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Featured researches published by Patricia J. Pardo.


Journal of Neural Engineering | 2007

Synchronous neural interactions assessed by magnetoencephalography: a functional biomarker for brain disorders

Apostolos P. Georgopoulos; Elissaios Karageorgiou; Arthur C. Leuthold; Scott M. Lewis; Joshua Lynch; Aurelio A. Alonso; Zaheer Aslam; Adam F. Carpenter; Angeliki Georgopoulos; Laura S. Hemmy; Ioannis G. Koutlas; Frederick J. P. Langheim; J. Riley McCarten; Susan E. McPherson; José V. Pardo; Patricia J. Pardo; Gareth Parry; Susan Rottunda; Barbara M. Segal; Scott R. Sponheim; John J. Stanwyck; Massoud Stephane; Joseph Westermeyer

We report on a test to assess the dynamic brain function at high temporal resolution using magnetoencephalography (MEG). The essence of the test is the measurement of the dynamic synchronous neural interactions, an essential aspect of the brain function. MEG signals were recorded from 248 axial gradiometers while 142 human subjects fixated a spot of light for 45-60 s. After fitting an autoregressive integrative moving average (ARIMA) model and taking the stationary residuals, all pairwise, zero-lag, partial cross-correlations (PCC(ij)(0)) and their z-transforms (z(ij)(0)) between i and j sensors were calculated, providing estimates of the strength and sign (positive, negative) of direct synchronous coupling at 1 ms temporal resolution. We found that subsets of z(ij)(0) successfully classified individual subjects to their respective groups (multiple sclerosis, Alzheimers disease, schizophrenia, Sjögrens syndrome, chronic alcoholism, facial pain, healthy controls) and gave excellent external cross-validation results.


Neuroscience Letters | 1997

PET study of the localization and laterality of lingual somatosensory processing in humans

José V. Pardo; Timothy D Wood; Patricia Costello; Patricia J. Pardo; Joel T. Lee

Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was measured using positron emission tomography (PET) during four tasks in right-handed volunteers with eyes closed: resting, protruding the tongue, stroking the left side of the protruding tongue, and stroking the right side of the protruding tongue. The primary somatosensory tongue representation (S1) mapped to the contralateral central sulcus (Brodmann (BA) 3/4) at approximately 28 mm above the intercommissural plane. Of note, stimulation of the left side of the tongue produced also an ipsilateral S1 response. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) of rCBF at S1 across all four conditions yielded only a significant effect for tongue stimulation, with no effect of laterality; the usually large asymmetries (contralateral >> ipsilateral) in S1 did not surface. We hypothesize that this atypical activation pattern arises from the tongues specialization for language.


Experimental Brain Research | 2005

Cognitive dimensions of orthographic stimuli affect occipitotemporal dynamics

Tony W. Wilson; Arthur C. Leuthold; Scott M. Lewis; Apostolos P. Georgopoulos; Patricia J. Pardo

Previous research documented letter-string specific cortices in the ventral visual stream near the left occipitotemporal junction (i.e., anterior fusiform gyrus). These neural areas potentially code the perceptual elements comprising orthographic stimuli, and thus function as feature detectors in high-level vision. While abundant evidence supports this region’s role in detecting isomorphic perceptual features, any influence cognitive dimensions (e.g., the lexicality of letter-strings) may play in modulating this area’s processing remains an open question. To investigate this, we examined the spatiotemporal dynamics of high-density magnetoencephalographic signals, recorded as subjects completed a rhyme-judgment task on stimuli varying in the cognitive property of lexicality. Our data demonstrate that the time course of occipitotemporal cortices discriminates cognitive attributes of orthographic stimuli. The dynamics in this brain region may indicate interactive processes unfolding later in the time course, when more anterior fronto-temporal circuits are activated by semantic correlates of real words.


Archive | 2008

Neuroimaging in Psychiatry

Patricia J. Pardo; Cheryl A. Olman; José V. Pardo

The tools of neuroimaging continue to improve at a rapid pace. Each technique possesses strengths and limitations. The various techniques each offer unique information. To fully understand the biological substrates of psychiatric disease, multiple neuroimaging and neurophysiological techniques must continue to develop and flourish. The goal of this chapter is to provide a solid understanding of methods frequently used in neuroimaging and neurophysiology.


Archives of General Psychiatry | 1988

Asymmetries in Hemispheric Control of Attention in Schizophrenia.

Michael I. Posner; Terrance S Early; Eric M. Reiman; Patricia J. Pardo; Meena Dhawan


American Journal of Psychiatry | 1993

Neural correlates of self-induced dysphoria

José V. Pardo; Patricia J. Pardo; Marcus E. Raichle


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2006

Neurocognitive dysfunction in antidepressant-free, non-elderly patients with unipolar depression: Alerting and covert orienting of visuospatial attention

José V. Pardo; Patricia J. Pardo; Steven W. Humes; Michael I. Posner


Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2000

Genetic and state variables of neurocognitive dysfunction in schizophrenia: a twin study.

Patricia J. Pardo; Mary Ann Knesevich; George P. Vogler; José V. Pardo; Bradford Towne; C. Robert Cloninger; Michael I. Posner


Schizophrenia Research | 2006

Classification of adolescent psychotic disorders using linear discriminant analysis

Patricia J. Pardo; Apostolos P. Georgopoulos; John T. Kenny; Traci A. Stuve; Robert L. Findling; S. Charles Schulz


Journal of Psychiatry & Neuroscience | 2006

About the mechanisms of auditory verbal hallucinations: a positron emission tomographic study.

Massoud Stephane; Matthew C. Hagen; Joel T. Lee; Jonathan Uecker; Patricia J. Pardo; Michael A. Kuskowski; José V. Pardo

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Joel T. Lee

University of Minnesota

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