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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Associations Between Polymorphisms in the Serotonin Transporter Gene (5-HTTLPR), Memory, Hippocampal Structure, and Depressive Symptoms in Healthy Young Adults

Price, Jenessa Sheree 06 December 2010 (has links)
No description available.
2

Genetic, Hemodynamic, and Electrophysiological Correlates of Cortico-Limbic Function in Clinically Depressed Individuals

Hegde, Jayanta January 2010 (has links)
Resting frontal electroencephalographic (EEG) asymmetry has been hypothesized to be a biological marker of clinical depression but may reflect an endophenotype specific to women. Frontal EEG asymmetry was assessed in individuals (22% male) with (n = 12) and without (n = 21) a DSM-IV diagnosis of lifetime Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) or Dysthmic Disorder on 4 occasions within a two-week period. Depressed women exhibited greater relative right frontal activity at rest than never-depressed women across occasions. In contrast, depressed men displayed greater relative left frontal activity than never-depressed men. The same participants engaged in a Passive Viewing Face task while undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The present study did not replicate previous findings which show a hyperactive hemodynamic response in the amygdalae among depressed individuals. Mixed linear models indicated a lifetime depression by biological sex by amygdala activation interaction. For never-depressed control participants, frontal asymmetry is unrelated to the level of emotion-related amygdalae activation, but for lifetime depression spectrum participants, in both men and women, relatively greater amygdalae activation to emotional faces is associated with less left frontal activity as compared to those with less amygdalae activation to emotional faces. Also, when activation to emotionally expressive faces was closer to the levels of activation observed in the neutral face condition, the predicted pattern of association between frontal EEG asymmetry and depression based on the above findings was disrupted in men, but preserved in women. When levels of activation to emotion faces was considerably lower than that to neutral faces, the pattern was generally preserved for men, but not for women. Preliminary tests were also conducted in an attempt to replicate previous reports that document a positive correlation between the risk allele of the serotonin transporter gene and amygdalae activation. The present study failed to replicate this pattern, perhaps on account of the relatively small sample size available when non-Caucasian participants were excluded from the analysis.
3

Interactive Effect of the Serotonin Transporter 5-HTTLPR Genotype and Chronic Stress on Depressive Symptoms in Postmenopausal Women

Hantsoo, Liisa Victoria 20 August 2010 (has links)
No description available.
4

Characterizing the age-related decline of memory monitoring : neuroimaging and genetic approaches

Pacheco, Jennifer Lynn 09 June 2011 (has links)
Memory monitoring, or the ability to accurately assess one’s memory retrieval success, is known to be declined for older adults. The behavioral decline has been well explored, and is specific to tasks of source monitoring; tasks involving item memory monitoring do not show age-related deficits. This study attempts to further characterize the decline by exploring neuroanatomical contributions to the decline, and genetic influences that may explain performance variability in older adults. Older adults were genotyped for the serotonin transporter (5-HTTLPR) gene, and those that are carriers of the low-expressing allele demonstrate the expected age-related decline of source monitoring performance when compared to younger adults. Interestingly, older adults who lack this allele did not display any decline in performance when compared to younger adults. Neuroanatomical correlates of task performance indicate that prefrontal regions in the inferior and lateral cortices support accurate source memory monitoring, likely through their role in the proper selection of memory cues and inhibition of irrelevant information. This relationship suggests that age-related atrophy occurring in these structures could be responsible for the performance deficits on source memory monitoring tasks. There was no direct relationship seen between genotype for the 5-HTTLPR gene and cortical volumes, however diffusion tensor imaging shows that older adults who carry this allele have altered connections between the medial temporal lobe, responsible for memory retrieval, and prefrontal cortex, which monitors the retrieval process. Through stronger connections of critical networks, older adults who lack the 5-HTTLPR short allele may be able to compensate for the age-related atrophy seen in the prefrontal cortex. Functional results further indicate that the older adult non-carriers recruit inferior and lateral frontal regions to a greater extent than the older adult carriers during accurate memory monitoring. These results begin to suggest a neuroprotective mechanism for the 5-HTTLPR genotype, wherein some older adults may be able to postpone the expected decline of memory monitoring by retaining the ability to recruit essential inferior frontal structures through more organized white matter pathways. / text
5

Genetische Polymorphismen im Serotonintransportergen und Risikofaktoren für das SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome) / Genetic Polymorphisms in the Serotonin Transporter Gene and Risk Factors for SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome)

Geisenberger, Dorothee 28 November 2011 (has links)
No description available.
6

Genetic Variation and Shared Biological Susceptibility Underlying Comorbidity in Neuropsychiatry

Palomo, Tomas, Kostrzewa, Richard M., Beninger, Richard J., Archer, Trevor 01 December 2007 (has links)
Genetic factors underlying alcoholism, substance abuse, antisocial and violent behaviour, psychosis, schizophrenia and psychopathy are emerging to implicate dopaminergic and cannabinoid, but also monoaminergic and glutamatergic systems through the maze of promoter genes and polymorphisms. Candidate gene association studies suggest the involvement of a range of genes in different disorders of CNS structure and function. Indices of comorbidity both complicate the array of gene-involvement and provide a substrate of hazardous interactivity. The putative role of the serotonin transporter gene in affective-dissociative spectrum disorders presents both plausible genetic variation and complication of comorbidity. The position of genetic variation is further complicated through ethnic, contextual and social factors that provide geometric progressions in the comordity already underlying diagnostic obstacles. The concept of shared biological susceptibilty to two or more disorder conditions of comorbidity seems a recurring observation, e.g., bipolar disorder with alcoholism or schizophrenia with alcohol/substance abuse or diabetes with schizopsychotic disorder. Several lines of evidence seem to suggest that the factors influencing variation in one set of symptoms and those affecting one or more disorders are observed to a marked extent which ought to facilitate the search for susceptibility genes in comorbid brain disorders. Identification of regional genetic factors is awaited for a more compelling outline that ought eventually to lead to greater efficacy of symptom-disorder arrangements and an augmentation of current pharmacological treatment therapies.
7

Frontal-limbic brain processes in healthy individuals : environmental, epigenetic and behavioral correlates

Ismaylova, Elmira 05 1900 (has links)
No description available.
8

Functional Investigations into the Recognition Memory Network, its Association with Genetic Polymorphisms and Implications for Disorders of Emotional Memory

Dörfel, Denise 22 January 2010 (has links)
Recent research, that has been focused on recognition memory, has revealed that two processes contribute to recognition of previously encountered items: recollection and familiarity (Aggleton & Brown, 1999; Eichenbaum, 2006; Eichenbaum, Yonelinas, & Ranganath, 2007; Rugg & Yonelinas, 2003; Skinner & Fernandes, 2007; Squire, Stark, & Clark, 2004; Wixted, 2007a; Yonelinas, 2001a; Yonelinas, 2002). The findings of neural correlates of recollection and familiarity lead to the assumption that there are different brain regions activated in either process, but there are, to the best of my knowledge, no studies assessing how these brain regions are working together in a recollection or a familiarity network, respectively. Additionally, there are almost no studies to date, which directly searched for overlapping regions. Therefore, in study I of the current thesis, brain regions associated to both recognition processes are searched investigated. Additionally, a connectivity analysis will search for functional correlated brain activations that either build a recollection or a familiarity network. It is undoubtable that the Brain Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF) is strongly involved in synaptic plasticity in the hippocampus (Bramham & Messaoudi, 2005) and there is evidence that a genetic variant of this neurotrophin (BDNF 66Met) is related to poorer memory performance (Egan, et al., 2003). Therefore, in study II of the current thesis, the effect of BDNF Val66Met on recollection and familiarity performance and related brain activations is investigated. Finally, one could summarize, that serotonin, like BDNF, is strongly involved in brain development and plasticity as well as in learning and memory processes (Vizi, 2008). More precisely, there is evidence for alterations in the structure of brain regions, which are known to be involved in emotional memory formation and retrieval, like amygdala and hippocampus (Frodl, et al., 2008; Munafo, Brown, & Hariri, 2008; Pezawas, et al., 2005). One study found an slight epistatic effect of BDNF and 5-HTTLPR on the grey matter volume of the amygdala (Pezawas, et al., 2008). Therefore, in study III, it is investigated if such an interaction effect could be substantiated for the amygdala and additionally revealed for the hippocampus. The results of the current thesis allow further comprehension of recollection, hence episodic memory, and point to a special role of the BDNF in temporal and prefrontal brain regions. Additionally, the finding of an epistatic effect between BDNF and serotonin transporter function point to the need of analyzing interactions between genes and also between genes and environmental factors which reveals more information than the study of main effects alone. In conclusion, analyzing behavioral and neural correlates of episodic memory reveal allowed insights in brain functions that may serve as guideline for future studies in clinical populations with memory deficits, including susceptibility factors such as good or bad environment, as well as promising gene variants that influence episodic memory.

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