Search results for " Programming"
showing 10 items of 1616 documents
T42. JUMPING TO CONCLUSIONS IS ASSOCIATED WITH THE POLYGENIC RISK SCORE FOR INTELLIGENCE BUT NOT FOR SCHIZOPHRENIA. PRELIMINARY FINDINGS FROM THE EU-…
2019
Background Psychotic patients tend to require less evidence to make decisions compared to general population. This bias named Jumping to Conclusions (JTC) has been found at First Episode Psychosis (FEP) in schizophrenia patients and associated with proneness to psychotic-like experiences in the general population. Interesting findings showed also strong association with lower cognitive functioning in psychotic patients, which in turn has been shown as a candidate intermediate phenotype for psychosis. Overall, findings to date could suggest a shared genetic liability between the occurrence of JTC and psychosis, potentially via IQ. The present study aims to investigate whether the presence of…
Personality traits as indicators of vulnerability to schizophrenia
1993
NORMATIVE DATA OF THE SCIP-S IN SCHIZOPHRENIA AND TYPE I BIPOLAR DISORDER
2010
Schizophrenia and left hemisphere dysfunctions a controlled neuropsychological study in schizophrenics and their relatives
1993
218 – Are there structural changes associated to suicidal behavior in patients with schizophrenia?
2008
Sex concordance for schizophrenia in families
1992
Consensus guideline for the evaluation of physical health in patients with schizophrenia
2007
The impact of sex, age at onset and birth complications on the risk of schizophrenia in a family study sample
1992
Auditory temporal processing in schizophrenia: high level rather than low level deficits?
2006
INTRODUCTION: Patients with schizophrenia demonstrate a wide range of information processing deficits. Most recent studies argue in favour of high level deficits, including attention and context processing, whereas fewer studies have demonstrated deficits at earlier stages of processing, such as perceptual discrimination and organisation. This is the first study to investigate both high and low level processing, within a single paradigm, in the case of auditory temporal processing in schizophrenia. METHODS: Patients with schizophrenia were compared to controls on a series of tasks involving three auditory temporal processes varying from low to higher level: (1) segregation of a complex sequ…
Disturbed structural connectivity in schizophrenia primary factor in pathology or epiphenomenon?
2007
Indirect evidence for disturbed structural connectivity of subcortical fiber tracts in schizophrenia has been obtained from functional neuroimaging and electrophysiologic studies. During the past few years, new structural imaging methods have become available. Diffusion tensor imaging and magnetization transfer imaging (MTI) have been used to investigate directly whether fiber tract abnormalities are indeed present in schizophrenia. To date, findings are inconsistent that may express problems related to methodological issues and sample size. Also, pathological processes detectable with these new techniques are not yet well understood. Nevertheless, with growing evidence of disturbed structu…