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Dive into the research topics where Ryan Hopson is active.

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Featured researches published by Ryan Hopson.


NeuroImage | 2014

Neuroimaging of the Philadelphia neurodevelopmental cohort.

Theodore D. Satterthwaite; Mark A. Elliott; Kosha Ruparel; James Loughead; Karthik Prabhakaran; Monica E. Calkins; Ryan Hopson; Chad T. Jackson; Jack R. Keefe; Marisa Riley; Frank D. Mentch; Patrick Sleiman; Ragini Verma; Christos Davatzikos; Hakon Hakonarson; Ruben C. Gur; Raquel E. Gur

The Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort (PNC) is a large-scale, NIMH funded initiative to understand how brain maturation mediates cognitive development and vulnerability to psychiatric illness, and understand how genetics impacts this process. As part of this study, 1445 adolescents ages 8-21 at enrollment underwent multimodal neuroimaging. Here, we highlight the conceptual basis for the effort, the study design, and the measures available in the dataset. We focus on neuroimaging measures obtained, including T1-weighted structural neuroimaging, diffusion tensor imaging, perfusion neuroimaging using arterial spin labeling, functional imaging tasks of working memory and emotion identification, and resting state imaging of functional connectivity. Furthermore, we provide characteristics regarding the final sample acquired. Finally, we describe mechanisms in place for data sharing that will allow the PNC to become a freely available public resource to advance our understanding of normal and pathological brain development.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Functional Maturation of the Executive System during Adolescence

Theodore D. Satterthwaite; Daniel H. Wolf; Guray Erus; Kosha Ruparel; Mark A. Elliott; Efstathios D. Gennatas; Ryan Hopson; Chad R. Jackson; Karthik Prabhakaran; Warren B. Bilker; Monica E. Calkins; James Loughead; Alex J. Smith; David R. Roalf; Hakon Hakonarson; Ragini Verma; Christos Davatzikos; Ruben C. Gur; Raquel E. Gur

Adolescence is characterized by rapid development of executive function. Working memory (WM) is a key element of executive function, but it is not known what brain changes during adolescence allow improved WM performance. Using a fractal n-back fMRI paradigm, we investigated brain responses to WM load in 951 human youths aged 8–22 years. Compared with more limited associations with age, WM performance was robustly associated with both executive network activation and deactivation of the default mode network. Multivariate patterns of brain activation predicted task performance with a high degree of accuracy, and also mediated the observed age-related improvements in WM performance. These results delineate a process of functional maturation of the executive system, and suggest that this process allows for the improvement of cognitive capability seen during adolescence.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Impact of puberty on the evolution of cerebral perfusion during adolescence

Theodore D. Satterthwaite; Russell T. Shinohara; Daniel H. Wolf; Ryan Hopson; Mark A. Elliott; Simon N. Vandekar; Kosha Ruparel; Monica E. Calkins; David R. Roalf; Efstathios D. Gennatas; Chad R. Jackson; Guray Erus; Karthik Prabhakaran; Christos Davatzikos; John A. Detre; Hakon Hakonarson; Ruben C. Gur; Raquel E. Gur

Significance Blood perfusion is a fundamental property of brain physiology and is known to be higher in adult females than in males. However, it is unknown when such a sex difference emerges during the lifespan, or what biological processes may cause it. In the largest study of brain perfusion yet reported, we establish for the first time to our knowledge that patterns of development of cerebral perfusion during adolescence are markedly different in males and females, and such differences are attributable in part to the effects of puberty. These results may have important implications for neuropsychiatric disorders with adolescent onset and strong gender disparities, such as mood disorders, anxiety disorders, and schizophrenia. Puberty is the defining biological process of adolescent development, yet its effects on fundamental properties of brain physiology such as cerebral blood flow (CBF) have never been investigated. Capitalizing on a sample of 922 youths ages 8–22 y imaged using arterial spin labeled MRI as part of the Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort, we studied normative developmental differences in cerebral perfusion in males and females, as well as specific associations between puberty and CBF. Males and females had conspicuously divergent nonlinear trajectories in CBF evolution with development as modeled by penalized splines. Seventeen brain regions, including hubs of the executive and default mode networks, showed a robust nonlinear age-by-sex interaction that surpassed Bonferroni correction. Notably, within these regions the decline in CBF was similar between males and females in early puberty and only diverged in midpuberty, with CBF actually increasing in females. Taken together, these results delineate sex-specific growth curves for CBF during youth and for the first time to our knowledge link such differential patterns of development to the effects of puberty.


NeuroImage | 2016

The impact of quality assurance assessment on diffusion tensor imaging outcomes in a large-scale population-based cohort.

David R. Roalf; Megan Quarmley; Mark A. Elliott; Theodore D. Satterthwaite; Simon N. Vandekar; Kosha Ruparel; Efstathios D. Gennatas; Monica E. Calkins; Tyler M. Moore; Ryan Hopson; Karthik Prabhakaran; Chad T. Jackson; Ragini Verma; Hakon Hakonarson; Ruben C. Gur; Raquel E. Gur

BACKGROUND Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is applied in investigation of brain biomarkers for neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative disorders. However, the quality of DTI measurements, like other neuroimaging techniques, is susceptible to several confounding factors (e.g., motion, eddy currents), which have only recently come under scrutiny. These confounds are especially relevant in adolescent samples where data quality may be compromised in ways that confound interpretation of maturation parameters. The current study aims to leverage DTI data from the Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort (PNC), a sample of 1601 youths with ages of 8-21 who underwent neuroimaging, to: 1) establish quality assurance (QA) metrics for the automatic identification of poor DTI image quality; 2) examine the performance of these QA measures in an external validation sample; 3) document the influence of data quality on developmental patterns of typical DTI metrics. METHODS All diffusion-weighted images were acquired on the same scanner. Visual QA was performed on all subjects completing DTI; images were manually categorized as Poor, Good, or Excellent. Four image quality metrics were automatically computed and used to predict manual QA status: Mean voxel intensity outlier count (MEANVOX), Maximum voxel intensity outlier count (MAXVOX), mean relative motion (MOTION) and temporal signal-to-noise ratio (TSNR). Classification accuracy for each metric was calculated as the area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve (AUC). A threshold was generated for each measure that best differentiated visual QA status and applied in a validation sample. The effects of data quality on sensitivity to expected age effects in this developmental sample were then investigated using the traditional MRI diffusion metrics: fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD). Finally, our method of QA is compared with DTIPrep. RESULTS TSNR (AUC=0.94) best differentiated Poor data from Good and Excellent data. MAXVOX (AUC=0.88) best differentiated Good from Excellent DTI data. At the optimal threshold, 88% of Poor data and 91% Good/Excellent data were correctly identified. Use of these thresholds on a validation dataset (n=374) indicated high accuracy. In the validation sample 83% of Poor data and 94% of Excellent data was identified using thresholds derived from the training sample. Both FA and MD were affected by the inclusion of poor data in an analysis of an age, sex and race matched comparison sample. In addition, we show that the inclusion of poor data results in significant attenuation of the correlation between diffusion metrics (FA and MD) and age during a critical neurodevelopmental period. We find higher correspondence between our QA method and DTIPrep for Poor data, but we find our method to be more robust for apparently high-quality images. CONCLUSION Automated QA of DTI can facilitate large-scale, high-throughput quality assurance by reliably identifying both scanner and subject induced imaging artifacts. The results present a practical example of the confounding effects of artifacts on DTI analysis in a large population-based sample, and suggest that estimates of data quality should not only be reported but also accounted for in data analysis, especially in studies of development.


NeuroImage | 2016

The Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort: A publicly available resource for the study of normal and abnormal brain development in youth.

Theodore D. Satterthwaite; John J. Connolly; Kosha Ruparel; Monica E. Calkins; Chad T. Jackson; Mark A. Elliott; David R. Roalf; Ryan Hopson; Karthik Prabhakaran; Meckenzie Behr; Haijun Qiu; Frank D. Mentch; Rosetta M. Chiavacci; Patrick Sleiman; Ruben C. Gur; Hakon Hakonarson; Raquel E. Gur

The Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort (PNC) is a large-scale study of child development that combines neuroimaging, diverse clinical and cognitive phenotypes, and genomics. Data from this rich resource is now publicly available through the Database of Genotypes and Phenotypes (dbGaP). Here we focus on the data from the PNC that is available through dbGaP and describe how users can access this data, which is evolving to be a significant resource for the broader neuroscience community for studies of normal and abnormal neurodevelopment.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2015

Working Memory-Related Neural Activity Predicts Future Smoking Relapse

James Loughead; E. Paul Wileyto; Kosha Ruparel; Mary Falcone; Ryan Hopson; Ruben C. Gur; Caryn Lerman

Brief abstinence from smoking impairs cognition, particularly executive function, and this has a role in relapse to smoking. This study examined whether working memory-related brain activity predicts subsequent smoking relapse above and beyond standard clinical and behavioral measures. Eighty treatment-seeking smokers completed two functional magnetic resonance imaging sessions (smoking satiety vs 24 h abstinence challenge) during performance of a visual N-back task. Brief counseling and a short-term quit attempt followed. Relapse during the first 7 days was biochemically confirmed by the presence of the nicotine metabolite cotinine. Mean percent blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal change was extracted from a priori regions of interest: bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), medial frontal/cingulate gyrus, posterior cingulate cortex (PCC), and ventromedial prefrontal cortex. Signal from these brain regions and additional clinical measures were used to model outcome status, which was then validated with resampling techniques. Relapse to smoking was predicted by increased withdrawal symptoms, decreased left DLPFC and increased PCC BOLD percent signal change (abstinence vs smoking satiety). Receiver operating characteristic analysis demonstrated 81% area under the curve using these predictors, a significant improvement over the model with clinical variables only. The combination of abstinence-induced decreases in left DLPFC activation and reduced suppression of PCC may be a prognostic marker for poor outcome, specifically early smoking relapse.


JAMA Psychiatry | 2015

Functional Neuroimaging Abnormalities in Youth With Psychosis Spectrum Symptoms

Daniel H. Wolf; Theodore D. Satterthwaite; Monica E. Calkins; Kosha Ruparel; Mark A. Elliott; Ryan Hopson; Chad T. Jackson; Karthik Prabhakaran; Warren B. Bilker; Hakon Hakonarson; Ruben C. Gur; Raquel E. Gur

IMPORTANCE The continuum view of the psychosis spectrum (PS) implies that, in population-based samples, PS symptoms should be associated with neural abnormalities similar to those found in help-seeking clinical risk individuals and in schizophrenia. To our knowledge, functional neuroimaging has not previously been applied in large population-based PS samples and can help us understand the neural architecture of psychosis more broadly and identify brain phenotypes beyond symptoms that are associated with the extended psychosis phenotype. OBJECTIVE To examine the categorical and dimensional relationships of PS symptoms to prefrontal hypoactivation during working memory and to amygdala hyperactivation during threat emotion processing. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS The Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort is a genotyped, prospectively accrued, population-based sample of almost 10,000 youths who received a structured psychiatric evaluation and a computerized neurocognitive battery. The study was conducted at an academic and childrens hospital health care network, between November 1, 2009 to November 30, 2011. A subsample of 1445 youths underwent neuroimaging, including functional magnetic resonance imaging tasks examined herein. Participants were youth aged 11 to 22 years old identified through structured interview as having PS features (PS group) (n = 260) and typically developing (TD) comparison youth without significant psychopathology (TD group) (n = 220). MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Two functional magnetic resonance imaging paradigms were used: a fractal n-back working memory task probing executive system function and an emotion identification task probing amygdala responses to threatening faces. RESULTS In the n-back task, working memory evoked lower activation in the PS group than the TD group throughout the executive control circuitry, including dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (cluster-corrected P < .05). Within the PS group, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex activation correlated with cognitive deficits (r = .32, P < .001), but no correlation was found with positive symptom severity. During emotion identification, PS demonstrated elevated responses to threatening facial expressions in amygdala, as well as left fusiform cortex and right middle frontal gyrus (cluster-corrected P < .05). The response in the amygdala correlated with positive symptom severity (r = .16, P = .01) but not with cognitive deficits. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE The pattern of functional abnormalities observed in the PS group is similar to that previously found in schizophrenia and help-seeking risk samples. Specific circuit dysfunction during cognitive and emotion-processing tasks is present early in the development of psychopathology and herein could not be attributed to chronic illness or medication confounds. Hypoactivation in executive circuitry and limbic hyperactivation to threat could reflect partly independent risk factors for PS symptoms, with the former relating to cognitive deficits that increase the risk for developing psychotic symptoms and the latter contributing directly to positive psychotic symptoms.


American Journal of Psychiatry | 2016

Common and Dissociable Mechanisms of Executive System Dysfunction Across Psychiatric Disorders in Youth.

Sheila Shanmugan; Daniel H. Wolf; Monica E. Calkins; Tyler M. Moore; Kosha Ruparel; Ryan Hopson; Simon N. Vandekar; David R. Roalf; Mark A. Elliott; Chad R. Jackson; Efstathios D. Gennatas; Ellen Leibenluft; Daniel S. Pine; Russell T. Shinohara; Hakon Hakonarson; Ruben C. Gur; Raquel E. Gur; Theodore D. Satterthwaite

OBJECTIVE Disruption of executive function is present in many neuropsychiatric disorders. However, determining the specificity of executive dysfunction across these disorders is challenging given high comorbidity of conditions. Here the authors investigate executive system deficits in association with dimensions of psychiatric symptoms in youth using a working memory paradigm. The authors hypothesize that common and dissociable patterns of dysfunction would be present. METHOD The authors studied 1,129 youths who completed a fractal n-back task during functional magnetic resonance imaging at 3-T as part of the Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort. Factor scores of clinical psychopathology were calculated using an item-wise confirmatory bifactor model, describing overall psychopathology as well as four orthogonal dimensions of symptoms: anxious-misery (mood and anxiety), behavioral disturbance (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and conduct disorder), psychosis-spectrum symptoms, and fear (phobias). The effect of psychopathology dimensions on behavioral performance and executive system recruitment (2-back > 0-back) was examined using both multivariate (matrix regression) and mass-univariate (linear regression) analyses. RESULTS Overall psychopathology was associated with both abnormal multivariate patterns of activation and a failure to activate executive regions within the cingulo-opercular control network, including the frontal pole, cingulate cortex, and anterior insula. In addition, psychosis-spectrum symptoms were associated with hypoactivation of the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, whereas behavioral symptoms were associated with hypoactivation of the frontoparietal cortex and cerebellum. In contrast, anxious-misery symptoms were associated with widespread hyperactivation of the executive network. CONCLUSIONS These findings provide novel evidence that common and dissociable deficits within the brains executive system are present in association with dimensions of psychopathology in youth.


Obesity | 2016

Changes in neural responsivity to highly palatable foods following roux‐en‐Y gastric bypass, sleeve gastrectomy, or weight stability: An fMRI study

Lucy F. Faulconbridge; Kosha Ruparel; James Loughead; Kelly C. Allison; Louise A. Hesson; Anthony N. Fabricatore; Amber Rochette; Scott Ritter; Ryan Hopson; David B. Sarwer; Noel N. Williams; Allan Geliebter; Ruben C. Gur; Thomas A. Wadden

This prospective, observational fMRI study examined changes over time in blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) response to high‐ and low‐calorie foods (HCF and LCF) in bariatric surgery candidates and weight‐stable controls.


Biological Psychiatry | 2016

Elevated Amygdala Perfusion Mediates Developmental Sex Differences in Trait Anxiety

Antonia N. Kaczkurkin; Tyler M. Moore; Kosha Ruparel; Rastko Ciric; Monica E. Calkins; Russell T. Shinohara; Mark A. Elliott; Ryan Hopson; David R. Roalf; Simon N. Vandekar; Efstathios D. Gennatas; Daniel H. Wolf; J. Cobb Scott; Daniel S. Pine; Ellen Leibenluft; John A. Detre; Edna B. Foa; Raquel E. Gur; Ruben C. Gur; Theodore D. Satterthwaite

BACKGROUND Adolescence is a critical period for emotional maturation and is a time when clinically significant symptoms of anxiety and depression increase, particularly in females. However, few studies relate developmental differences in symptoms of anxiety and depression to brain development. Cerebral blood flow is one brain phenotype that is known to have marked developmental sex differences. METHODS We investigated whether developmental sex differences in cerebral blood flow mediated sex differences in anxiety and depression symptoms by capitalizing on a large sample of 875 youths who completed cross-sectional imaging as part of the Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort. Perfusion was quantified on a voxelwise basis using arterial spin-labeled magnetic resonance imaging at 3T. Perfusion images were related to trait and state anxiety using general additive models with penalized splines, while controlling for gray matter density on a voxelwise basis. Clusters found to be related to anxiety were evaluated for interactions with age, sex, and puberty. RESULTS Trait anxiety was associated with elevated perfusion in a network of regions including the amygdala, anterior insula, and fusiform cortex, even after accounting for prescan state anxiety. Notably, these relationships strengthened with age and the transition through puberty. Moreover, higher trait anxiety in postpubertal females was mediated by elevated perfusion of the left amygdala. CONCLUSIONS Taken together, these results demonstrate that differences in the evolution of cerebral perfusion during adolescence may be a critical element of the affective neurobiological characteristics underlying sex differences in anxiety and mood symptoms.

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Kosha Ruparel

University of Pennsylvania

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Ruben C. Gur

University of Washington

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Theodore D. Satterthwaite

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Mark A. Elliott

University of Pennsylvania

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Raquel E. Gur

University of Pennsylvania

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David R. Roalf

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Monica E. Calkins

University of Pennsylvania

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Hakon Hakonarson

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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James Loughead

University of Pennsylvania

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