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Natalie Phillips

Possible papers associated with this exact author name in Arrow. This page groups case-insensitive exact name matches and is not a full identity disambiguation profile.

2 papers
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2

YNICL Journal 2021 Journal Article

Neural correlates of resilience to the effects of hippocampal atrophy on memory

  • Sylvie Belleville
  • Samira Mellah
  • Simon Cloutier
  • Thien Thanh Dang-Vu
  • Simon Duchesne
  • Samantha Maltezos
  • Natalie Phillips
  • Carol Hudon

INTRODUCTION: Cognitive reserve can be defined as a property of the brain that enables an individual to sustain cognitive performance in spite of age-related neural changes. This study uses brain imaging to identify which cognitive reserve mechanisms protect against the detrimental effect of hippocampal atrophy on associative memory. METHODS: The study included 108 older adults from the Quebec Consortium for the early identification of Alzheimer's disease. They received a magnetic resonance imaging examination to measure memory-related activations and hippocampal volume. Participants also completed a reserve-proxy questionnaire, and received a comprehensive clinical assessment. RESULTS: Higher scores on the reserve questionnaire were associated with more activation in the right inferior temporal and left occipital fusiform gyri. The activation of the right temporal gyrus moderated the relationship between the volume of the hippocampus and face-name memory. A smaller volume was associated with weaker memory in participants with lower activation, but not in those with greater activation. DISCUSSION: Recruitment of the temporal lobe protects against the detrimental effect of hippocampal atrophy on associative memory and contributes to cognitive reserve.

YNIMG Journal 2016 Journal Article

The Age-ility Project (Phase 1): Structural and functional imaging and electrophysiological data repository

  • Frini Karayanidis
  • Max C. Keuken
  • Aaron Wong
  • Jaime L. Rennie
  • Gilles de Hollander
  • Patrick S. Cooper
  • W. Ross Fulham
  • Rhoshel Lenroot

Our understanding of the complex interplay between structural and functional organisation of brain networks is being advanced by the development of novel multi-modal analyses approaches. The Age-ility Project (Phase 1) data repository offers open access to structural MRI, diffusion MRI, and resting-state fMRI scans, as well as resting-state EEG recorded from the same community participants (n=131, 15–35y, 66 male). Raw imaging and electrophysiological data as well as essential demographics are made available via the NITRC website. All data have been reviewed for artifacts using a rigorous quality control protocol and detailed case notes are provided.