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Fred W. Sabb

Researcher at University of Oregon

Publications -  69
Citations -  8085

Fred W. Sabb is an academic researcher from University of Oregon. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Genome-wide association study. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 68 publications receiving 6926 citations. Previous affiliations of Fred W. Sabb include University of California, Los Angeles & Princeton University.

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Genome-wide association meta-analysis in 269,867 individuals identifies new genetic and functional links to intelligence

Jeanne E. Savage, +135 more
- 25 Jun 2018 - 
TL;DR: A large-scale genetic association study of intelligence identifies 190 new loci and implicates 939 new genes related to neurogenesis, neuron differentiation and synaptic structure, a major step forward in understanding the neurobiology of cognitive function as well as genetically related neurological and psychiatric disorders.
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Selective Deficits in Prefrontal Cortex Function in Medication-Naive Patients With Schizophrenia

TL;DR: Results demonstrate selectivity in dorsolateral PFC dysfunction among medication-naive first-episode patients with schizophrenia, suggesting that a specific deficit in PFC function is present at illness onset, prior to the administration of medication or the most confounding effects of illness duration.
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The Neural Correlates of Motor Skill Automaticity

TL;DR: The results showed that supplementary motor area and putamen/globus pallidus regions showed training-related decreases for sequence conditions but not for random conditions, confirming the role of these regions in the representation of learned motor sequences.
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Recruitment of Anterior Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex in Human Reasoning: a Parametric Study of Relational Complexity

TL;DR: Functional magnetic resonance imaging is used to identify brain regions that respond selectively in processing high levels of relational complexity and provides evidence that brain regions specific to integrating complex relations among stimuli are distinct from those involved in coping with general task difficulty and with working-memory demands.
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Study of 300,486 individuals identifies 148 independent genetic loci influencing general cognitive function

Gail Davies, +257 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors combine cognitive and genetic data from the CHARGE and COGENT consortia, and UK Biobank (total N = 300,486; age 16-102) and find 148 genome-wide significant independent loci associated with general cognitive function.