SMA for either controls or aphasics. In addition, aphasics had significantly higher relCBV in the R sensorimotor mouth during story than pattern. This R sensorimotor mouth relCBV was also significantly higher in aphasics than controls during story, and the two groups did not differ during pattern. The overall mean relCBV for the nine R perisylvian ROIs was significantly higher for aphasics than controls during both story and pattern. These results suggest that poor modulation, including possible over-activation of R sensorimotor mouth and other R perisylvian language homologues may underlie in part, the hesitant, poorly articulated, agrammatic speech associated with nonfluent aphasia.
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- 2004
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14. 3.36 ASSESSING IMPACT OF MENTAL HEALTH EDUCATION FOR ADOLESCENTS IN RURAL COSTA RICA
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Auralyd Padilla, Cindy Vargas Cruz, Jean A. Frazier, and Steven M. Hodge
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Environmental health ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Psychology ,Mental health - Published
- 2016
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