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Dive into the research topics where Ruben Miranda is active.

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Featured researches published by Ruben Miranda.


American Journal of Psychiatry | 2015

The Brain's Response to Reward Anticipation and Depression in Adolescence: Dimensionality, Specificity, and Longitudinal Predictions in a Community-Based Sample.

Argyris Stringaris; Pablo Vidal-Ribas Belil; Eric Artiges; Hervé Lemaitre; Fanny Gollier-Briant; Selina Wolke; Hélène Vulser; Ruben Miranda; Jani Penttilä; Maren Struve; Tahmine Fadai; Viola Kappel; Yvonne Grimmer; Robert Goodman; Luise Poustka; Patricia J. Conrod; Anna Cattrell; Tobias Banaschewski; Arun L.W. Bokde; Uli Bromberg; Christian Büchel; Herta Flor; Vincent Frouin; Juergen Gallinat; Hugh Garavan; Penny A. Gowland; Andreas Heinz; Bernd Ittermann; Frauke Nees; Dimitri Papadopoulos

OBJECTIVE The authors examined whether alterations in the brains reward network operate as a mechanism across the spectrum of risk for depression. They then tested whether these alterations are specific to anhedonia as compared with low mood and whether they are predictive of depressive outcomes. METHOD Functional MRI was used to collect blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) responses to anticipation of reward in the monetary incentive task in 1,576 adolescents in a community-based sample. Adolescents with current subthreshold depression and clinical depression were compared with matched healthy subjects. In addition, BOLD responses were compared across adolescents with anhedonia, low mood, or both symptoms, cross-sectionally and longitudinally. RESULTS Activity in the ventral striatum was reduced in participants with subthreshold and clinical depression relative to healthy comparison subjects. Low ventral striatum activation predicted transition to subthreshold or clinical depression in previously healthy adolescents at 2-year follow-up. Brain responses during reward anticipation decreased in a graded manner between healthy adolescents, adolescents with current or future subthreshold depression, and adolescents with current or future clinical depression. Low ventral striatum activity was associated with anhedonia but not low mood; however, the combined presence of both symptoms showed the strongest reductions in the ventral striatum in all analyses. CONCLUSIONS The findings suggest that reduced striatal activation operates as a mechanism across the risk spectrum for depression. It is associated with anhedonia in healthy adolescents and is a behavioral indicator of positive valence systems, consistent with predictions based on the Research Domain Criteria.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2014

White-matter microstructure and gray-matter volumes in adolescents with subthreshold bipolar symptoms

M-L Paillère Martinot; Hervé Lemaitre; Eric Artiges; Ruben Miranda; Robert Goodman; Jani Penttilä; Maren Struve; Tahmine Fadai; Viola Kappel; Luise Poustka; Patricia J. Conrod; Tobias Banaschewski; A Barbot; Gareth J. Barker; Christian Büchel; Herta Flor; J. Gallinat; Hugh Garavan; Andreas Heinz; Bernd Ittermann; Claire Lawrence; Eva Loth; Karl Mann; Tomáš Paus; Zdenka Pausova; Marcella Rietschel; Trevor W. Robbins; Michael N. Smolka; Gunter Schumann; J.-L. Martinot

Abnormalities in white-matter (WM) microstructure, as lower fractional anisotropy (FA), have been reported in adolescent-onset bipolar disorder and in youth at familial risk for bipolarity. We sought to determine whether healthy adolescents with subthreshold bipolar symptoms (SBP) would have early WM microstructural alterations and whether those alterations would be associated with differences in gray-matter (GM) volumes. Forty-two adolescents with three core manic symptoms and no psychiatric diagnosis, and 126 adolescents matched by age and sex, with no psychiatric diagnosis or symptoms, were identified after screening the IMAGEN database of 2223 young adolescents recruited from the general population. After image quality control, voxel-wise statistics were performed on the diffusion parameters using tract-based spatial statistics in 25 SBP adolescents and 77 controls, and on GM and WM images using voxel-based morphometry in 30 SBP adolescents and 106 controls. As compared with healthy controls, adolescents with SBP displayed lower FA values in a number of WM tracts, particularly in the corpus callosum, cingulum, bilateral superior and inferior longitudinal fasciculi, uncinate fasciculi and corticospinal tracts. Radial diffusivity was mainly higher in posterior parts of bilateral superior and inferior longitudinal fasciculi, inferior fronto-occipital fasciculi and right cingulum. As compared with controls, SBP adolescents had lower GM volume in the left anterior cingulate region. This is the first study to investigate WM microstructure and GM morphometric variations in adolescents with SBP. The widespread FA alterations in association and projection tracts, associated with GM changes in regions involved in mood disorders, suggest altered structural connectivity in those adolescents.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Sleep habits, academic performance, and the adolescent brain structure

Anna S. Urrila; Eric Artiges; Jessica Massicotte; Ruben Miranda; Hélène Vulser; Pauline Bézivin-Frere; Winok Lapidaire; Hervé Lemaitre; Jani Penttilä; Patricia J. Conrod; Hugh Garavan; Marie-Laure Paillère Martinot; Jean-Luc Martinot; Tobias Banaschewski; Herta Flor; Mira Fauth-Bühler; Louise Poutska; Frauke Nees; Yvonne Grimmer; Maren Struve; Andeas Heinz; Andreas Ströhle; Viola Kappel; Betteke Maria van Noort; Jean-Baptiste Poline; Yanick Schwartz; Benjamin Thyreau; James Ireland; John A. Rogers; Nadège Bordas

Here we report the first and most robust evidence about how sleep habits are associated with regional brain grey matter volumes and school grade average in early adolescence. Shorter time in bed during weekdays, and later weekend sleeping hours correlate with smaller brain grey matter volumes in frontal, anterior cingulate, and precuneus cortex regions. Poor school grade average associates with later weekend bedtime and smaller grey matter volumes in medial brain regions. The medial prefrontal - anterior cingulate cortex appears most tightly related to the adolescents’ variations in sleep habits, as its volume correlates inversely with both weekend bedtime and wake up time, and also with poor school performance. These findings suggest that sleep habits, notably during the weekends, have an alarming link with both the structure of the adolescent brain and school performance, and thus highlight the need for informed interventions.


American Journal of Psychiatry | 2018

Early Variations in White Matter Microstructure and Depression Outcome in Adolescents With Subthreshold Depression

Hélène Vulser; Marie-Laure Paillère Martinot; Eric Artiges; Ruben Miranda; Jani Penttilä; Yvonne Grimmer; Betteke M. van Noort; Argyris Stringaris; Maren Struve; Tahmine Fadai; Viola Kappel; Robert Goodman; Eleni T. Tzavara; Charbel Massaad; Tobias Banaschewski; Gareth J. Barker; Arun L.W. Bokde; Uli Bromberg; Rüdiger Brühl; Christian Büchel; Anna Cattrell; Patricia J. Conrod; Sylvane Desrivières; Herta Flor; Vincent Frouin; Juergen Gallinat; Hugh Garavan; Penny Gowland; Andreas Heinz; Frauke Nees

OBJECTIVE: White matter microstructure alterations have recently been associated with depressive episodes during adolescence, but it is unknown whether they predate depression. The authors investigated whether subthreshold depression in adolescence is associated with white matter microstructure variations and whether they relate to depression outcome. METHOD: Adolescents with subthreshold depression (N=96) and healthy control subjects (N=336) drawn from a community-based cohort were compared using diffusion tensor imaging and whole brain tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) at age 14 to assess white matter microstructure. They were followed up at age 16 to assess depression. Probabilistic tractography was used to reconstruct white matter streamlines spreading from the regions identified in the TBSS analysis and along bundles implicated in emotion regulation, the uncinate fasciculus and the cingulum. The authors searched for mediating effects of white matter microstructure on the relationship between baseline subthreshold depression and depression at follow-up, and then explored the specificity of the findings. RESULTS: Lower fractional anisotropy (FA) and higher radial diffusivity were found in the anterior corpus callosum in the adolescents with subthreshold depression. Tractography analysis showed that they also had lower FA in the right cingulum streamlines, along with lower FA and higher mean diffusivity in tracts connecting the corpus callosum to the anterior cingulate cortex. The relation between subthreshold depression at baseline and depression at follow-up was mediated by FA values in the latter tracts, and lower FA values in those tracts distinctively predicted higher individual risk for depression. CONCLUSIONS: Early FA variations in tracts projecting from the corpus callosum to the anterior cingulate cortex may denote a higher risk of transition to depression in adolescents.


European Psychiatry | 2013

2177 – Neuroanatomical changes associated with subthreshold depression in adolescents

Hélène Vulser; Marie-Laure Paillère-Martinot; Hervé Lemaitre; Ruben Miranda; Eric Artiges; Robert Goodman; J. Penttilä; Maren Struve; T. Fadai; Viola Kappel; Luise Poustka; Patricia J. Conrod; Tobias Banaschewski; A. Barbot; Gareth J. Barker; C. Büchel; Herta Flor; J. Gallinat; Hugh Garavan; A. Heinz; Bernd Ittermann; Claire Lawrence; Eva Loth; Karl Mann; T. Paus; Zdenka Pausova; M. Rietschel; Trevor W. Robbins; M. Smolka; G. Schumann

Introduction Although neuroimaging studies suggest brain regional abnormalities in depressive disorders, it remains unclear whether abnormalities are present at illness onset or reflect disease progression. Objectives We hypothesized that cerebral variations were present in adolescents with subthreshold depression known to be at high risk for later full-blown depression. Aims We examined brain structural and diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance images of adolescents with subthreshold depression. Methods The participants were extracted from the European IMAGEN study cohort of healthy adolescents recruited at age 14. Subthreshold depression was defined as a distinct period of abnormally depressed or irritable mood, or loss of interest, plus two or more depressive symptoms but without diagnosis of Major Depressive Episode. Comparisons were performed between adolescents meeting these criteria and control adolescents within the T1-weighted imaging modality (118 and 475 adolescents respectively) using voxel-based morphometry and the diffusion tensor imaging modality (89 ad 422 adolescents respectively) using tract-based spatial statistics. Whole brain analyses were performed with a statistical threshold set to p Results Compared with controls, adolescents with subthreshold depression had smaller gray matter volume in caudate nuclei, medial frontal and cingulate cortices; smaller white matter volume in anterior limb of internal capsules, left forceps minor and right cingulum; and lower fractional anisotropy and higher radial diffusivity in the genu of corpus callosum. Conclusions The findings suggest that adolescents with subthreshold depression have volumetric and microstructural gray and white matter changes in the emotion regulation frontal-striatal-limbic network.


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 2015

Subthreshold Depression and Regional Brain Volumes in Young Community Adolescents

Hélène Vulser; Hervé Lemaitre; Eric Artiges; Ruben Miranda; Jani Penttilä; Maren Struve; Tahmine Fadai; Viola Kappel; Yvonne Grimmer; Robert Goodman; Argyris Stringaris; Luise Poustka; Patricia J. Conrod; Vincent Frouin; Tobias Banaschewski; Gareth J. Barker; Arun L.W. Bokde; Uli Bromberg; Christian Büchel; Herta Flor; Juergen Gallinat; Hugh Garavan; Penny A. Gowland; Andreas Heinz; Bernd Ittermann; Claire Lawrence; Eva Loth; Karl Mann; Frauke Nees; Tomáš Paus


Biological Psychiatry | 2017

111. White Matter Microstructural Variations in Adolescents with Affective Symptoms

Marie-Laure Paillère Martinot; Hélène Vulser; Eric Artiges; Nadège Bourvis; Jean-Pierre Benoit; Marie Douniol; Richard Delorme; David Cohen; Ruben Miranda; Irina Filippi; Jean-Luc Martinot; Hervé Lemaitre


Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience | 2016

Neural correlates of three types of negative life events during angry face processing in adolescents

Fanny Gollier-Briant; Marie-Laure Paillère-Martinot; Hervé Lemaitre; Ruben Miranda; Hélène Vulser; Robert Goodman; Jani Penttilä; Maren Struve; Tahmine Fadai; Viola Kappel; Luise Poustka; Yvonne Grimmer; Uli Bromberg; Patricia J. Conrod; Tobias Banaschewski; Gareth J. Barker; Arun L.W. Bokde; Christian Büchel; Herta Flor; Juergen Gallinat; Hugh Garavan; Andreas Heinz; Claire Lawrence; Karl Mann; Frauke Nees; Tomáš Paus; Zdenka Pausova; Vincent Frouin; Marcella Rietschel; Trevor W. Robbins


European Psychiatry | 2013

Vulnérabilité aux troubles de l'humeur à l'adolescence

Marie-Laure Paillère-Martinot; Hervé Lemaitre; Hélène Vulser; Eric Artiges; Ruben Miranda; J.-L. Martinot


Encephale-revue De Psychiatrie Clinique Biologique Et Therapeutique | 2012

Subdépression au collège : études en imagerie structurale

M.-L. Paillere-Martinot; Hervé Lemaitre; Hélène Vulser; Eric Artiges; Ruben Miranda; Gunter Schumann; J.-L. Martinot

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Luise Poustka

Medical University of Vienna

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