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Dive into the research topics where Mary R. Newsome is active.

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Featured researches published by Mary R. Newsome.


Journal of Neurotrauma | 2010

Diffusion Tensor Imaging of Mild to Moderate Blast-Related Traumatic Brain Injury and Its Sequelae

Harvey S. Levin; Elisabeth A. Wilde; Maya Troyanskaya; Nancy J. Petersen; Randall S. Scheibel; Mary R. Newsome; Majdi Radaideh; Trevor C. Wu; Ragini Yallampalli; Zili Chu; Xiaoqi Li

To evaluate the effects of mild to moderate blast-related traumatic brain injury (TBI) on the microstructure of brain white matter (WM) and neurobehavioral outcomes, we studied 37 veterans and service members (mean age 31.5 years, SD = 7.2; post-injury interval 871.5 days; SD = 343.1), whose report of acute neurological status was consistent with sustaining mild to moderate TBI due to blast while serving in Iraq or Afghanistan. Fifteen veterans without a history of TBI or exposure to blast (mean age 31.4 years, SD = 5.4) served as a comparison group, including seven subjects with extracranial injury (post-injury interval 919.5 days, SD = 455.1), and eight who were uninjured. Magnetic resonance imaging disclosed focal lesions in five TBI participants. Post-concussion symptoms (Neurobehavioral Symptom Inventory), post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms (PTSD Checklist-Civilian), and global distress and depression (Brief Symptom Inventory) were worse in the TBI participants than the comparison group, but no group differences were found in perceived physical or mental functioning (SF-12). Verbal memory (Selective Reminding) was less efficient in the TBI group, but there were no group differences in nonverbal memory (Selective Reminding) or decision making (Iowa Gambling Task). Verbal memory in the TBI group was unrelated to PTSD severity. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) using tractography, standard single-slice region-of-interest measurement, and voxel-based analysis disclosed no group differences in fractional anisotropy (FA) and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC). However, FA of the left and right posterior internal capsule and left corticospinal tract was positively correlated with total words consistently recalled, whereas ADC for the left and right uncinate fasciculi and left posterior internal capsule was negatively correlated with this measure of verbal memory. Correlations of DTI variables with symptom measures were non-significant and inconsistent. Our data do not show WM injury in mild to moderate blast-related TBI in veterans despite their residual symptoms and difficulty in verbal memory. Limitations of the study and implications for future research are also discussed.


Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair | 2007

Altered brain activation during cognitive control in patients with moderate to severe traumatic brain injury.

Randall S. Scheibel; Mary R. Newsome; Joel L. Steinberg; Deborah A. Pearson; Ronald A. Rauch; Hui Mao; Maya Troyanskaya; Rajkumar G. Sharma; Harvey S. Levin

Background. Persistent deficits in cognitive control have been documented following traumatic brain injury (TBI) but are inconsistently related to the presence and location of focal lesions. Objective. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to examine brain activation during a cognitive control task in patients with moderate to severe TBI or orthopedic injury (OI). Methods. Fourteen TBI patients and 10 OI patients underwent fMRI at 3 months postinjury using a stimulus-response compatibility task in which response accuracy and reaction time were measured. Performance between the groups was equated by individually adjusting the amount of training. Groups did not differ in age, gender, or education. Results. Brain activation during stimulus-response incompatibility was greater in TBI patients than in OI patients within the cingulate, medial frontal, middle frontal, and superior frontal gyri. However, the positive regression of activation with response accuracy during stimulus-response incompatibility indicated a stronger relationship for OI patients than the TBI group within the anterior cingulate gyrus, medial frontal, and parietal regions, as well as deep brain structures (eg, brainstem). The number of focal lesions within either the whole brain or within prefrontal areas was not related to brain activation, but there was a relationship between activation and TBI severity. Conclusions. These findings suggest that neural networks mediating cognitive control are altered after moderate to severe TBI, possibly as a result of diffuse axonal injury, and that the typical relationship of brain activation to performance is disrupted.


Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology | 2007

Hippocampus, amygdala, and basal ganglia morphometrics in children after moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury.

Elisabeth A. Wilde; Erin D. Bigler; Jill V. Hunter; Michael A. Fearing; Randall S. Scheibel; Mary R. Newsome; Jamie L. Johnson; Jocelyne Bachevalier; Xiaoqi Li; Harvey S. Levin

While closed head injury frequently results in damage to the frontal and temporal lobes, damage to deep cortical structures, such as the hippocampus, amygdala, and basal ganglia, has also been reported. Five deep central structures (hippocampus, amygdala, globus pallidus, putamen, and caudate) were examined in 16 children (eight males, eight females; aged 9–16y), imaged 1 to 10 years after moderate‐to‐severe traumatic brain injury (TBI), and in 16 individually‐matched uninjured children. Analysis revealed significant volume loss in the hippocampus, amydala, and globus pallidus of the TBI group. Investigation of relative volume loss between these structures and against five cortical areas (ventromedial frontal, superomedial frontal, lateral frontal, temporal, and parieto‐occipital) revealed the hippocampus to be the most vulnerable structure following TBI (i.e. greatest relative difference between the groups). In a separate analysis excluding children with focal hippocampal abnormalities (e.g. lesions), group differences in hippocampal volume were still evident, suggesting that hippocampal damage may be diffuse rather than focal.


Metaphor and Symbol | 2001

Inhibition of the Literal: Filtering Metaphor-Irrelevant Information During Metaphor Comprehension

Sam Glucksberg; Mary R. Newsome; Yevgeniya Goldvarg

When people understand metaphors, irrelevant information must be filtered out; for example, to say that ones lawyer is a shark should not be taken to mean that he or she could breathe underwater. We employed a variant of the independent cue paradigm to determine whether metaphor-irrelevant information is inhibited. Consistent with earlier findings of inhibitory processes in idiom comprehension, we found evidence of inhibition of irrelevant information in metaphor comprehension. We also demonstrated that these inhibitory effects were not attributable to lexical priming per se. Overall, the pattern of data implicates active inhibition as a mechanism for filtering irrelevant information during figurative language comprehension.


NeuroImage | 2010

Diffuse damage in pediatric traumatic brain injury: a comparison of automated versus operator-controlled quantification methods.

Erin D. Bigler; Tracy J. Abildskov; Elisabeth A. Wilde; Stephen R. McCauley; Xiaoqi Li; Tricia L. Merkley; Michael A. Fearing; Mary R. Newsome; Randall S. Scheibel; Jill V. Hunter; Zili Chu; Harvey S. Levin

This investigation had two main objectives: 1) to assess the comparability of volumes determined by operator-controlled image quantification with automated image analysis in evaluating atrophic brain changes related to traumatic brain injury (TBI) in children, and 2) to assess the extent of diffuse structural changes throughout the brain as determined by reduced volume of a brain structure or region of interest (ROI). Operator-controlled methods used ANALYZE software for segmentation and tracing routines of pre-defined brain structures and ROIs. For automated image analyses, the open-access FreeSurfer program was used. Sixteen children with moderate-to-severe TBI were compared to individually matched, typically developing control children and the volumes of 18 brain structures and/or ROIs were compared between the two methods. Both methods detected atrophic changes but differed in the magnitude of the atrophic effect with the best agreement in subcortical structures. The volumes of all brain structures/ROIs were smaller in the TBI group regardless of method used; overall effect size differences were minimal for caudate and putamen but moderate to large for all other measures. This is reflective of the diffuse nature of TBI and its widespread impact on structural brain integrity, indicating that both FreeSurfer and operator-controlled methods can reliably assess cross-sectional volumetric changes in pediatric TBI.


Journal of Neurotrauma | 2009

Effects of Severity of Traumatic Brain Injury and Brain Reserve on Cognitive-Control Related Brain Activation

Randall S. Scheibel; Mary R. Newsome; Maya Troyanskaya; Joel L. Steinberg; Felicia C. Goldstein; Hui Mao; Harvey S. Levin

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has revealed more extensive cognitive-control related brain activation following traumatic brain injury (TBI), but little is known about how activation varies with TBI severity. Thirty patients with moderate to severe TBI and 10 with orthopedic injury (OI) underwent fMRI at 3 months post-injury using a stimulus response compatibility task. Regression analyses indicated that lower total Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) and GCS verbal component scores were associated with higher levels of brain activation. Brain-injured patients were also divided into three groups based upon their total GCS score (3-4, 5-8, or 9-15), and patients with a total GCS score of 8 or less produced increased, diffuse activation that included structures thought to mediate visual attention and cognitive control. The cingulate gyrus and thalamus were among the areas showing greatest increases, and this is consistent with vulnerability of these midline structures in severe, diffuse TBI. Better task performance was associated with higher activation, and there were differences in the over-activation pattern that varied with TBI severity, including greater reliance upon left-lateralized brain structures in patients with the most severe injuries. These findings suggest that over-activation is at least partially effective for improving performance and may be compensatory.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2011

Brain Imaging Correlates of Verbal Working Memory in Children Following Traumatic Brain Injury

Elisabeth A. Wilde; Mary R. Newsome; Erin D. Bigler; Jon L. Pertab; Tricia L. Merkley; Gerri Hanten; Randall S. Scheibel; Xiaoqi Li; Zili Chu; Ragini Yallampalli; Jill V. Hunter; Harvey S. Levin

Neural correlates of working memory (WM) based on the Sternberg Item Recognition Task (SIRT) were assessed in 40 children with moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) compared to 41 demographically-comparable children with orthopedic injury (OI). Multiple magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) methods assessed structural and functional brain correlates of WM, including volumetric and cortical thickness measures on all children; functional MRI (fMRI) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) were performed on a subset of children. Confirming previous findings, children with TBI had decreased cortical thickness and volume as compared to the OI group. Although the findings did not confirm the predicted relation of decreased frontal lobe cortical thickness and volume to SIRT performance, left parietal volume was negatively related to reaction time (RT). In contrast, cortical thickness was positively related to SIRT accuracy and RT in the OI group, particularly in aspects of the frontal and parietal lobes, but these relationships were less robust in the TBI group. We attribute these findings to disrupted fronto-parietal functioning in attention and WM. fMRI results from a subsample demonstrated fronto-temporal activation in the OI group, and parietal activation in the TBI group, and DTI findings reflected multiple differences in white matter tracts that engage fronto-parietal networks. Diminished white matter integrity of the frontal lobes and cingulum bundle as measured by DTI was associated with longer RT on the SIRT. Across modalities, the cingulate emerged as a common structure related to performance after TBI. These results are discussed in terms of how different imaging modalities tap different types of pathologic correlates of brain injury and their relationship with WM.


Journal of The International Neuropsychological Society | 2012

Altered Brain Activation in Military Personnel with One or More Traumatic Brain Injuries Following Blast

Randall S. Scheibel; Mary R. Newsome; Maya Troyanskaya; Xiaodi Lin; Joel L. Steinberg; Majdi Radaideh; Harvey S. Levin

Explosive blast is a frequent cause of traumatic brain injury (TBI) among personnel deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) with an event-related stimulus-response compatibility task was used to compare 15 subjects with mild, chronic blast-related TBI with 15 subjects who had not experienced a TBI or blast exposure during deployment. Six TBI subjects reported multiple injuries. Relative to the control group, TBI subjects had slightly slower responses during fMRI and increased somatic complaints and symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression. A between-group analysis indicated greater activation during stimulus-response incompatibility in TBI subjects within the anterior cingulate gyrus, medial frontal cortex, and posterior cerebral areas involved in visual and visual-spatial functions. This activation pattern was more extensive after statistically controlling for reaction time and symptoms of PTSD and depression. There was also a negative relationship between symptoms of PTSD and activation within posterior brain regions. These results provide evidence for increased task-related activation following mild, blast-related TBI and additional changes associated with emotional symptoms. Limitations of this study include no matching for combat exposure and different recruitment strategies so that the control group was largely a community-based sample, while many TBI subjects were seeking services.


Journal of Neurotrauma | 2014

Neural activation during response inhibition differentiates blast from mechanical causes of mild to moderate traumatic brain injury.

Barbara L. Fischer; Michael W. Parsons; Sally Durgerian; Christine Reece; Lyla Mourany; Mark J. Lowe; Erik B. Beall; Katherine A. Koenig; Stephen E. Jones; Mary R. Newsome; Randall S. Scheibel; Elisabeth A. Wilde; Maya Troyanskaya; Tricia L. Merkley; Mark F. Walker; Harvey S. Levin; Stephen M. Rao

Military personnel involved in Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom (OEF/OIF) commonly experience blast-induced mild to moderate traumatic brain injury (TBI). In this study, we used task-activated functional MRI (fMRI) to determine if blast-related TBI has a differential impact on brain activation in comparison with TBI caused primarily by mechanical forces in civilian settings. Four groups participated: (1) blast-related military TBI (milTBI; n=21); (2) military controls (milCON; n=22); (3) non-blast civilian TBI (civTBI; n=21); and (4) civilian controls (civCON; n=23) with orthopedic injuries. Mild to moderate TBI (MTBI) occurred 1 to 6 years before enrollment. Participants completed the Stop Signal Task (SST), a measure of inhibitory control, while undergoing fMRI. Brain activation was evaluated with 2 (mil, civ)×2 (TBI, CON) analyses of variance, corrected for multiple comparisons. During correct inhibitions, fMRI activation was lower in the TBI than CON subjects in regions commonly associated with inhibitory control and the default mode network. In contrast, inhibitory failures showed significant interaction effects in the bilateral inferior temporal, left superior temporal, caudate, and cerebellar regions. Specifically, the milTBI group demonstrated more activation than the milCON group when failing to inhibit; in contrast, the civTBI group exhibited less activation than the civCON group. Covariance analyses controlling for the effects of education and self-reported psychological symptoms did not alter the brain activation findings. These results indicate that the chronic effects of TBI are associated with abnormal brain activation during successful response inhibition. During failed inhibition, the pattern of activation distinguished military from civilian TBI, suggesting that blast-related TBI has a unique effect on brain function that can be distinguished from TBI resulting from mechanical forces associated with sports or motor vehicle accidents. The implications of these findings for diagnosis and treatment of TBI are discussed.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 2008

Effects of Traumatic Brain Injury on Working Memory-Related Brain Activation in Adolescents

Mary R. Newsome; Joel L. Steinberg; Randall S. Scheibel; Maya Troyanskaya; Z. Chu; Gerri Hanten; Hanzhang Lu; Summer Lane; Xiaodi Lin; Jill V. Hunter; Carmen Vasquez; Jennifer Zientz; Xiaoqi Li; Elisabeth A. Wilde; Harvey S. Levin

Eight adolescents (ages 13-18 years) who sustained traumatic brain injury (TBI) and eight gender- and age-matched typically developing (TD) adolescents underwent event-related functional MRI (fMRI) while performing a Sternberg letter recognition task. Encoding, maintenance, and retrieval were examined with memory loads of one or four items during imaging. Both groups performed above a 70% accuracy criterion and did not differ in performance. TD adolescents showed greater increase in frontal and parietal activation during high-load relative to low-load maintenance than the TBI group. The TBI patients showed greater increase in activation during high-load relative to low-load encoding and retrieval than the TD group. Results from this preliminary study suggest that the capability to differentially allocate neural resources according to memory load is disrupted by TBI for the maintenance subcomponent of working memory. The overrecruitment of frontal and extrafrontal regions during encoding and retrieval following TBI may represent a compensatory process.

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Harvey S. Levin

Baylor College of Medicine

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Xiaoqi Li

Baylor College of Medicine

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Jill V. Hunter

Baylor College of Medicine

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Maya Troyanskaya

Baylor College of Medicine

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Joel L. Steinberg

Virginia Commonwealth University

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Gerri Hanten

Baylor College of Medicine

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Erin D. Bigler

Brigham Young University

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Xiaodi Lin

Baylor College of Medicine

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