Ye Emily Wu
Overview
Explore the profile of Ye Emily Wu including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
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10
Citations
651
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Recent Articles
1.
Sun F, Wu Y, Hong W
Science
. 2025 Feb;
387(6736):eadq2679.
PMID: 39977513
Humans often take actions to assist others experiencing unresponsiveness, such as transient loss of consciousness. How other animals react to unresponsive conspecifics-and the neural mechanisms driving such behaviors-remain largely unexplored....
2.
Zhang M, Wu Y, Jiang M, Hong W
Nature
. 2024 Jan;
626(7997):136-144.
PMID: 38267578
Humans and animals exhibit various forms of prosocial helping behaviour towards others in need. Although previous research has investigated how individuals may perceive others' states, the neural mechanisms of how...
3.
Gandal M, Haney J, Wamsley B, Yap C, Parhami S, Emani P, et al.
Nature
. 2022 Nov;
611(7936):532-539.
PMID: 36323788
Neuropsychiatric disorders classically lack defining brain pathologies, but recent work has demonstrated dysregulation at the molecular level, characterized by transcriptomic and epigenetic alterations. In autism spectrum disorder (ASD), this molecular...
4.
Wu Y, Hong W
Trends Neurosci
. 2022 Jul;
45(10):749-762.
PMID: 35853793
The ability to behave in ways that benefit other individuals' well-being is among the most celebrated human characteristics crucial for social cohesiveness. Across mammalian species, animals display various forms of...
5.
Wu Y, Dang J, Kingsbury L, Zhang M, Sun F, Hu R, et al.
Nature
. 2021 Oct;
599(7884):262-267.
PMID: 34646019
The ability to help and care for others fosters social cohesiveness and is vital to the physical and emotional well-being of social species, including humans. Affiliative social touch, such as...
6.
Mohr M, Wong A, Sukumar G, Dalgard C, Hong W, Wu T, et al.
PLoS One
. 2021 Aug;
16(8):e0256148.
PMID: 34407144
In females, estrogens have two main modes of action relating to gonadotropin secretion: positive feedback and negative feedback. Estrogen positive and negative feedback are controlled by different regions of the...
7.
Hu R, Zuo Y, Ly T, Wang J, Meera P, Wu Y, et al.
Nat Neurosci
. 2021 Apr;
24(6):831-842.
PMID: 33820999
Social interactions and relationships are often rewarding, but the neural mechanisms through which social interaction drives positive experience remain poorly understood. In this study, we developed an automated operant conditioning...
8.
Kingsbury L, Huang S, Wang J, Gu K, Golshani P, Wu Y, et al.
Cell
. 2019 Jun;
178(2):429-446.e16.
PMID: 31230711
Social interactions involve complex decision-making tasks that are shaped by dynamic, mutual feedback between participants. An open question is whether and how emergent properties may arise across brains of socially...
9.
Chen P, Hu R, Wu Y, Pan L, Huang S, Micevych P, et al.
Cell
. 2019 Feb;
176(5):1206-1221.e18.
PMID: 30773317
Social behaviors, including behaviors directed toward young offspring, exhibit striking sex differences. Understanding how these sexually dimorphic behaviors are regulated at the level of circuits and transcriptomes will provide insights...
10.
Kim Y, Khoshkhoo S, Frankowski J, Zhu B, Abbasi S, Lee S, et al.
Neuron
. 2018 Oct;
100(5):1180-1193.e6.
PMID: 30344048
Considerable evidence suggests loss-of-function mutations in the chromatin remodeler CHD2 contribute to a broad spectrum of human neurodevelopmental disorders. However, it is unknown how CHD2 mutations lead to impaired brain...