Xiuli Wang
Sichuan University
19 Papers
Xiuli Wang is an academic researcher from Sichuan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Anxiety. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 15 publications.
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Papers
Stress and the brain: Perceived stress mediates the impact of the superior frontal gyrus spontaneous activity on depressive symptoms in late adolescence
TL;DR: Estimating the fractional amplitude of low‐frequency fluctuations (fALFFs) via resting‐state functional magnetic resonance imaging suggested that the fALFF in the left SFG is a neurofunctional marker of perceived stress in adolescents and revealed a potential indirect effect of perceived Stress on the association between the SFG spontaneous activity and depressive symptoms.
Gray matter bases of psychotic features in adult bipolar disorder: A systematic review and voxel-based meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies.
Xiuli Wang,Fangfang Tian,Song Wang,Bochao Cheng,Lihua Qiu,Manxi He,Hongming Wang,Mingjun Duan,Jing Dai,Zhiyun Jia +9 more
TL;DR: It is revealed that P‐BD patients exhibited smaller GMVs mainly in the prefronto‐temporal and cingulate cortices, the precentral gyrus, and insula relative to HC both qualitatively and quantitatively, and psychosis in BD might be associated with specific cortical GMV deficits.
Neural correlates during working memory processing in major depressive disorder
Xiuli Wang,Mingying Du,Taolin Chen,Ziqi Chen,Xiaoqi Huang,Ya Luo,Youjin Zhao,Poornima Kumar,Qiyong Gong +8 more
TL;DR: Regardless of differences in task performance between groups, patients with MDD showed consistent functional abnormalities in the cortical-limbic-subcortical circuitry during WM processing.
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Brain grey-matter volume alteration in adult patients with bipolar disorder under different conditions: a voxel-based meta-analysis
Xiuli Wang,Qiang Luo,Fangfang Tian,Bochao Cheng,Lihua Qiu,Song Wang,Manxi He,Hongming Wang,Mingjun Duan,Zhiyun Jia +9 more
TL;DR: Structural grey-matter abnormalities in patients with bipolar disorder and bipolar disorder type I were mainly in the prefrontal cortex and insula, and could be correlated with patients' specific demographic and clinical features.
gray matter alterations in post-traumatic stress disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and social anxiety disorder
Bochao Cheng,Xiaoqi Huang,Shiguang Li,Xinyu Hu,Ya Luo,Xiuli Wang,Xun Yang,Changjian Qiu,Yanchun Yang,Wei Zhang,Feng Bi,Neil Roberts,Qiyong Gong +12 more
TL;DR: Evidence for brain structure differences that in future could provide biomarkers to potentially support classification of these disorders using MRI is found.