Paper List
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Developing the PsyCogMetrics™ AI Lab to Evaluate Large Language Models and Advance Cognitive Science
This paper addresses the critical gap between sophisticated LLM evaluation needs and the lack of accessible, scientifically rigorous platforms that in...
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Equivalence of approximation by networks of single- and multi-spike neurons
This paper resolves the fundamental question of whether single-spike spiking neural networks (SNNs) are inherently less expressive than multi-spike SN...
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The neuroscience of transformers
提出了Transformer架构与皮层柱微环路之间的新颖计算映射,连接了现代AI与神经科学。
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Framing local structural identifiability and observability in terms of parameter-state symmetries
This paper addresses the core challenge of systematically determining which parameters and states in a mechanistic ODE model can be uniquely inferred ...
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Leveraging Phytolith Research using Artificial Intelligence
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck in phytolith research by automating the labor-intensive manual microscopy process through a multimodal AI...
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Neural network-based encoding in free-viewing fMRI with gaze-aware models
This paper addresses the core challenge of building computationally efficient and ecologically valid brain encoding models for naturalistic vision by ...
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Scalable DNA Ternary Full Adder Enabled by a Competitive Blocking Circuit
This paper addresses the core bottleneck of carry information attenuation and limited computational scale in DNA binary adders by introducing a scalab...
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ELISA: An Interpretable Hybrid Generative AI Agent for Expression-Grounded Discovery in Single-Cell Genomics
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck of translating high-dimensional single-cell transcriptomic data into interpretable biological hypotheses ...
Module control in youth symptom networks across COVID-19
School of Biomedical Engineering and Informatics, Nanjing Medical University | Early Intervention Unit, Department of Psychiatry, The Affiliated Brain Hospital of Nanjing Medical University
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the core challenge of distinguishing whether a prolonged societal stressor (COVID-19) fundamentally reorganizes the architecture of youth psychopathology or merely redistributes influence across a stable symptom network scaffold.
核心创新
- Methodology Applies a minimum-dominating-set (MDS) based module control framework to repeated cross-sectional symptom network data, enabling the quantification of how control is redistributed across symptom communities over time.
- Biology Reveals a dual-timescale response: symptom community structure (mesoscale scaffold) remains conserved, while intermodule control dynamically shifts from stress-centered to a distributed pattern across emotional, cognitive, and social domains.
- Methodology Systematically evaluates the robustness of network control metrics (node strength, ACF, AMCS) via extensive resampling (bootstrap and case-dropping), establishing intermodule control (AMCS) as a stable feature for cross-phase comparison.
主要结论
- Symptom community organization was broadly conserved across five pandemic phases (2020-2023), indicating a stable mesoscale scaffold resilient to macro-level shocks.
- Intermodule control, quantified by Average Module Control Strength (AMCS), reconfigured significantly: early phases were dominated by stress-related symptoms (STR domain), while later phases showed distributed control across Emotional (EMO), Cognitive/Social (CSF), and Self-perception/Physiological (SPF) domains.
- Resampling analyses (1000 bootstraps) demonstrated high stability for node strength (correlation with full-sample ~0.95), moderate stability for module-to-module control (AMCS correlation ~0.70-0.80), and lower robustness for within-module control (ACF).
摘要: The COVID-19 pandemic exposed young people to a prolonged and evolving societal stressor, yet it remains unclear whether symptom networks were reorganized or whether control was redistributed across a conserved modular scaffold. Here we analysed repeated cross-sectional data on 47 self-reported mental-health symptoms from 14,181 U.S. young adults aged 18–24 years across five COVID-19 phases between 2020 and 2023. For each phase, we estimated Gaussian graphical models, identified symptom communities, and characterized minimum-dominating-set-based module control. Symptom networks showed broadly conserved community organization across phases, indicating a stable mesoscale scaffold despite marked temporal variation. By contrast, intermodule control shifted from an early configuration centered on stress-related symptoms to a later, more distributed pattern spanning emotional, cognitive and social domains. Resampling analyses showed high stability for node strength and moderate stability for module-to-module control, whereas average within-module control was less robust. These findings suggest that prolonged crisis may preserve the modular architecture of youth psychopathology while redistributing control across symptom domains, and they identify intermodule control as a comparatively robust mesoscale feature for cross-phase comparison.