Functional connectivity in brain s fatigue network changes in response to cognitive fatigue
Kessler Foundation researchers have demonstrated changes in the functional connectivity within the fatigue network in response to cognitive fatigue. This finding, the first of its kind, was reported in
Scientific Reports on December 14, 2020 in the open access article, Using functional connectivity changes associated with cognitive fatigue to delineate a fatigue network (doi: 10.1038//s41598-020-78768-3).
The authors are Glenn Wylie, DPhil, Brian Yao, PhD, Helen M. Genova, PhD, Michele H. Chen, PhD, and John DeLuca, PhD, of Kessler Foundation. All have faculty appointments at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School. Dr. Wylie is also a research scientist at The Department of Veterans Affairs War-related Injury and Illness Study Center at the New Jersey Healthcare System.
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Carlos Pato will be the first executive chair of psychiatry at Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences and Michele Pato will become the inaugural director of the new Rutgers Center for Genomics of Psychiatric Health and Addiction.
Carlos Pato and Michele Pato to Oversee Behavioral Health, Addictions and Genomic Psychiatry Research
Rutgers has selected two distinguished psychiatrists – husband and wife Carlos N. Pato and Michele T. Pato – to oversee behavioral health, addictions and genomic psychiatry research, a rapidly growing field in psychiatric medicine that investigates the genetic connections to mental health.
Carlos Pato will be the first executive chair of psychiatry at Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences (RBHS) and Michele Pato, the director of SUNY Downstate’s Institute for Genomic Health, will become the inaugural director of the new Rutgers Center for Genomics of Psychiatric Health and Addiction (RCPHA) and will join her husband as professor of psychia
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IMAGE: Dr. Wylie, director of the Rocco Ortenzio Neuroimaging Center at Kessler Foundation, specializes in the implementation of neuroimaging techniques in rehabilitation research. view more
Credit: Kessler Foundation
East Hanover, NJ. March 8, 2021. Kessler Foundation researchers have demonstrated changes in the functional connectivity within the fatigue network in response to cognitive fatigue. This finding, the first of its kind, was reported in
Scientific Reports on December 14, 2020 in the open access article, Using functional connectivity changes associated with cognitive fatigue to delineate a fatigue network (doi: 10.1038//s41598-020-78768-3).
The authors are Glenn Wylie, DPhil, Brian Yao, PhD, Helen M. Genova, PhD, Michele H. Chen, PhD, and John DeLuca, PhD, of Kessler Foundation. All have faculty appointments at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School. Dr. Wylie is also a research scientist at The Department of Veterans Affairs War-related Injury a
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