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Eun Jin Yoon

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3 papers
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3

YNIMG Journal 2026 Journal Article

Evaluating AI-aided approaches for 18F-FDG PET quantification: Indirect synthetic MR-based versus direct partial volume correction

  • Yu Jin Seol
  • Hye Bin Yoo
  • Eun Jin Yoon
  • Yu Kyeong Kim
  • Seongho Seo
  • Jae Sung Lee

F-FDG PET in clinical and research applications without requiring anatomical MR images. Indirect PVC showed advantages in transparency and performance for quantification in smaller anatomical regions, whereas direct PVC may be more suitable for rapid assessment in larger brain regions.

YNICL Journal 2021 Journal Article

Patterns of brain activity during a set-shifting task linked to mild behavioral impairment in Parkinson’s disease

  • Eun Jin Yoon
  • Zahinoor Ismail
  • Iris Kathol
  • Mekale Kibreab
  • Tracy Hammer
  • Stefan Lang
  • Mehrafarin Ramezani
  • Noémie Auclair-Ouellet

Mild behavioral impairment (MBI) is a neurobehavioral syndrome characterized by later life emergence of sustained neuropsychiatric symptoms, as an at-risk state for incident cognitive decline and dementia. Prior studies have reported that neuropsychiatric symptoms are associated with cognitive abilities in Parkinson's disease (PD) patients, and we have recently found a strong correlation between MBI and cognitive performance. However, the underlying neural activity patterns of cognitive performance linked to MBI in PD are unknown. Fifty-nine non-demented PD patients and 26 healthy controls were scanned using fMRI during performance of a modified version of the Wisconsin card sorting task. MBI was evaluated using the MBI-checklist, and PD patients were divided into two groups, PD-MBI and PD-noMBI. Compared to the PD-noMBI group and healthy controls, the PD-MBI group revealed less activation in the prefrontal and posterior parietal cortices, and reduced deactivation in the medial temporal region. These results suggest that in PD, MBI reflects deficits in the frontoparietal control network and the hippocampal memory system.

YNICL Journal 2020 Journal Article

Mild behavioral impairment in Parkinson's disease is associated with altered corticostriatal connectivity

  • Stefan Lang
  • Eun Jin Yoon
  • Mekale Kibreab
  • Iris Kathol
  • Jenelle Cheetham
  • Tracy Hammer
  • Justyna Sarna
  • Zahinoor Ismail

BACKGROUND: Mild behavioral impairment (MBI) is a syndrome characterized by later life onset, sustained neuropsychiatric symptoms as a marker of dementia risk. In Parkinson's disease (PD), MBI has been associated with worse cognitive abilities and increased cortical atrophy. However, the circuit level correlates of MBI have not been investigated in this population. Our objective was to investigate the relationship between MBI and corticostriatal connectivity in PD patients. This emphasis on corticostriatal connectivity was due to the significant role of these circuits in neuropsychiatric and cognitive symptoms across disease conditions. METHODS: Seventy-four non-demented patients with PD were administered the MBI-checklist, and classified as having high MBI (PD-MBI; n = 21) or low MBI scores (PD-noMBI; n = 53). Corticostriatal connectivity was assessed with both an atlas and seed-based analysis. The atlas analysis consisted of calculating the average connectivity between the striatal network and the default mode (DMN), central executive (CEN), and saliency networks (SAN). Structural measurements of cortical thickness and volume were also assessed. PD-MBI and PD-noMBI patients were compared, along with a group of age matched healthy control subjects (HC; n = 28). Subsequently, a seed analysis assessed the relationship of MBI scores with the connectivity of twelve seeds within the striatum while controlling for cognitive ability. A complementary analysis assessed the relationship between striatal connectivity and cognition, while controlling for MBI-C. RESULTS: PD-MBI demonstrated decreased connectivity between the striatum and both the DMN and SAN compared to PD-noMBI and HC. The decreased connectivity between the striatum and the SAN was explained partly by increased atrophy within the SAN in PD-MBI. The seed analysis revealed a relationship between higher MBI scores and lower connectivity of the left caudate head to the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex and left middle frontal gyrus. Higher MBI-C scores were also related to decreased connectivity of the right caudate head with the anterior cingulate cortex, precuneus, and left supramarginal gyrus, as well as increased connectivity to the left hippocampus and right cerebellar hemisphere. Caudate-precuneus connectivity was independently associated with both global behavioural and cognitive scores. CONCLUSION: These results suggest PD-MBI is associated with altered corticostriatal connectivity, particularly between the head of the caudate and cortical regions associated with the DMN and SAN. In particular, caudate-precuneus connectivity is associated with both global behavioral and cognitive symptoms in PD.