Too Little or Too Much: Nonlinear Relationship Between Sleep Duration and Daily Affective Well-Being in Depressed Adults

IALH Research Fellow Jonathan Rush (Psychology) has co-authored a new research article entitled Too little or too much: nonlinear relationship between sleep duration and daily affective well-being in depressed adults. Collaborating authors include Sun Ah Lee1, Dahlia Mukherjee, Soomi Lee1, and David M. Almeida. The article was published in BMC Psychiatry. Abstract: Background: In addition …

Premorbid Personality Traits as Predictors for Incident Predementia Syndromes: A Multistate Model Approach

IALH Research Fellows Theone Paterson and Stuart MacDonald and IALH Student Affiliate Morgan Schaeffer have co-authored a research article entitled Premorbid personality traits as predictors for incident predementia syndromes: a multistate model approach. The article was published in Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society. Abstract: Objective: Associations have been found between five-factor model (FFM) personality …

Brain Changes: Aerobic Exercise for Traumatic Brain Injury Rehabilitation

IALH Research Fellow Brian Christie and IALH Student Affiliates Taylor Snowden and Jamie Morrison have co-authored a new research article entitled Brain Changes: Aerobic Exercise for Traumatic Brain Injury Rehabilitation. Collaborating authors include Meike Boerstra, Eric Eyolfson, Crystal Acosta, Erin Grafe, Hannah Reid, Justin Brand, Matthew Galati, and Judith Gargaro. The article was published in …

Does Being Defiant and Irritable Take a Toll on Physical Health? Examining the Covariation Between Symptoms of Physical Health and Oppositional Defiance Across Adolescence to Young Adulthood

IALH Research Fellows Jonathan Rush and Paweena Sukhawathanakul and IALH Student Affiliate Cynthia McDowell have written a research article entitled Does being defiant and irritable take a toll on physical health? Examining the covariation between symptoms of physical health and oppositional defiance across adolescence to young adulthood. The article was published in Psychology & Health. …

Repeated Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Causes Sex-Specific Increases in Cell Proliferation and Inflammation in Juvenile Rats

IALH Research Fellow Brian Christie and IALH Student Affiliate Jamie Morrison have co-authored a new research article entitled Repeated mild traumatic brain injury causes sex-specific increases in cell proliferation and inflammation in juvenile rats. Collaborating authors include Katie J. Neale, Hannah M. O. Reid, Barbara Sousa, Erin McDonagh, Sandy Shultz, and Eric Eyolfson. The article …

The Impact of Biomaterial Surface Properties on Engineering Neural Tissue for Spinal Cord Regeneration

IALH Research Fellow Stephanie Willerth has co-authored a new research article entitled The Impact of Biomaterial Surface Properties on Engineering Neural Tissue for Spinal Cord Regeneration. Collaborating authors include by Victor A. da Silva, Bianca C. Bobotis, Felipe F. Correia, Théo H. Lima-Vasconcellos, Gabrielly M. D. Chiarantin, Laura De La Vega, Christiane B. Lombello, Sônia …

The Piano Man: A Case Report of Anterior Thalamic Infarct with Dementia and Preserved Music Ability

IALH Research Fellows Theone Paterson and Jodie Gawryluk have co-authored a research article with IALH Student Affiliate Ashleigh Parker and colleague Tamara Goranson. The article entitled The Piano Man: A Case Report of Anterior Thalamic Infarct with Dementia and Preserved Music Ability was published in Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology. Abstract: Objective: The thalamus is the …

Psilocybin’s Effects on Cognition and Creativity: A Scoping Review

IALH Research Fellow Mauricio Garcia-Barrera and IALH Student Affiliate Baeleigh VanderZwaag have co-authored a new research scoping review entitled Psilocybin’s Effects on Cognition and Creativity: A Scoping Review. Other authors include Justin N Bonnieux, Zahra Premji, and Albert Garcia-Romeu. The review was published in Journal of Psychopharmacology. Abstract: Background: Research on psilocybin has become increasingly …

Opposite Effects of Emotion and Event Segmentation on Temporal Ordermemory and Object-Context Binding

IALH Research Fellow Tarek Amer has co-authored a new research article entitled Opposite effects of emotion and event segmentation on temporal ordermemory and object-context binding. Collaborating authors include Monika Riegel, Daniel Granja, Patrik Vuilleumier, and Ulrike Rimmele. The article was published in Cognition and Emotion. Abstract: Our daily lives unfold continuously, yet our memories are …

Comparison of Computational Fluid Dynamics with Transcranial Doppler Ultrasound in Response to Physiological Stimuli

IALH Research Fellow Kurt Smith has co-authored a new research article entitled Comparison of computational fluid dynamics with transcranial Doppler ultrasound in response to physiological stimuli. Collaborating authors include Harrison T. Caddy, Hannah J. Thomas, Lachlan J. Kelsey, Barry J. Doyle, and Daniel J. Green. The article was published in Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology. …

Affective Reactivity to Daily Stressors and Immune Cell Gene Expression in the MIDUS Study

IALH Research Fellow Jonathan Rush has co-authored a new research article entitled Affective reactivity to daily stressors and immune cell gene expression in the MIDUS study. Collaborating authors include Abner T. Apsley, Sun Ah Lee, Aarti C. Bhat, David M. Almeida, Steven W. Cole, and Idan Shalev. The article was published in Brain, Behavior, and …

Co-Design of a Digital App “WhatMatters” to Support Person-Centred Care: A Critical Reflection

IALH Research Fellow Mariko Sakamoto has co-authored a new research article entitled Co-design of a digital app “WhatMatters” to support person-centred care: A critical reflection. Collaborating authors include Yi Peng (Ellen) Guo, Karen Lok Yi Wong,  Jim Mann, Annette Berndt,  Jennifer Boger, Leanne Currie, Caylee Raber, Eva Egeberg, Chelsea Burke, Garima Sood, Angelica Lim, Sasha …

Progranulin is an FMRP Target That Influences Macroorchidism But Not Behaviour in a Mouse Model of Fragile X Syndrome

IALH Research Fellow Brian Christie has co-authjored a new research article entitled Progranulin is an FMRP target that influences macroorchidism but not behaviour in a mouse model of Fragile X Syndrome. Collaborating authors include Benjamin Life, Luis E.B. Bettio, Ilse Gantois, and Blair R. Leavitt. The article was published in Current Research in Neurobiology. Abstract: …

Participatory Action Research: An Exploration From a Freirean Perspective of Research Involving People With Dementia

IALH Research Fellow Mariko Sakamoto has co-authored a new research article entitled Participatory Action Research: An Exploration From a Freirean Perspective of Research Involving People With Dementia. Collaborating authors include Deborah O’Connor, Alison Phinney, Habib Chaudhury, and Jim Mann. The article was published in International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry. Abstract:  Background: Researchers are increasingly being …

A Protocol for Remote Cognitive Training Developed for Use in Clinical Populations During the COVID-19 Pandemic

IALH Research Fellows Jodie Gawryluk and Brian Christie, and IALH Student Affiliates Taylor Snowden-Richardson, Lisa Ohlhauser and Jamie Morrison are collaborating authors on a new research article entitled A Protocol for Remote Cognitive Training Developed for Use in Clinical Populations During the COVID-19 Pandemic. The article was published in Neurotrauma Reports. Abstract: Many traumatic brain …

Psychological Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Canadian Healthcare Workers: A Case Control Comparison From Three Cross Sectional Surveys

                  IALH Research Fellows Brianna Turner and Theone Paterson have co-authored a new research article entitled Psychological Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Canadian Healthcare Workers: A Case Control Comparison From Three Cross Sectional Surveys. Collaborating authors include Brooke E. Welch, Nicole K. Legg, Peter Phiri, and …

Predictions Transform Memories: How Expected Versus Unexpected Events are Integrated or Separated in Memory

IALH Research Fellow Tarek Amer has co-authored a new research article entitled Predictions transform memories: How expected versus unexpected events are integrated or separated in memory. Collaborating authors include Oded Bein, Camille Gasser, Anat Maril, and Lila Davachi. The article was published in Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews. Abstract: Our brains constantly generate predictions about the …

How Does the Brain Age in Individuals with Multiple Sclerosis? A Systematic Review

IALH Research Fellow Jodie Gawryluk has co-authored a new research article entitled How does the brain age in individuals with multiple sclerosis? A systematic review. Collaborating authors include Nataliya Tokarska, Isabelle Tottenham, and Charbel Baaklini. The article was published in Frontiers in Neurology. Abstract: Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a complex neurological disorder that involves demyelination, …

Electrophysiological Variability During Tests of Executive Functioning: A Comparison of Athletes With and Without Concussion and Sedentary Control Participants

IALH Research Fellows Stuart MacDonald and Mauricio Garcia-Barrera and former student affiliate Drew Halliday have co-authored a new research article entitled Electrophysiological Variability During Tests of Executive Functioning: A Comparison of Athletes With and Without Concussion and Sedentary Control Participants. Collaborating authors include Justin E. Karr, Danesh Shahnazian, Iris Gordon, Juan Pablo Sanchez Escudero, Sarah …

Reelin Rescues Behavioral, Electrophysiological, and Molecular Metrics of a Chronic Stress Phenotype in a Similar Manner to Ketamine

IALH Research Fellows Brian Christie and Hector Caruncho, and IALH Student Affiliate Brady Rieve have collaborated on a new research article entitled Reelin Rescues Behavioral, Electrophysiological, and Molecular Metrics of a Chronic Stress Phenotype in a Similar Manner to Ketamine. Other authors include Jenessa N. Johnston, Josh Allen, Irene Shkolnikov, Carla L. Sanchez-Lafuente, Kaylene Scheil, …

Editorial: Insights on Neuroinflammatory Response by Microglia-Targeted Pharmacology

IALH Research Fellow Hector Caruncho has co-authored a new editorial article entitled Editorial: Insights on neuroinflammatory response by microglia-targeted pharmacology. Collaborating authors include Jacob Raber, Philippe De Deurwaerdere and Massimo Grilli. The article was published in Frontiers in Pharmacology. First Paragraph: Microglia, the innate immune cells of the CNS, are critical for the regulation of …

Natural Killer Cells and Innate Lymphoid Cells 1 Tune Anxiety-Like Behavior and Memory in Mice Via Interferon-γ and Acetylcholine

IALH Research Fellow Marie-Ève Tremblay has co-authored a new research article entitled Natural killer cells and innate lymphoid cells 1 tune anxiety-like behavior and memory in mice via interferon-γ and acetylcholine. Collaborating authors include Stefano Garofalo, Germana Cocozza, Alessandro Mormino, Giovanni Bernardini, Eleonora Russo, Donald Ielpo, Diego Andolina, Rossella Ventura, Katiuscia Martinello, Massimiliano Renzi, Sergio …

It Runs in the Family: Testing for Longitudinal Family Flynn Effects

IALH Research Fellow Scott Hofer and IALH Data Analyst Stacey Voll have co-authored a new research article entitled It Runs in the Family: Testing for Longitudinal Family Flynn Effects. Collaborating authors include Linda Wänström 1, Patrick O’Keefe, Sean A. P. Clouston, Frank D. Mann, Graciela Muniz-Terrera, Yun Zhang, and Joseph L. Rodgers. The article was …

Cohort Changes and Sex Differences After Age 50 in Cognitive Variables in the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing

IALH Research Fellow Scott Hofer, IALH Data Analyst Stacey Voll have collaborated on a new research article entitled Cohort changes and sex differences after age 50 in cognitive variables in the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. Collaborating authors include Patrick O’Keefe, Graciela Muniz-Terrera, Sean Clouston,  Linda Wanström, Frank D Mann, and Joseph Lee Rodgers. The …

Protocol for the Brain Health Support Program Study of the Canadian Therapeutic Platform Trial for Multidomain Interventions to Prevent Dementia (CAN-THUMBS UP): A Prospective 12-Month Intervention Study

IALH Research Fellows Scott Hofer and Paul Brewster, and IALH Research Coordinator Shahnaz Winer are a few of several collaborating authors on a new research article entitled Protocol for the Brain Health Support Program Study of the Canadian Therapeutic Platform Trial for Multidomain Interventions to Prevent Dementia (CAN-THUMBS UP): A Prospective 12-Month Intervention Study. The …