Results 301 to 310 of about 270,788 (377)
As many patients with inflammatory arthritis (IA) have chronic pain, understanding how to best assess and manage pain in IA is a priority. Comorbid depression is prevalent in adults with IA, affecting 15% to 39% of people. Although pain and depression are thought to be associated in IA, this concept is largely based on cross‐sectional data.
Natasha Cox +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Review study of alteration functional activities and networks in ulcerative colitis using resting-state fMRI. [PDF]
Alyami AS.
europepmc +1 more source
Beyond Inflammation: Why Understanding the Brain Matters in Inflammatory Arthritis
Persistent pain remains a major challenge in inflammatory arthritis, even when joint inflammation is well controlled. Pain and associated symptoms such as fatigue cannot be explained by peripheral inflammation alone but reflect altered central pain processing. These changes may arise through “top‐down” mechanisms, reflecting pre‐existing dysfunction in
Eoin M. Kelleher +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Shared neural network dysfunctions in treatment-resistant major depression and alcohol use disorder: Resting-state fMRI evidence and implications for neuromodulation. [PDF]
Tien Y, Li CT.
europepmc +1 more source
Spatiotemporal Reservoir Computing with a Reconfigurable Multifunctional Memristor Array
This study presents a hardware physical reservoir computing system using a tri‐modal memristive crossbar array. Stochastic masking, bistable nonlinear activation, and analog readout enable fully in‐memory spatiotemporal processing. Demonstrations on cellular automata, Lorenz prediction, ADHD EEG classification, and chaotic KS modeling highlight its ...
Sungho Kim +10 more
wiley +1 more source
Investigating Brain Functional Connectivity and Its Correlation With Cognitive Dysfunction in Chronic Kidney Disease Patients via Resting-State fMRI. [PDF]
Liu Y +10 more
europepmc +1 more source
TVB C++: A Fast and Flexible Back‐End for The Virtual Brain
TVB C++ is a streamlined and fast C++ Back‐End for The Virtual Brain (TVB), designed to make it as flexible as TVB, and FAST. Another pillar is to be fully compatible with TVB so easy bindings can be created from Python. Users can easily configure TVB C++ to execute the same code but with enhanced performance and parallelism.
Ignacio Martín +7 more
wiley +1 more source

