Demography

Springer Nature
Springer Nature
ISSN: 00703370, 15337790

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SCImago
Q1
WOS
Q1
Impact factor
3.6
SJR
1.928
CiteScore
5.9
Categories
Demography
Areas
Social Sciences
Years of issue
1964-2025
journal names
Demography
Publications
3 625
Citations
154 226
h-index
166
Top-3 citing journals
Demography
Demography (9323 citations)
SSRN Electronic Journal
SSRN Electronic Journal (3855 citations)
Top-3 organizations
University of Michigan
University of Michigan (202 publications)
Princeton University
Princeton University (139 publications)
Top-3 countries
USA (2711 publications)
United Kingdom (166 publications)
Germany (160 publications)

Most cited in 5 years

Found 
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Publications found: 6619
Quantitative trait loci mapping of circulating metabolites in cerebrospinal fluid to uncover biological mechanisms involved in brain-related phenotypes
Reus L.M., Boltz T., Francia M., Bot M., Ramesh N., Koromina M., Pijnenburg Y.A., den Braber A., van der Flier W.M., Visser P.J., van der Lee S.J., Tijms B.M., Teunissen C.E., Loohuis L.O., Ophoff R.A.
Q1
Springer Nature
Molecular Psychiatry 2025 citations by CoLab: 0
Investigating dopaminergic abnormalities in schizophrenia and first-episode psychosis with normative modelling and multisite molecular neuroimaging
Giacomel A., Martins D., Nordio G., Easmin R., Howes O., Selvaggi P., Williams S.C., Turkheimer F., De Groot M., Dipasquale O., Veronese M., Angelescu I., Bloomfield M., Bonoldi I., Borgan F., et. al.
Q1
Springer Nature
Molecular Psychiatry 2025 citations by CoLab: 0  |  Abstract
Abstract Molecular neuroimaging techniques, like PET and SPECT, offer invaluable insights into the brain’s in-vivo biology and its dysfunction in neuropsychiatric patients. However, the transition of molecular neuroimaging into diagnostics and precision medicine has been limited to a few clinical applications, hindered by issues like practical feasibility, high costs, and high between-subject heterogeneity of neuroimaging measures. In this study, we explore the use of normative modelling (NM) to identify individual patient alterations by describing the physiological variability of molecular functions. NM potentially addresses challenges such as small sample sizes and diverse acquisition protocols typical of molecular neuroimaging studies. We applied NM to two PET radiotracers targeting the dopaminergic system ([11C]-(+)-PHNO and [18F]FDOPA) to create a reference-cohort model of healthy controls. The models were subsequently utilized on different independent cohorts of patients with psychosis in different disease stages and treatment outcomes. Our results showed that patients with psychosis exhibited a higher degree of extreme deviations (~3-fold increase) than controls, although this pattern was heterogeneous, with minimal overlap of extreme deviations topology (max 20%). We also confirmed that striatal [18F]FDOPA signal, when referenced to a normative distribution, can predict treatment response (striatal AUC ROC: 0.77–0.83). In conclusion, our results indicate that normative modelling can be effectively applied to molecular neuroimaging after proper harmonization, enabling insights into disease mechanisms and advancing precision medicine. In addition, the method is valuable in understanding the heterogeneity of patient populations and can contribute to maximising cost efficiency in studies aimed at comparing cases and controls.
The case for hemispheric lateralization of the human amygdala in fear processing
Xie T., van Rooij S.J., Inman C.S., Wang S., Brunner P., Willie J.T.
Q1
Springer Nature
Molecular Psychiatry 2025 citations by CoLab: 0
Suspected autoimmune-mediated dissociative symptoms
Endres D., Reinhold E., Klesse C., Domschke K., Prüss H., Tebartz van Elst L.
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Springer Nature
Molecular Psychiatry 2025 citations by CoLab: 0
Genome-wide association study reveals multiple loci for nociception and opioid consumption behaviors associated with heroin vulnerability in outbred rats
Kuhn B.N., Cannella N., Chitre A.S., Nguyen K.H., Cohen K., Chen D., Peng B., Ziegler K.S., Lin B., Johnson B.B., Missfeldt Sanches T., Crow A.D., Lunerti V., Gupta A., Dereschewitz E., et. al.
Q1
Springer Nature
Molecular Psychiatry 2025 citations by CoLab: 0  |  Abstract
Abstract The increased prevalence of opioid use disorder (OUD) makes it imperative to disentangle the biological mechanisms contributing to individual differences in OUD vulnerability. OUD shows strong heritability, however genetic variants contributing to vulnerability remain poorly defined. We performed a genome-wide association study using over 850 male and female heterogeneous stock (HS) rats to identify genes underlying behaviors associated with OUD such as nociception, as well as heroin-taking, extinction and seeking behaviors. By using an animal model of OUD, we were able to identify genetic variants associated with distinct OUD behaviors while maintaining a uniform environment, an experimental design not easily achieved in humans. Furthermore, we used a novel non-linear network-based clustering approach to characterize rats based on OUD vulnerability to assess genetic variants associated with OUD susceptibility. Our findings confirm the heritability of several OUD-like behaviors, including OUD susceptibility. Additionally, several genetic variants associated with nociceptive threshold prior to heroin experience, heroin consumption, escalation of intake, and motivation to obtain heroin were identified. Tom1, a microglial component, was implicated for nociception. Several genes involved in dopaminergic signaling, neuroplasticity and substance use disorders, including Brwd1, Pcp4, Phb1l2 and Mmp15 were implicated for the heroin traits. Additionally, an OUD vulnerable phenotype was associated with genetic variants for consumption and break point, suggesting a specific genetic contribution for OUD-like traits contributing to vulnerability. Together, these findings identify novel genetic markers related to the susceptibility to OUD-relevant behaviors in HS rats.
Dual recombinase-mediated intersectional genetics defines the functional heterogeneity of neural stem cells in adult hippocampus
Liang Z., Li Z., Zhang D., Luo X., Liu Q., Qin D., Wang M., Xu Z., Feng J., He J., Guo W.
Q1
Springer Nature
Molecular Psychiatry 2025 citations by CoLab: 0
Childhood trauma cortisol and immune cell glucocorticoid transcript levels are associated with increased risk for suicidality in adolescence
Goltser-Dubner T., Benarroch F., Lavon M., Amer R., Canetti L., Giesser R., Kianski E., Martin J., Pevzner D., Blum Weinberg P., Ben-Ari A., Bar-Nitsan M., Alon S., Yshai S., Lotan A., et. al.
Q1
Springer Nature
Molecular Psychiatry 2025 citations by CoLab: 0  |  Abstract
Abstract Rising adolescent suicide rates present a growing unmet need. Childhood trauma (CT) has been associated with altered cortisol dynamics and immune cell glucocorticoid reactivity, yet their additive longer-term contributions to later suicide outcomes are less clear. The current study compared CT scores, resting salivary free cortisol and mononuclear cell gene expression levels of the nuclear receptor, subfamily 3, member 1 (NR3C1) coding the glucocorticoid receptor, and its co-chaperons FKBP prolyl isomerase 5 (FKBP5) and KIT Ligand (KITLG), between a cohort of adolescents presenting with a suicidal crisis requiring hospital treatment, and matched healthy controls. Childhood trauma scores and glucocorticoid measures were significantly altered among suicidal adolescents, and CT scores correlated with mononuclear cell glucocorticoid transcripts. Both CT scores and glucocorticoid measures explained substantial additive portions of the variance in adolescent suicidality. Long-term perturbations in cortisol dynamics and immune cell glucocorticoid response elements denote dysregulated immune stress reactivity, and may possess value in prediction and point to modifiable-risk factors in prevention of clinically significant suicidality during the brittle period of adolescence, years after childhood trauma exposure.
Polygenic scores for autism are associated with reduced neurite density in adults and children from the general population
Gu Y., Maria-Stauffer E., Bedford S.A., Adhya D., Allison C., Ayeung B., Bamford R., Bethlehem R., Biron-Shental T., Burton G., Davies J., Davis J., Floris D., Franklin A., Gabis L., et. al.
Q1
Springer Nature
Molecular Psychiatry 2025 citations by CoLab: 0  |  Abstract
Abstract Genetic variants linked to autism are thought to change cognition and behaviour by altering the structure and function of the brain. Although a substantial body of literature has identified structural brain differences in autism, it is unknown whether autism-associated common genetic variants are linked to changes in cortical macro- and micro-structure. We investigated this using neuroimaging and genetic data from adults (UK Biobank, N = 31,748) and children (ABCD, N = 4928). Using polygenic scores and genetic correlations we observe a robust negative association between common variants for autism and a magnetic resonance imaging derived phenotype for neurite density (intracellular volume fraction) in the general population. This result is consistent across both children and adults, in both the cortex and in white matter tracts, and confirmed using polygenic scores and genetic correlations. There were no sex differences in this association. Mendelian randomisation analyses provide no evidence for a causal relationship between autism and intracellular volume fraction, although this should be revisited using better powered instruments. Overall, this study provides evidence for shared common variant genetics between autism and cortical neurite density.
Coding principles and mechanisms of serotonergic transmission modes
Zhang Y., Zhang P., Shin M., Chang Y., Abbott S.B., Venton B.J., Zhu J.J.
Q1
Springer Nature
Molecular Psychiatry 2025 citations by CoLab: 0  |  Abstract
Abstract Serotonin-mediated intercellular communication has been implicated in myriad human behaviors and diseases, yet how serotonin communicates and how the communication is regulated remain unclear due to limitations of available monitoring tools. Here, we report a method multiplexing genetically encoded sensor-based imaging and fast-scan cyclic voltammetry, enabling simultaneous recordings of synaptic, perisynaptic, proximate and distal extrasynaptic serotonergic transmission. Employing this method alongside a genetically encoded sensor-based image analysis program (GESIAP), we discovered that heterogeneous firing patterns of serotonergic neurons create various transmission modes in the mouse raphe nucleus and amygdala, encoding information of firing pulse frequency, number, and synchrony using neurotransmitter quantity, releasing synapse count, and synaptic and/or volume transmission. During tonic and low-frequency phasic activities, serotonin is confined within synaptic clefts due to efficient retrieval by perisynaptic transporters, mediating synaptic transmission modes. Conversely, during high-frequency, especially synchronized phasic activities, or when transporter inhibition, serotonin may surpass transporter capacity, and escape synaptic clefts through 1‒3 outlet channels, leading to volume transmission modes. Our results elucidate a mechanism of how channeled synaptic enclosures, synaptic properties, and transporters collaborate to define the coding principles of activity pattern-dependent serotonergic transmission modes.
YY1 mutations disrupt corticogenesis through a cell type specific rewiring of cell-autonomous and non-cell-autonomous transcriptional programs
Pereira M.F., Finazzi V., Rizzuti L., Aprile D., Aiello V., Mollica L., Riva M., Soriani C., Dossena F., Shyti R., Castaldi D., Tenderini E., Carminho-Rodrigues M.T., Bally J.F., de Vries B.B., et. al.
Q1
Springer Nature
Molecular Psychiatry 2025 citations by CoLab: 0
Resting-state fMRI reveals altered functional connectivity associated with resilience and susceptibility to chronic social defeat stress in mouse brain
Lupinsky D., Nasseef M.T., Parent C., Craig K., Diorio J., Zhang T., Meaney M.J.
Q1
Springer Nature
Molecular Psychiatry 2025 citations by CoLab: 0
Genetic architectures of childhood maltreatment and causal influence of childhood maltreatment on health outcomes in adulthood
Chen T., Chen C., Liu C., Lee J., Ganna A., Feng Y.A., Lin Y.
Q1
Springer Nature
Molecular Psychiatry 2025 citations by CoLab: 0
Using twin-pairs to assess potential bias in polygenic prediction of externalising behaviours across development
Bright J.K., Rayner C., Freeman Z., Zavos H.M., Ahmadzadeh Y.I., Viding E., McAdams T.A.
Q1
Springer Nature
Molecular Psychiatry 2025 citations by CoLab: 0  |  Abstract
Abstract Prediction from polygenic scores may be confounded by sources of passive gene-environment correlation (rGE; e.g. population stratification, assortative mating, and environmentally mediated effects of parental genotype on child phenotype). Using genomic data from 10 000 twin pairs, we asked whether polygenic scores from the most recent externalising genome-wide association study predict conduct problems, ADHD symptomology and callous-unemotional traits, and whether these predictions are biased by rGE. We ran regression models including within-family and between-family polygenic scores, to separate the direct genetic influence on a trait from environmental influences that correlate with genes (indirect genetic effects). Findings suggested that this externalising polygenic score is a good index of direct genetic influence on conduct and ADHD-related symptoms across development, with minimal bias from rGE, although the polygenic score predicted less variance in CU traits. Post-hoc analyses showed some indirect genetic effects acting on a common factor indexing stability of conduct problems across time and contexts.
Genome-wide analysis identifies novel shared loci between depression and white matter microstructure
Zhao Q., Wang S., Xiong D., Liu M., Zhang Y., Zhao G., Zhao J., Shi Z., Zhang Z., Lei M., Zhai Y., Xu J., Hao X., Li S., Liu F.
Q1
Springer Nature
Molecular Psychiatry 2025 citations by CoLab: 0
The dopaminergic effects of esketamine are mediated by a dual mechanism involving glutamate and opioid receptors
Rizzo A., Garçon-Poca M.Z., Essmann A., Souza A.J., Michaelides M., Ciruela F., Bonaventura J.
Q1
Springer Nature
Molecular Psychiatry 2025 citations by CoLab: 0

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USA, 2711, 74.79%
United Kingdom, 166, 4.58%
Germany, 160, 4.41%
Canada, 103, 2.84%
Australia, 74, 2.04%
Netherlands, 72, 1.99%
Sweden, 70, 1.93%
China, 67, 1.85%
Italy, 59, 1.63%
Israel, 40, 1.1%
France, 36, 0.99%
Finland, 36, 0.99%
India, 35, 0.97%
Norway, 35, 0.97%
Spain, 34, 0.94%
Denmark, 28, 0.77%
Switzerland, 26, 0.72%
Republic of Korea, 21, 0.58%
Austria, 20, 0.55%
Japan, 16, 0.44%
Bangladesh, 15, 0.41%
Mexico, 15, 0.41%
Thailand, 15, 0.41%
South Africa, 15, 0.41%
Belgium, 14, 0.39%
Brazil, 12, 0.33%
Pakistan, 11, 0.3%
Ireland, 10, 0.28%
Kenya, 10, 0.28%
Singapore, 10, 0.28%
Malaysia, 9, 0.25%
Philippines, 8, 0.22%
Egypt, 7, 0.19%
New Zealand, 7, 0.19%
Chile, 7, 0.19%
Ghana, 6, 0.17%
Georgia, 5, 0.14%
Malawi, 5, 0.14%
Nigeria, 5, 0.14%
Vietnam, 4, 0.11%
Costa Rica, 4, 0.11%
Saudi Arabia, 4, 0.11%
Tanzania, 4, 0.11%
Turkey, 4, 0.11%
Estonia, 3, 0.08%
Czech Republic, 3, 0.08%
Sri Lanka, 3, 0.08%
Russia, 2, 0.06%
Portugal, 2, 0.06%
Argentina, 2, 0.06%
Hungary, 2, 0.06%
Gambia, 2, 0.06%
Zambia, 2, 0.06%
Indonesia, 2, 0.06%
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Lithuania, 2, 0.06%
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UAE, 2, 0.06%
Peru, 2, 0.06%
Poland, 2, 0.06%
Uganda, 2, 0.06%
Barbados, 1, 0.03%
Burkina Faso, 1, 0.03%
Guinea, 1, 0.03%
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Greece, 1, 0.03%
Iran, 1, 0.03%
Iceland, 1, 0.03%
Qatar, 1, 0.03%
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Colombia, 1, 0.03%
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Lebanon, 1, 0.03%
Mozambique, 1, 0.03%
Nepal, 1, 0.03%
Puerto Rico, 1, 0.03%
Senegal, 1, 0.03%
Sudan, 1, 0.03%
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USA, 312, 65.82%
Germany, 70, 14.77%
United Kingdom, 40, 8.44%
Sweden, 30, 6.33%
Italy, 23, 4.85%
Canada, 21, 4.43%
Finland, 21, 4.43%
Australia, 20, 4.22%
France, 18, 3.8%
Netherlands, 18, 3.8%
China, 16, 3.38%
Spain, 14, 2.95%
Norway, 10, 2.11%
Switzerland, 9, 1.9%
Denmark, 7, 1.48%
Singapore, 6, 1.27%
Japan, 6, 1.27%
South Africa, 5, 1.05%
Belgium, 4, 0.84%
Brazil, 4, 0.84%
Republic of Korea, 4, 0.84%
Israel, 3, 0.63%
India, 3, 0.63%
Ireland, 3, 0.63%
Malawi, 3, 0.63%
Austria, 2, 0.42%
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Poland, 2, 0.42%
Estonia, 1, 0.21%
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Egypt, 1, 0.21%
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Colombia, 1, 0.21%
Lithuania, 1, 0.21%
Mexico, 1, 0.21%
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Sudan, 1, 0.21%
Thailand, 1, 0.21%
Tanzania, 1, 0.21%
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