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Dive into the research topics where Sephira G. Ryman is active.

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Featured researches published by Sephira G. Ryman.


NeuroImage | 2014

Sex differences in the relationship between white matter connectivity and creativity.

Sephira G. Ryman; Martijn P. van den Heuvel; Ronald A. Yeo; Arvind Caprihan; Jessica Carrasco; Andrei A. Vakhtin; Ranee A. Flores; Christopher Wertz; Rex E. Jung

Creative cognition emerges from a complex network of interacting brain regions. This study investigated the relationship between the structural organization of the human brain and aspects of creative cognition tapped by divergent thinking tasks. Diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) was used to obtain fiber tracts from 83 segmented cortical regions. This information was represented as a network and metrics of connectivity organization, including connectivity strength, clustering and communication efficiency were computed, and their relationship to individual levels of creativity was examined. Permutation testing identified significant sex differences in the relationship between global connectivity and creativity as measured by divergent thinking tests. Females demonstrated significant inverse relationships between global connectivity and creative cognition, whereas there were no significant relationships observed in males. Node specific analyses revealed inverse relationships across measures of connectivity, efficiency, clustering and creative cognition in widespread regions in females. Our findings suggest that females involve more regions of the brain in processing to produce novel ideas to solutions, perhaps at the expense of efficiency (greater path lengths). Males, in contrast, exhibited few, relatively weak positive relationships across these measures. Extending recent observations of sex differences in connectome structure, our findings of sexually dimorphic relationships suggest a unique topological organization of connectivity underlying the generation of novel ideas in males and females.


Aids and Behavior | 2016

Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience of Adolescent Sexual Risk and Alcohol Use

Sarah W. Feldstein Ewing; Sephira G. Ryman; Arielle S. Gillman; Barbara J. Weiland; Rachel E. Thayer; Angela D. Bryan

Abstract Human adolescents engage in very high rates of unprotected sex. This behavior has a high potential for unintended, serious, and sustained health consequences including HIV/AIDS. Despite these serious health consequences, we know little about the neural and cognitive factors that influence adolescents’ decision-making around sex, and their potential overlap with behaviorally co-occurring risk behaviors, including alcohol use. Thus, in this review, we evaluate the developmental neuroscience of sexual risk and alcohol use for human adolescents with an eye to relevant prevention and intervention implications.ResumenAdolescentes humanos participan en muy altas tasas de relaciones sexuales sin protección. Este comportamiento tiene un alto potencial de consecuencias para la salud que no están intencionales, y que son severos y sostenidos, incluyendo VIH/SIDA. A pesar de estos consecuencias para la salud, sabemos muy poco de los factores neurales y cognitivos que influyen los decisiones de comportamiento sexual y la coincidencia potencial de estos mechanismos con los que forman la base de comportamientos de riesgo que son fuertemente asociadas con relaciones sexuales sin protección, incluyendo el uso del alcohol. Así, en esto revisión, evaluamos la neurociencia del desarrollo del riesgo sexual y el uso de alcohol en adolescentes humanos poniendo el acento en las implicaciones de prevención y intervención pertinentes.


Human Brain Mapping | 2015

Subcortical intelligence: Caudate volume predicts IQ in healthy adults

Rachael G. Grazioplene; Sephira G. Ryman; Jeremy R. Gray; Aldo Rustichini; Rex E. Jung; Colin G. DeYoung

This study examined the association between size of the caudate nuclei and intelligence. Based on the central role of the caudate in learning, as well as neuroimaging studies linking greater caudate volume to better attentional function, verbal ability, and dopamine receptor availability, we hypothesized the existence of a positive association between intelligence and caudate volume in three large independent samples of healthy adults (total N = 517). Regression of IQ onto bilateral caudate volume controlling for age, sex, and total brain volume indicated a significant positive correlation between caudate volume and intelligence, with a comparable magnitude of effect across each of the three samples. No other subcortical structures were independently associated with IQ, suggesting a specific biological link between caudate morphology and intelligence. Hum Brain Mapp 36:1407–1416, 2015.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2015

Quantity yields quality when it comes to creativity: a brain and behavioral test of the equal-odds rule

Rex E. Jung; Christopher J. Wertz; Christine Meadows; Sephira G. Ryman; Andrei A. Vakhtin; Ranee A. Flores

The creativity research community is in search of a viable cognitive measure providing support for behavioral observations that higher ideational output is often associated with higher creativity (known as the equal-odds rule). One such measure has included divergent thinking: the production of many examples or uses for a common or single object or image. We sought to test the equal-odds rule using a measure of divergent thinking, and applied the consensual assessment technique to determine creative responses as opposed to merely original responses. We also sought to determine structural brain correlates of both ideational fluency and ideational creativity. Two-hundred forty-six subjects were subjected to a broad battery of behavioral measures, including a core measure of divergent thinking (Foresight), and measures of intelligence, creative achievement, and personality (i.e., Openness to Experience). Cortical thickness and subcortical volumes (e.g., thalamus) were measured using automated techniques (FreeSurfer). We found that higher number of responses on the divergent thinking task was significantly associated with higher creativity (r = 0.73) as independently assessed by three judges. Moreover, we found that creativity was predicted by cortical thickness in regions including the left frontal pole and left parahippocampal gyrus. These results support the equal-odds rule, and provide neuronal evidence implicating brain regions involved with “thinking about the future” and “extracting future prospects.”


ieee global conference on signal and information processing | 2013

MIGRAINE: MRI Graph Reliability Analysis and Inference for Connectomics

William Gray Roncal; Zachary H. Koterba; Disa Mhembere; Dean M. Kleissas; Joshua T. Vogelstein; Randal C. Burns; Anita R. Bowles; Dimitrios K. Donavos; Sephira G. Ryman; Rex E. Jung; Lei Wu; Vince D. Calhoun; R. Jacob Vogelstein

Currently, connectomes (e.g., functional or structural brain graphs) can be estimated in humans at ≈ 1 mm3 scale using a combination of diffusion weighted magnetic resonance imaging, functional magnetic resonance imaging and structural magnetic resonance imaging scans. This manuscript summarizes a novel, scalable implementation of open-source algorithms to rapidly estimate magnetic resonance connectomes, using both anatomical regions of interest (ROIs) and voxel-size vertices. To assess the reliability of our pipeline, we develop a novel non-parametric non-Euclidean reliability metric. Here we provide an overview of the methods used, demonstrate our implementation, and discuss available user extensions. We conclude with results showing the efficacy and reliability of the pipeline over previous state-of-the-art.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Brain biochemistry and personality: a magnetic resonance spectroscopy study.

Sephira G. Ryman; Charles Gasparovic; Edward J. Bedrick; Ranee A. Flores; Alison N. Marshall; Rex E. Jung

To investigate the biochemical correlates of normal personality we utilized proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H-MRS). Our sample consisted of 60 subjects ranging in age from 18 to 32 (27 females). Personality was assessed with the NEO Five-Factor Inventory (NEO-FFI). We measured brain biochemistry within the precuneus, the cingulate cortex, and underlying white matter. We hypothesized that brain biochemistry within these regions would predict individual differences across major domains of personality functioning. Biochemical models were fit for all personality domains including Neuroticism, Extraversion, Openness, Agreeableness, and Conscientiousness. Our findings involved differing concentrations of Choline (Cho), Creatine (Cre), and N-acetylaspartate (NAA) in regions both within (i.e., posterior cingulate cortex) and white matter underlying (i.e., precuneus) the Default Mode Network (DMN). These results add to an emerging literature regarding personality neuroscience, and implicate biochemical integrity within the default mode network as constraining major personality domains within normal human subjects.


Cerebral Cortex | 2016

Look Hear! The Prefrontal Cortex is Stratified by Modality of Sensory Input During Multisensory Cognitive Control

Andrew R. Mayer; Sephira G. Ryman; Faith M. Hanlon; Andrew B. Dodd; Josef M. Ling

&NA; Parsing multisensory information from a complex external environment is a fundamental skill for all organisms. However, different organizational schemes currently exist for how multisensory information is processed in human (supramodal; organized by cognitive demands) versus primate (organized by modality/cognitive demands) lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC). Functional magnetic resonance imaging results from a large cohort of healthy controls (N = 64; Experiment 1) revealed a rostral‐caudal stratification of LPFC for auditory versus visual attention during an audio‐visual Stroop task. The stratification existed in spite of behavioral and functional evidence of increased interference from visual distractors. Increased functional connectivity was also observed between rostral LPFC and auditory cortex across independent samples (Experiments 2 and 3) and multiple methodologies. In contrast, the caudal LPFC was preferentially activated during visual attention but functioned in a supramodal capacity for resolving multisensory conflict. The caudal LPFC also did not exhibit increased connectivity with visual cortices. Collectively, these findings closely mirror previous nonhuman primate studies suggesting that visual attention relies on flexible use of a supramodal cognitive control network in caudal LPFC whereas rostral LPFC is specialized for directing attention to auditory inputs (i.e., human auditory fields).


PLOS ONE | 2014

Subcortical correlates of individual differences in aptitude.

Rex E. Jung; Sephira G. Ryman; Andrei A. Vakhtin; Jessica Carrasco; Chris Wertz; Ranee A. Flores

The study of individual differences encompasses broad constructs including intelligence, creativity, and personality. However, substantially less research is devoted to the study of specific aptitudes in spite of their importance to educational, occupational, and avocational success. We sought to determine subcortical brain structural correlates of several broad aptitudes including Math, Vocabulary, Foresight, Paper Folding, and Inductive Reasoning in a large (N = 107), healthy, young (age range  = 16–29) cohort. Subcortical volumes were measured using an automated technique (FreeSurfer) across structures including bilateral caudate, putamen, globus pallidus, thalamus, nucleus accumbens, hippocampus, amygdala, and five equal regions of the corpus callosum. We found that performance on measures of each aptitude was predicted by different subcortical structures: Math – higher right nucleus accumbens volume; Vocabulary – higher left hippocampus volume; Paper Folding – higher right thalamus volume; Foresight – lower right thalamus and higher mid anterior corpus callosum volume; Inductive Reasoning – higher mid anterior corpus callosum volume. Our results support general findings, within the cognitive neurosciences, showing lateralization of structure-function relationships, as well as more specific relationships between individual structures (e.g., left hippocampus) and functions relevant to particular aptitudes (e.g., Vocabulary).


ieee global conference on signal and information processing | 2013

Computing scalable multivariate glocal invariants of large (brain-) graphs

Disa Mhembere; William Gray Roncal; Daniel L. Sussman; Carey E. Priebe; Rex E. Jung; Sephira G. Ryman; R. Jacob Vogelstein; Joshua T. Vogelstein; Randal C. Burns

Graphs are quickly emerging as a leading abstraction for the representation of data. One important application domain originates from an emerging discipline called “connectomics”. Connectomics studies the brain as a graph; vertices correspond to neurons (or collections thereof) and edges correspond to structural or functional connections between them. To explore the variability of connectomes-to address both basic science questions regarding the structure of the brain, and medical health questions about psychiatry and neurology-one can study the topological properties of these brain-graphs. We define multivariate glocal graph invariants: these are features of the graph that capture various local and global topological properties of the graphs. We show that the collection of features can collectively be computed via a combination of daisy-chaining, sparse matrix representation and computations, and efficient approximations. Our custom open-source Python package serves as a back-end to a Web-service that we have created to enable researchers to upload graphs, and download the corresponding invariants in a number of different formats. Moreover, we built this package to support distributed processing on multicore machines. This is therefore an enabling technology for network science, lowering the barrier of entry by providing tools to biologists and analysts who otherwise lack these capabilities. As a demonstration, we run our code on 120 brain-graphs, each with approximately 16M vertices and up to 90M edges.


Journal of Psychiatry & Neuroscience | 2016

Proactive response inhibition abnormalities in the sensorimotor cortex of patients with schizophrenia.

Andrew R. Mayer; Faith M. Hanlon; Andrew B. Dodd; Ronald A. Yeo; Kathleen Y. Haaland; Josef M. Ling; Sephira G. Ryman

BACKGROUND Previous studies of response inhibition in patients with schizophrenia have focused on reactive inhibition tasks (e.g., stop-signal, go/no-go), primarily observing lateral prefrontal cortex abnormalities. However, recent studies suggest that purposeful and sustained (i.e., proactive) inhibition may also be affected in these patients. METHODS Patients with chronic schizophrenia and healthy controls underwent fMRI while inhibiting motor responses during multisensory (audiovisual) stimulation. Resting state data were also collected. RESULTS We included 37 patients with schizophrenia and 37 healthy controls in our study. Both controls and patients with schizophrenia successfully inhibited the majority of overt motor responses. Functional results indicated basic inhibitory failure in the lateral premotor and sensorimotor cortex, with opposing patterns of positive (schizophrenia) versus negative (control) activation. Abnormal activity was associated with independently assessed signs of psychomotor retardation. Patients with schizophrenia also exhibited unique activation of the pre-supplementary motor area (pre-SMA)/SMA and precuneus relative to baseline as well as a failure to deactivate anterior nodes of the default mode network. Independent resting-state connectivity analysis indicated reduced connectivity between anterior (task results) and posterior regions of the sensorimotor cortex for patients as well as abnormal connectivity between other regions (cerebellum, thalamus, posterior cingulate gyrus and visual cortex). LIMITATIONS Aside from rates of false-positive responses, true proactive response inhibition tasks do not provide behavioural metrics that can be independently used to quantify task performance. CONCLUSION Our results suggest that basic cortico-cortico and intracortical connections between the sensorimotor cortex and adjoining regions are impaired in patients with schizophrenia and that these impaired connections contribute to inhibitory failures (i.e., a positive rather than negative hemodynamic response).

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Rex E. Jung

University of New Mexico

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Ronald A. Yeo

University of New Mexico

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Andrew B. Dodd

The Mind Research Network

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Jessica Pommy

University of New Mexico

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