2019
Socioeconomic status in children is associated with spontaneous activity in right superior temporal gyrus
Biazoli C, Salum G, Gadelha A, Rebello K, Moura L, Pan P, Brietzke E, Miguel E, Rohde L, Bressan R, Jackowski A, Sato J. Socioeconomic status in children is associated with spontaneous activity in right superior temporal gyrus. Brain Imaging And Behavior 2019, 14: 961-970. PMID: 30868400, DOI: 10.1007/s11682-019-00073-z.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsRight superior temporal gyrusSuperior temporal gyrusTemporal gyrusExtended language networkDifferent developmental trajectoriesBrain functional organizationSchool-based sampleFunctional organizationStructural neuroimaging findingsCognitive controlSocioeconomic statusLanguage networkExternalizing problemsInternalizing problemsDevelopmental trajectoriesEmotional problemsSpontaneous activityRegional spontaneous activityLanguage processingFMRI featuresBrain regionsBrain areasNeuroimaging findingsFunctional networksLinguistic environment
2018
Associations between children’s family environment, spontaneous brain oscillations, and emotional and behavioral problems
Sato J, Biazoli C, Salum G, Gadelha A, Crossley N, Vieira G, Zugman A, Picon F, Pan P, Hoexter M, Amaro E, Anés M, Moura L, Del’Aquilla M, Mcguire P, Rohde L, Miguel E, Bressan R, Jackowski A. Associations between children’s family environment, spontaneous brain oscillations, and emotional and behavioral problems. European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 2018, 28: 835-845. PMID: 30392120, DOI: 10.1007/s00787-018-1240-y.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsFamily environmentMental health outcomesFamily coherenceEmotional problemsOrbitofrontal cortexTemporal poleResting-state fMRI dataLeft temporal poleSpontaneous brain oscillationsChild's family environmentRight orbitofrontal cortexOscillatory neural activityHealth outcomesBrain oscillationsBehavioral problemsNeural activityFMRI dataFMRI metricsBrain areasLow-frequency fluctuationsFractional amplitudeLower incidenceSpontaneous activityHigh incidenceExploratory study
2015
Temporal stability of network centrality in control and default mode networks: Specific associations with externalizing psychopathology in children and adolescents
Sato J, Biazoli C, Salum G, Gadelha A, Crossley N, Satterthwaite T, Vieira G, Zugman A, Picon F, Pan P, Hoexter M, Anés M, Moura L, Del'aquilla M, Amaro E, McGuire P, Lacerda A, Rohde L, Miguel E, Jackowski A, Bressan R. Temporal stability of network centrality in control and default mode networks: Specific associations with externalizing psychopathology in children and adolescents. Human Brain Mapping 2015, 36: 4926-4937. PMID: 26350757, PMCID: PMC6868942, DOI: 10.1002/hbm.22985.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsDefault mode networkChild Behavior ChecklistDynamic functional connectivity patternsHigh Risk Cohort StudyBehavior ChecklistAbnormal connectivity patternsFunctional connectivity patternsResting-state fMRIPathological mental statesCohort studyConnectivity patternsPsychiatric disordersFunctional network dynamicsGeneral psychopathologyTotal scoreMode networkNetwork maturationBrain networksMaturation indexEmotional problemsChildrenAge effectsOverall presenceSpecific associationAdolescents