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Researchers awarded $3 million to study neural dynamics of mental disorders

 E-Mail ATLANTA Georgia State University researchers have received a five-year, $3 million grant from the National Institute of Mental Health to develop new strategies to identify mood disorders using whole brain dynamics, which considers changes in the shape, size or location of brain networks, as well as changes in the connections between brain networks. The researchers will use the approaches they develop to integrate four-dimensional brain imaging with clinical and cognitive data to identify clues about how mental illness presents in the brain. Distinguished University Professor of Psychology Vince Calhoun, director of the Center for Translational Research in Neuroimaging and Data Science (TReNDS), is the lead researcher on the project.

Rockland County s Holocaust Remembrance Day stays strong through COVID

For the second year in a row Yom HaShoah, or Holocaust Remembrance Day, was commemorated virtually by the Holocaust Museum & Center for Tolerance in Rockland County.  During the annual Yom HaShoah Commemoration at the Rockland County Courthouse, local leaders in the legal community highlighted the importance of the justice system in our democracy, and why we must never forget the Holocaust. Despite the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, the event was not going to be canceled under any circumstances, said attorney and longtime chair of the event, Paul Adler.  We felt it was important, that just as the mass says never forget, never again, that we would never forget to remind those that it would never happen again, Adler said.

For malnourished children, a new type of microbiome-directed food boosts growth | The Source

New food is designed to nurture healthy gut microbes A new study shows that a therapeutic food designed to repair the gut microbiomes of malnourished children is better than standard therapy in supporting their growth. The research, published online April 7, 2021, in The New England Journal of Medicine, was a collaboration between Washington University School of Medicine and the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research in Dhaka, Bangladesh, where the clinical trial was conducted. Pictured, a mother feeds her child one of the therapeutic foods as part of the clinical trial. (Photo: International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research) April 7, 2021 SHARE A new type of therapeutic food specifically designed to repair the gut microbiomes of malnourished children is superior to standard therapy in promoting growth, according to the results of a proof-of-concept clinical trial conducted in Bangladesh.

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