Skills (10)
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52 Questions7265 Followers
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2 Questions82 Followers
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89 Questions21735 Followers
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41 Questions5717 Followers
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5 Questions830 Followers
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1 Question14 Followers
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12 Questions500 Followers
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32 Questions6856 Followers
Research experience
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Jan 2010
Research: City College of New York
City College of New YorkUSA · New York City -
Jan 2008
Research: St. Vincent’s Hospital
St. Vincent’s HospitalIreland (Republic of Ireland) · Dublin -
Jan 2005–
Dec 2009Research: University College Dublin
University College Dublin · School of PsychologyIreland (Republic of Ireland) · Dublin -
Jan 2004–
Dec 2010Research: Trinity College Dublin
Trinity College Dublin · Institute of NeuroscienceIreland (Republic of Ireland) · Dublin -
Jan 2003–
Dec 2007Research: Cornell University
Cornell University · Department of PsychiatryUSA · Ithaca -
Jan 2000–
Dec 2012Research: Nathan Kline Institute
Nathan Kline InstituteUSA · Orangeburg -
Jan 2000
Research: New York University
New York University USAUSA · New York City -
Jan 1993–
Dec 2012Research: Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Albert Einstein College of Medicine · Department of PediatricsUSA · New York City
Education
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Sep 1994–
Sep 1999Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Neuroscience · Ph.D.USA · Bronx
Other
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Languagesenglish
Questions and Answers (3) View all
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Question asked in In Vivo1 Setting up a high-density epidural recording rig for KO mouse models?My lab is in the process of building a high-density in-vivo epidural recording setup for use in mouse KO models. Our intention is to try to place 32-6... [more]My lab is in the process of building a high-density in-vivo epidural recording setup for use in mouse KO models. Our intention is to try to place 32-64 electrodes on the epidural surface with maximal coverage of the whole brain. We hope to be able to make recordings in awake moving animals. I’d be interested in any advice people might have regarding setting up such a preparation, and any related experiences. I’d also appreciate hearing about any multichannel grid-type electrode arrays that people have found particularly useful. The same question applies to amplifier systems that might be considered ideal for recording field potentials in such a preparation.By John Foxe · Albert Einstein College of MedicineFollowing
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Answer added in EEGLAB16 EEG-phase synchronizsation measures: what software tool would you recommend?By Sebastian Olbrich · University of LeipzigJohn Foxe · Albert Einstein College of MedicineI agree with Christian that BESA provides a good alternative (although it is quite expensive). It has an excellent inter-areal coherence function in s... [more]I agree with Christian that BESA provides a good alternative (although it is quite expensive). It has an excellent inter-areal coherence function in source space. The obvious caveat is that you need to have a sufficiently dense sensor array to realistically separate sources; you need to be aware that your source model is just that - a model, and you need to be ever-sensitive to the issue of simple volume conduction.Following
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Answer added in EEGLAB16 EEG-phase synchronizsation measures: what software tool would you recommend?By Sebastian Olbrich · University of LeipzigJohn Foxe · Albert Einstein College of MedicineEEGLAB is a great free place to start http://sccn.ucsd.edu/eeglab/EEGLAB is a great free place to start http://sccn.ucsd.edu/eeglab/Following
Publications (202) View all
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Article: Auditory-driven phase reset in visual cortex: Human electrocorticography reveals mechanisms of early multisensory integration.
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ABSTRACT: Findings in animal models demonstrate that activity within hierarchically early sensory cortical regions can be modulated by cross-sensory inputs through resetting of the phase of ongoing intrinsic neural oscillations. Here, subdural recordings evaluated whether phase resetting by auditory inputs would impact multisensory integration processes in human visual cortex. Results clearly showed auditory-driven phase reset in visual cortices and, in some cases, frank auditory event-related potentials (ERP) were also observed over these regions. Further, when audiovisual bisensory stimuli were presented, this led to robust multisensory integration effects which were observed in both the ERP and in measures of phase concentration. These results extend findings from animal models to human visual cortices, and highlight the impact of cross-sensory phase resetting by a non-primary stimulus on multisensory integration in ostensibly unisensory cortices.NeuroImage 04/2013; · 5.89 Impact Factor -
Article: Intact inhibitory control processes in abstinent drug abusers (II): A high-density electrical mapping study in former cocaine and heroin addicts.
Kristen P Morie, Hugh Garavan, Ryan P Bell, Pierfilippo De Sanctis, Menachem I Krakowski, John J Foxe[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Response inhibition deficits are well-documented in drug users, and are related to the impulsive tendencies characteristic of the addictive phenotype. Addicts also show significant motivational issues that may accentuate these inhibitory deficits. We investigated the extent to which these inhibitory deficits are present in abstinence. Salience of the task stimuli was also manipulated on the premise that emotionally-valenced inputs might impact inhibitory efficacy by overcoming the blunted responses to everyday environmental inputs characteristic of this population. Participants performed response inhibition tasks consisting of both neutral and emotionally valenced stimuli while high-density event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded. Electrophysiological responses (N2/P3 components) to successful inhibitions in abstinent abusers (N=20) and non-using participants (N=21) were compared. In contrast to previous work in current users, our abstinent cohort showed no detectable behavioral or electrophysiological differences in their inhibitory responses, and no differences on self-reports of impulsivity, despite their long histories of chronic use (mean = 10.3 years). The current findings are consistent with a recovery of inhibitory control processes as a function of abstinence. Abstinent former users, however, did show a reduced modulation, relative to controls, of their ERPs to valenced input while performing successful inhibitions, although contrary to our hypothesis, the use of valenced inputs had no impact on inhibitory performance. Reduced ERP modulation to emotionally valenced inputs may have implications for relapse in emotional contexts outside the treatment center.Neuropharmacology 03/2013; · 4.81 Impact Factor -
Article: Intact inhibitory control processes in abstinent drug abusers (I): A functional neuroimaging study in former cocaine addicts.
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ABSTRACT: Neuroimaging studies in current cocaine dependent (CD) individuals consistently reveal cortical hypoactivity across regions of the response inhibition circuit (RIC). Dysregulation of this critical executive network is hypothesized to account for the lack of inhibitory control that is a hallmark of the addictive phenotype, and chronic abuse is believed to compound the issue. A crucial question is whether deficits in this circuit persist after drug cessation, and whether recovery of this system will be seen after extended periods of abstinence, a question with implications for treatment course and outcome. Utilizing functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we examined activation in nodes of the RIC in abstinent CD individuals (n=27) and non-using controls (n=45) while they performed a motor response inhibition task. In contrast to current users, these abstinent individuals, despite extended histories of chronic cocaine-abuse (average duration of use = 8.2 years), performed the task just as efficiently as non-users. In line with these behavioral findings, no evidence for between-group differences in activation of the RIC was found and instead, robust activations were apparent in both groups within the well-characterized nodes of the RIC. Similarly, our complementary Electroencephalography (EEG) investigation also showed an absence of behavioral and electrophysiological deficits in abstinent drug abusers. These results are consistent with an amelioration of neurobiological deficits in inhibitory circuitry following drug cessation, and could help explain how long-term abstinence is maintained. Finally, regression analyses revealed a significant association between level of activation in the right insula with inhibition success and increased abstinence duration in the CD cohort suggesting that this region may be integral to successful recovery from cocaine addiction.Neuropharmacology 03/2013; · 4.81 Impact Factor -
SourceAvailable from: Pierfilippo De Sanctis
Dataset: Lalor 2012 SR Visual sensory processing deficits in SZ Is there anything to the magnocellular account
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Article: Dissociated grey matter changes with prolonged addiction and extended abstinence in cocaine users.
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ABSTRACT: Extensive evidence indicates that current and recently abstinent cocaine abusers compared to drug-naïve controls have decreased grey matter in regions such as the anterior cingulate, lateral prefrontal and insular cortex. Relatively little is known, however, about the persistence of these deficits in long-term abstinence despite the implications this has for recovery and relapse. Optimized voxel based morphometry was used to assess how local grey matter volume varies with years of drug use and length of abstinence in a cross-sectional study of cocaine users with various durations of abstinence (1-102 weeks) and years of use (0.3-24 years). Lower grey matter volume associated with years of use was observed for several regions including anterior cingulate, inferior frontal gyrus and insular cortex. Conversely, higher grey matter volumes associated with abstinence duration were seen in non-overlapping regions that included the anterior and posterior cingulate, insular, right ventral and left dorsal prefrontal cortex. Grey matter volumes in cocaine dependent individuals crossed those of drug-naïve controls after 35 weeks of abstinence, with greater than normal volumes in users with longer abstinence. The brains of abstinent users are characterized by regional grey matter volumes, which on average, exceed drug-naïve volumes in those users who have maintained abstinence for more than 35 weeks. The asymmetry between the regions showing alterations with extended years of use and prolonged abstinence suggest that recovery involves distinct neurobiological processes rather than being a reversal of disease-related changes. Specifically, the results suggest that regions critical to behavioral control may be important to prolonged, successful, abstinence.PLoS ONE 01/2013; 8(3):e59645. · 4.09 Impact Factor
About
I am a translational researcher with a history of research studies on the basic neurophysiology of autism and schizophrenia. Our work places special emphasis on the identification of endophenotypic markers in childhood neuropsychiatric diseases and in the linking of these biomarkers to the underlying genotype. Our lab employs an integrated approach using structural and functional neuroimaging, high-density electrophysiology, imaging genomics, eye tracking, psychophysics and virtual reality.