2010
DOI: 10.1097/wco.0b013e32833b764c
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Imaging genomics

Abstract: Purpose of review Imaging genomics is an emerging field that is rapidly identifying genes that influence the brain, cognition, and risk for disease. Worldwide, thousands of individuals are being scanned with high-throughput genotyping (genome-wide scans), and new imaging techniques [high angular resolution diffusion imaging and resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)] that provide fine-grained measures of the brain’s structural and functional connectivity. Along with clinical diagnosis and co… Show more

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Cited by 103 publications
(66 citation statements)
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References 71 publications
(73 reference statements)
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“…Imaging genetics is a rapidly emerging field that is opening up a new landscape of discovery in neuroscience (Thompson et al, 2010). In this context, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has become an increasingly popular tool for human brain investigation in vivo.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Imaging genetics is a rapidly emerging field that is opening up a new landscape of discovery in neuroscience (Thompson et al, 2010). In this context, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has become an increasingly popular tool for human brain investigation in vivo.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bush et al, for example, have recently shown that the BDNF Val66Met polymorphism confers an increased neuroendocrine sensitivity to socioeconomic context, with Met carriers having the highest and lowest cortisol expression levels, depending on SES (N. Bush, personal communication, unpublished data, 2017). Other findings in the nascent science of "imaging genomics"-a field merging high-throughput genotyping with new brain imaging technologies-are revealing how variations in DNA sequence are associated with structural and functional connectivity in specific brain regions (Thompson et al 2010). Recent fMRI studies, for example, have demonstrated the heritability of patterns of task-related brain region activation and shown how the COMT val108/158met functional polymorphism is associated with systematic differences in prefrontal cortical physiology and function (Egan et al 2001).…”
Section: Gene-environment Interplay In Brain Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As Levinson (2003Levinson ( , 2012 and Evans and Levinson (2009) have emphasized, human cognition is fundamentally tuned to variation: our brain is extremely flexible and open to environmental input (e.g., Jä ncke 2009); its development and expression is fundamentally affected by genetic variation (e.g., Thompson et al 2010); the physiology of language processing is highly variable (e.g., BornkesselSchlesewsky and Schlesewsky 2009); children's learning strategies are geared towards extracting key grammar information from distributional signals in whatever speech environment they happen to grow up in (e.g., Tomasello 2003).…”
Section: Universalsmentioning
confidence: 99%