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Herve Lemaitre

Researcher at French Institute of Health and Medical Research

Publications -  89
Citations -  5830

Herve Lemaitre is an academic researcher from French Institute of Health and Medical Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Functional magnetic resonance imaging. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 79 publications receiving 4823 citations. Previous affiliations of Herve Lemaitre include Paris Descartes University & University of Paris-Sud.

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The ENIGMA Consortium: large-scale collaborative analyses of neuroimaging and genetic data

Paul M. Thompson, +332 more
TL;DR: The ENIGMA Consortium has detected factors that affect the brain that no individual site could detect on its own, and that require larger numbers of subjects than any individual neuroimaging study has currently collected.
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A common allele in the oxytocin receptor gene (OXTR) impacts prosocial temperament and human hypothalamic-limbic structure and function

TL;DR: Evidence for structural alterations in key oxytocinergic regions emerged, particularly in the hypothalamus, and these neural characteristics predicted lower levels of reward dependence in male risk allele carriers.
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Correlated gene expression supports synchronous activity in brain networks

TL;DR: It is shown that functional brain networks defined with resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging can be recapitulated by using measures of correlated gene expression in a post mortem brain tissue data set.
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Normal age-related brain morphometric changes: nonuniformity across cortical thickness, surface area and gray matter volume?

TL;DR: Cortical thickness and volume collectively confirmed the vulnerability of the prefrontal cortex, whereas in other cortical regions, such as in the parietal cortex, thickness was the only measure sensitive to the pronounced age-related atrophy.
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Age- and sex-related effects on the neuroanatomy of healthy elderly.

TL;DR: Findings indicate that brain atrophy during the seventh and eighth decades of life is ubiquitous and proceeds at a rate that is not modulated by "Sex".