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Qingyang Li

Researcher at MIND Institute

Publications -  15
Citations -  4795

Qingyang Li is an academic researcher from MIND Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Connectomics & Resting state fMRI. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 15 publications receiving 3814 citations. Previous affiliations of Qingyang Li include University of Georgia.

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The autism brain imaging data exchange: towards a large-scale evaluation of the intrinsic brain architecture in autism

A Di Martino, +50 more
- 01 Jun 2014 - 
TL;DR: W Whole-brain analyses reconciled seemingly disparate themes of both hypo- and hyperconnectivity in the ASD literature; both were detected, although hypoconnectivity dominated, particularly for corticocortical and interhemispheric functional connectivity.
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A Comprehensive Assessment of Regional Variation in the Impact of Head Micromovements on Functional Connectomics

TL;DR: A comprehensive voxel-based examination of the impact of motion on the BOLD signal suggests that positive relationships may reflect neural origins of motion while negative relationships are likely to originate from motion artifact.
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The NKI-Rockland Sample: A Model for Accelerating the Pace of Discovery Science in Psychiatry.

TL;DR: The conceptual basis of the NKI-RS is described, including study design, sampling considerations, and steps to synchronize phenotypic and neuroimaging assessment, and it is hoped that familiarity with the conceptual underpinnings will facilitate harmonization with future data collection efforts aimed at advancing psychiatric neuroscience and nosology.
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Emotional perception: Meta-analyses of face and natural scene processing

TL;DR: The overlay of significant meta-analyses resulted in extensive overlap in clusters, coupled with offset and unique clusters of reliable activity in areas of greatest overlap is the amygdala, followed by regions of medial prefrontal cortex, inferior frontal/orbitofrontal cortex, and extrastriate occipital cortex.
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Striatum-based circuitry of adolescent depression and anhedonia.

TL;DR: Although MDD diagnosis and severity were related to striatal networks involving midline cortical structures, distinct circuits within the reward system were associated with anhedonia, which supports the incorporation of both categorical and dimensional approaches in neuropsychiatric research.