129 results on '"Bourgin J"'
Search Results
2. Cognitive functioning throughout adulthood and illness stages in individuals with psychotic disorders and their unaffected siblings
- Author
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Velthorst E., Mollon J., Murray R. M., de Haan L., Germeys I. M., Glahn D. C., Arango C., van der Ven E., Di Forti M., Bernardo M., Guloksuz S., Delespaul P., Mezquida G., Amoretti S., Bobes J., Saiz P. A., Garcia-Portilla M. P., Santos J. L., Jimenez-Lopez E., Sanjuan J., Aguilar E. J., Arrojo M., Carracedo A., Lopez G., Gonzalez-Penas J., Parellada M., Atbasoglu C., Saka M. C., Ucok A., Alptekin K., Akdede B., Binbay T., Altinyazar V., Ulas H., Yalincetin B., Gumus-Akay G., Beyaz B. C., Soygur H., Cankurtaran E. S., Kaymak S. U., Maric N. P., Mihaljevic M. M., Petrovic S. A., Mirjanic T., Del-Ben C. M., Ferraro L., Gayer-Anderson C., Jones P. B., Jongsma H. E., Kirkbride J. B., La Cascia C., Lasalvia A., Tosato S., Llorca P. -M., Menezes P. R., Morgan C., Quattrone D., Menchetti M., Selten J. -P., Szoke A., Tarricone I., Tortelli A., McGuire P., Valmaggia L., Kempton M. J., van der Gaag M., Riecher-Rossler A., Bressan R. A., Barrantes-Vidal N., Nelson B., McGorry P., Pantelis C., Krebs M. -O., Ruhrmann S., Sachs G., Rutten B. P. F., van Os J., Alizadeh B. Z., van Amelsvoort T., Bartels-Velthuis A. A., Bruggeman R., van Beveren N. J., Luykx J. J., Cahn W., Simons C. J. P., Kahn R. S., Schirmbeck F., van Winkel R., Calem M., Tognin S., Modinos G., Pisani S., Kraan T. C., van Dam D. S., Burger N., Amminger G. P., Politis A., Goodall J., Borgwardt S., Studerus E., Gadelha A., Brietzke E., Asevedo G., Asevedo E., Zugman A., Dominguez-Martinez T., Monsonet M., Cristobal-Narvaez P., Racioppi A., Kwapil T. R., Kazes M., Daban C., Bourgin J., Gay O., Mam-Lam-Fook C., Nordholm D., Rander L., Krakauer K., Glenthoj L. B., Glenthoj B., Gebhard D., Arnhold J., Klosterkotter J., Lasser I., Winklbaur B., Reichenberg A., Velthorst E., Mollon J., Murray R.M., de Haan L., Germeys I.M., Glahn D.C., Arango C., van der Ven E., Di Forti M., Bernardo M., Guloksuz S., Delespaul P., Mezquida G., Amoretti S., Bobes J., Saiz P.A., Garcia-Portilla M.P., Santos J.L., Jimenez-Lopez E., Sanjuan J., Aguilar E.J., Arrojo M., Carracedo A., Lopez G., Gonzalez-Penas J., Parellada M., Atbasoglu C., Saka M.C., Ucok A., Alptekin K., Akdede B., Binbay T., Altinyazar V., Ulas H., Yalincetin B., Gumus-Akay G., Beyaz B.C., Soygur H., Cankurtaran E.S., Kaymak S.U., Maric N.P., Mihaljevic M.M., Petrovic S.A., Mirjanic T., Del-Ben C.M., Ferraro L., Gayer-Anderson C., Jones P.B., Jongsma H.E., Kirkbride J.B., La Cascia C., Lasalvia A., Tosato S., Llorca P.-M., Menezes P.R., Morgan C., Quattrone D., Menchetti M., Selten J.-P., Szoke A., Tarricone I., Tortelli A., McGuire P., Valmaggia L., Kempton M.J., van der Gaag M., Riecher-Rossler A., Bressan R.A., Barrantes-Vidal N., Nelson B., McGorry P., Pantelis C., Krebs M.-O., Ruhrmann S., Sachs G., Rutten B.P.F., van Os J., Alizadeh B.Z., van Amelsvoort T., Bartels-Velthuis A.A., Bruggeman R., van Beveren N.J., Luykx J.J., Cahn W., Simons C.J.P., Kahn R.S., Schirmbeck F., van Winkel R., Calem M., Tognin S., Modinos G., Pisani S., Kraan T.C., van Dam D.S., Burger N., Amminger G.P., Politis A., Goodall J., Borgwardt S., Studerus E., Gadelha A., Brietzke E., Asevedo G., Asevedo E., Zugman A., Dominguez-Martinez T., Monsonet M., Cristobal-Narvaez P., Racioppi A., Kwapil T.R., Kazes M., Daban C., Bourgin J., Gay O., Mam-Lam-Fook C., Nordholm D., Rander L., Krakauer K., Glenthoj L.B., Glenthoj B., Gebhard D., Arnhold J., Klosterkotter J., Lasser I., Winklbaur B., Reichenberg A., RS: MHeNs - R2 - Mental Health, Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie, RS: MHeNs - R1 - Cognitive Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience, Neurosciences, Psychiatry, Clinical Developmental Psychology, World Health Organization (WHO) Collaborating Center, Life Course Epidemiology (LCE), Groningen Institute for Gastro Intestinal Genetics and Immunology (3GI), Clinical Cognitive Neuropsychiatry Research Program (CCNP), Real World Studies in PharmacoEpidemiology, -Genetics, -Economics and -Therapy (PEGET), Adult Psychiatry, APH - Mental Health, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Complex Trait Genetics, and Amsterdam Neuroscience - Mood, Anxiety, Psychosis, Stress & Sleep
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,validity ,medicine.medical_treatment ,CHILDHOOD ,Neuropsychological Tests ,FAMÍLIA ,episode ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,DEFICITS ,Settore MED/48 -Scienze Infermierist. e Tecn. Neuro-Psichiatriche e Riabilitat ,Medicine ,Cognitive impairment ,Psychiatry ,Symptom severity ,Cannabis use ,IMPAIRMENT ,ABILITY ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Schizophrenia ,RELIABILITY ,Neuropsychological Test ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Human ,Clinical psychology ,Adult ,Biochemistry & Molecular Biology ,impairment ,schizophrenia-patients ,ability ,GENETIC RISK ,Psychotic Disorder ,SCHIZOPHRENIA-PATIENTS ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Settore M-PSI/08 - Psicologia Clinica ,Humans ,In patient ,Cognitive skill ,VALIDITY ,Antipsychotic ,Molecular Biology ,Settore MED/25 - Psichiatria ,Aged ,Cross-Sectional Studie ,DECLINE ,Science & Technology ,reliability ,business.industry ,Working memory ,Siblings ,Neurosciences ,Diagnostic markers ,medicine.disease ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,030104 developmental biology ,deficits ,Psychotic Disorders ,PSYCHOSIS, COGNITION, MULTICENTRIC STUDY ,Neurosciences & Neurology ,business ,EPISODE ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme under grant agreement No. HEALTH-F2-2010-241909 (EUGEI); The Spanish sample was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation, Instituto de Salud Carlos III (SAM16PE07CP1, PI16/02012, PI19/024) (...), Velthorst, E., Mollon, J., Murray, R.M., de Haan, L., Germeys, I.M., Glahn, D.C., Arango, C., van der Ven, E., Di Forti, M., Bernardo, M., Guloksuz, S., Delespaul, P., Mezquida, G., Amoretti, S., Bobes, J., Saiz, P.A., García-Portilla, M.P., Santos, J.L., Jiménez-López, E., Sanjuan, J., Aguilar, E.J., Arrojo, M., Carracedo, A., López, G., González-Peñas, J., Parellada, M., Atbaşoğlu, C., Saka, M.C., Üçok, A., Alptekin, K., Akdede, B., Binbay, T., Altınyazar, V., Ulaş, H., Yalınçetin, B., Gümüş-Akay, G., Beyaz, B.C., Soygür, H., Cankurtaran, E.Ş., Kaymak, S.U., Maric, N.P., Mihaljevic, M.M., Petrovic, S.A., Mirjanic, T., Del-Ben, C.M., Ferraro, L., Gayer-Anderson, C., Jones, P.B., Jongsma, H.E., Kirkbride, J.B., La Cascia, C., Lasalvia, A., Tosato, S., Llorca, P.-M., Menezes, P.R., Morgan, C., Quattrone, D., Menchetti, M., Selten, J.-P., Szöke, A., Tarricone, I., Tortelli, A., McGuire, P., Valmaggia, L., Kempton, M.J., van der Gaag, M., Riecher-Rössler, A., Bressan, R.A., Barrantes-Vidal, N., Nelson, B., McGorry, P., Pantelis, C., Krebs, M.-O., Ruhrmann, S., Sachs, G., Rutten, B.P.F., van Os, J., Alizadeh, B.Z., van Amelsvoort, T., Bartels-Velthuis, A.A., Bruggeman, R., van Beveren, N.J., Luykx, J.J., Cahn, W., Simons, C.J.P., Kahn, R.S., Schirmbeck, F., van Winkel, R., Calem, M., Tognin, S., Modinos, G., Pisani, S., Kraan, T.C., van Dam, D.S., Burger, N., Amminger, G.P., Politis, A., Goodall, J., Borgwardt, S., Studerus, E., Gadelha, A., Brietzke, E., Asevedo, G., Asevedo, E., Zugman, A., Domínguez-Martínez, T., Monsonet, M., Cristóbal-Narváez, P., Racioppi, A., Kwapil, T.R., Kazes, M., Daban, C., Bourgin, J., Gay, O., Mam-Lam-Fook, C., Nordholm, D., Rander, L., Krakauer, K., Glenthøj, L.B., Glenthøj, B., Gebhard, D., Arnhold, J., Klosterkötter, J., Lasser, I., Winklbaur, B., Reichenberg, A., EU-GEI High Risk Study
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- 2021
3. Hyper-responsivity to stress in rats is associated with a large increase in amygdala volume. A 7 T MRI study
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Bourgin, J., Cachia, A., Boumezbeur, F., Djemaï, B., Bottlaender, M., Duchesnay, E., Mériaux, S., and Jay, T.M.
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- 2015
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4. Quelle est la nature du lien entre l’expérience de symptômes psychotiques atténués et l’existence d’idées suicidaires dans une population d’adolescents et jeunes adultes ?
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Liewig, J., Bourgin, J., Tebeka, S., Duchesnay, E., Mallet, J., Le Strat, Y., and Dubertret, C.
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- 2018
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5. Expériences psychotiques chez 50 patients adolescents hospitalisés pour la 1re fois : approche trans-diagnostique et prospective avec la PQ16
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Mallet, J., Guessoum, S., Brunet, F., Couturier, A., Avenet, L., Tebeka, S., Kiesmann, E., Mazer, N., Cardot, H., Bourgin, J., Liewig, J., Le Strat, Y., and Dubertret, C.
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- 2018
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6. Physical and mental health impact of COVID-19 on children, adolescents, and their families: The Collaborative Outcomes study on Health and Functioning during Infection Times - Children and Adolescents (COH-FIT-C&A)
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Solmi, M, Estradé, A, Thompson, T, Agorastos, A, Radua, J, Cortese, S, Dragioti, E, Leisch, F, Vancampfort, D, Thygesen, LC, Aschauer, H, Schloegelhofer, M, Akimova, E, Schneeberger, A, Huber, CG, Hasler, G, Conus, P, Cuénod, KQD, von Känel, R, Arrondo, G, Fusar-Poli, P, Gorwood, P, Llorca, PM, Krebs, MO, Scanferla, E, Kishimoto, T, Rabbani, G, Skonieczna-Żydecka, K, Brambilla, P, Favaro, A, Takamiya, A, Zoccante, L, Colizzi, M, Bourgin, J, Kamiński, K, Moghadasin, M, Seedat, S, Matthews, E, Wells, J, Vassilopoulou, E, Gadelha, A, Su, KP, Kwon, JS, Kim, M, Lee, TY, Papsuev, O, Manková, D, Boscutti, A, Gerunda, C, Saccon, D, Righi, E, Monaco, F, Croatto, G, Cereda, G, Demurtas, J, Brondino, N, Veronese, N, Enrico, P, Politi, P, Ciappolino, V, Pfennig, A, Bechdolf, A, Meyer-Lindenberg, A, Kahl, KG, Domschke, K, Bauer, M, Koutsouleris, N, Winter, S, Borgwardt, S, Bitter, I, Balazs, J, Czobor, P, Unoka, Z, Mavridis, D, Tsamakis, K, Bozikas, VP, Tunvirachaisakul, C, Maes, M, Rungnirundorn, T, Supasitthumrong, T, Haque, A, Brunoni, AR, Costardi, CG, Schuch, FB, Polanczyk, G, Luiz, JM, Fonseca, L, Aparicio, LV, Valvassori, SS, Nordentoft, M, Vendsborg, P, Hoffmann, SH, Sehli, J, Sartorius, N, Heuss, S, Guinart, D, Hamilton, J, Kane, J, Rubio, J, Sand, M, Marx, Wolf, Solmi, M, Estradé, A, Thompson, T, Agorastos, A, Radua, J, Cortese, S, Dragioti, E, Leisch, F, Vancampfort, D, Thygesen, LC, Aschauer, H, Schloegelhofer, M, Akimova, E, Schneeberger, A, Huber, CG, Hasler, G, Conus, P, Cuénod, KQD, von Känel, R, Arrondo, G, Fusar-Poli, P, Gorwood, P, Llorca, PM, Krebs, MO, Scanferla, E, Kishimoto, T, Rabbani, G, Skonieczna-Żydecka, K, Brambilla, P, Favaro, A, Takamiya, A, Zoccante, L, Colizzi, M, Bourgin, J, Kamiński, K, Moghadasin, M, Seedat, S, Matthews, E, Wells, J, Vassilopoulou, E, Gadelha, A, Su, KP, Kwon, JS, Kim, M, Lee, TY, Papsuev, O, Manková, D, Boscutti, A, Gerunda, C, Saccon, D, Righi, E, Monaco, F, Croatto, G, Cereda, G, Demurtas, J, Brondino, N, Veronese, N, Enrico, P, Politi, P, Ciappolino, V, Pfennig, A, Bechdolf, A, Meyer-Lindenberg, A, Kahl, KG, Domschke, K, Bauer, M, Koutsouleris, N, Winter, S, Borgwardt, S, Bitter, I, Balazs, J, Czobor, P, Unoka, Z, Mavridis, D, Tsamakis, K, Bozikas, VP, Tunvirachaisakul, C, Maes, M, Rungnirundorn, T, Supasitthumrong, T, Haque, A, Brunoni, AR, Costardi, CG, Schuch, FB, Polanczyk, G, Luiz, JM, Fonseca, L, Aparicio, LV, Valvassori, SS, Nordentoft, M, Vendsborg, P, Hoffmann, SH, Sehli, J, Sartorius, N, Heuss, S, Guinart, D, Hamilton, J, Kane, J, Rubio, J, Sand, M, and Marx, Wolf
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- 2022
7. The collaborative outcomes study on health and functioning during infection times in adults (COH-FIT-Adults): Design and methods of an international online survey targeting physical and mental health effects of the COVID-19 pandemic
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Solmi, M, Estradé, A, Thompson, T, Agorastos, A, Radua, J, Cortese, S, Dragioti, E, Leisch, F, Vancampfort, D, Thygesen, LC, Aschauer, H, Schloegelhofer, M, Akimova, E, Schneeberger, A, Huber, CG, Hasler, G, Conus, P, Cuénod, KQD, von Känel, R, Arrondo, G, Fusar-Poli, P, Gorwood, P, Llorca, PM, Krebs, MO, Scanferla, E, Kishimoto, T, Rabbani, G, Skonieczna-Żydecka, K, Brambilla, P, Favaro, A, Takamiya, A, Zoccante, L, Colizzi, M, Bourgin, J, Kamiński, K, Moghadasin, M, Seedat, S, Matthews, E, Wells, J, Vassilopoulou, E, Gadelha, A, Su, KP, Kwon, JS, Kim, M, Lee, TY, Papsuev, O, Manková, D, Boscutti, A, Gerunda, C, Saccon, D, Righi, E, Monaco, F, Croatto, G, Cereda, G, Demurtas, J, Brondino, N, Veronese, N, Enrico, P, Politi, P, Ciappolino, V, Pfennig, A, Bechdolf, A, Meyer-Lindenberg, A, Kahl, KG, Domschke, K, Bauer, M, Koutsouleris, N, Winter, S, Borgwardt, S, Bitter, I, Balazs, J, Czobor, P, Unoka, Z, Mavridis, D, Tsamakis, K, Bozikas, VP, Tunvirachaisakul, C, Maes, M, Rungnirundorn, T, Supasitthumrong, T, Haque, A, Brunoni, AR, Costardi, CG, Schuch, FB, Polanczyk, G, Luiz, JM, Fonseca, L, Aparicio, LV, Valvassori, SS, Nordentoft, M, Vendsborg, P, Hoffmann, SH, Sehli, J, Sartorius, N, Heuss, S, Guinart, D, Hamilton, J, Kane, J, Rubio, J, Sand, M, Berk, Michael, Solmi, M, Estradé, A, Thompson, T, Agorastos, A, Radua, J, Cortese, S, Dragioti, E, Leisch, F, Vancampfort, D, Thygesen, LC, Aschauer, H, Schloegelhofer, M, Akimova, E, Schneeberger, A, Huber, CG, Hasler, G, Conus, P, Cuénod, KQD, von Känel, R, Arrondo, G, Fusar-Poli, P, Gorwood, P, Llorca, PM, Krebs, MO, Scanferla, E, Kishimoto, T, Rabbani, G, Skonieczna-Żydecka, K, Brambilla, P, Favaro, A, Takamiya, A, Zoccante, L, Colizzi, M, Bourgin, J, Kamiński, K, Moghadasin, M, Seedat, S, Matthews, E, Wells, J, Vassilopoulou, E, Gadelha, A, Su, KP, Kwon, JS, Kim, M, Lee, TY, Papsuev, O, Manková, D, Boscutti, A, Gerunda, C, Saccon, D, Righi, E, Monaco, F, Croatto, G, Cereda, G, Demurtas, J, Brondino, N, Veronese, N, Enrico, P, Politi, P, Ciappolino, V, Pfennig, A, Bechdolf, A, Meyer-Lindenberg, A, Kahl, KG, Domschke, K, Bauer, M, Koutsouleris, N, Winter, S, Borgwardt, S, Bitter, I, Balazs, J, Czobor, P, Unoka, Z, Mavridis, D, Tsamakis, K, Bozikas, VP, Tunvirachaisakul, C, Maes, M, Rungnirundorn, T, Supasitthumrong, T, Haque, A, Brunoni, AR, Costardi, CG, Schuch, FB, Polanczyk, G, Luiz, JM, Fonseca, L, Aparicio, LV, Valvassori, SS, Nordentoft, M, Vendsborg, P, Hoffmann, SH, Sehli, J, Sartorius, N, Heuss, S, Guinart, D, Hamilton, J, Kane, J, Rubio, J, Sand, M, and Berk, Michael
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- 2022
8. Association of Adverse Outcomes With Emotion Processing and Its Neural Substrate in Individuals at Clinical High Risk for Psychosis
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Modinos, G, Kempton, MJ, Tognin, S, Calem, M, Porffy, L, Antoniades, M, Mason, A, Azis, M, Allen, P, Nelson, B, McGorry, P, Pantelis, C, Riecher-Rossler, A, Borgwardt, S, Bressan, R, Barrantes-Vidal, N, Krebs, M-O, Nordentoft, M, Glenthoj, B, Ruhrmann, S, Sachs, G, Rutten, B, van Os, J, de Haan, L, Velthorst, E, van der Gaag, M, Valmaggia, LR, McGuire, P, Kraan, TC, van Dam, DS, Burger, N, Amminger, GP, Politis, A, Goodall, J, Rapp, C, Ittig, S, Studerus, E, Smieskova, R, Gadelha, A, Brietzke, E, Asevedo, G, Asevedo, E, Zugman, A, Dominguez-Martinez, T, Monsonet, M, Hinojosa, L, Racioppi, A, Kwapil, TR, Kazes, M, Daban, C, Bourgin, J, Gay, O, Mam-Lam-Fook, C, Nordholm, D, Randers, L, Krakauer, K, Glenthoj, LB, Gebhard, D, Arnhold, J, Klosterkotter, J, Lasser, I, Winklbaur, B, Delespaul, PA, Modinos, G, Kempton, MJ, Tognin, S, Calem, M, Porffy, L, Antoniades, M, Mason, A, Azis, M, Allen, P, Nelson, B, McGorry, P, Pantelis, C, Riecher-Rossler, A, Borgwardt, S, Bressan, R, Barrantes-Vidal, N, Krebs, M-O, Nordentoft, M, Glenthoj, B, Ruhrmann, S, Sachs, G, Rutten, B, van Os, J, de Haan, L, Velthorst, E, van der Gaag, M, Valmaggia, LR, McGuire, P, Kraan, TC, van Dam, DS, Burger, N, Amminger, GP, Politis, A, Goodall, J, Rapp, C, Ittig, S, Studerus, E, Smieskova, R, Gadelha, A, Brietzke, E, Asevedo, G, Asevedo, E, Zugman, A, Dominguez-Martinez, T, Monsonet, M, Hinojosa, L, Racioppi, A, Kwapil, TR, Kazes, M, Daban, C, Bourgin, J, Gay, O, Mam-Lam-Fook, C, Nordholm, D, Randers, L, Krakauer, K, Glenthoj, LB, Gebhard, D, Arnhold, J, Klosterkotter, J, Lasser, I, Winklbaur, B, and Delespaul, PA
- Abstract
IMPORTANCE: The development of adverse clinical outcomes in patients with psychosis has been associated with behavioral and neuroanatomical deficits related to emotion processing. However, the association between alterations in brain regions subserving emotion processing and clinical outcomes remains unclear. OBJECTIVE: To examine the association between alterations in emotion processing and regional gray matter volumes in individuals at clinical high risk (CHR) for psychosis, and the association with subsequent clinical outcomes. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This naturalistic case-control study with clinical follow-up at 12 months was conducted from July 1, 2010, to August 31, 2016, and collected data from 9 psychosis early detection centers (Amsterdam, Basel, Cologne, Copenhagen, London, Melbourne, Paris, The Hague, and Vienna). Participants (213 individuals at CHR and 52 healthy controls) were enrolled in the European Network of National Schizophrenia Networks Studying Gene-Environment Interactions (EU-GEI) project. Data were analyzed from October 1, 2018, to April 24, 2019. MAIN MEASURES AND OUTCOMES: Emotion recognition was assessed with the Degraded Facial Affect Recognition Task. Three-Tesla magnetic resonance imaging scans were acquired from all participants, and gray matter volume was measured in regions of interest (medial prefrontal cortex, amygdala, hippocampus, and insula). Clinical outcomes at 12 months were evaluated for transition to psychosis using the Comprehensive Assessment of At-Risk Mental States criteria, and the level of overall functioning was measured through the Global Assessment of Functioning [GAF] scale. RESULTS: A total of 213 individuals at CHR (105 women [49.3%]; mean [SD] age, 22.9 [4.7] years) and 52 healthy controls (25 women [48.1%]; mean [SD] age, 23.3 [4.0] years) were included in the study at baseline. At the follow-up within 2 years of baseline, 44 individuals at CHR (20.7%) had developed psychosis and 169 (79.3%) had n
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- 2020
9. From Speech Illusions to Onset of Psychotic Disorder: Applying Network Analysis to an Experimental Measure of Aberrant Experiences
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Boyette, L-L, Isvoranu, A-M, Schirmbeck, F, Velthorst, E, Simons, CJP, Barrantes-Vidal, N, Bressan, R, Kempton, MJ, Krebs, M-O, McGuire, P, Nelson, B, Nordentoft, M, Riecher-Rössler, A, Ruhrmann, S, Rutten, BP, Sachs, G, Valmaggia, LR, van der Gaag, M, Borsboom, D, de Haan, L, van Os, J, Calem, M, Tognin, S, Modinos, G, Kraan, TC, van Dam, DS, Burger, N, McGorry, P, Amminger, GP, Pantelis, C, Politis, A, Goodall, J, Borgwardt, S, Studerus, E, Gadelha, A, Brietzke, E, Asevedo, G, Asevedo, E, Zugman, A, Domínguez-Martínez, T, Cristóbal-Narváez, P, Kwapil, TR, Monsonet, M, Hinojosa, L, Kazes, M, Daban, C, Bourgin, J, Gay, O, Mam-Lam-Fook, C, Nordholm, D, Randers, L, Krakauer, K, Glenthøj, L, Glenthøj, B, Gebhard, D, Arnhold, J, Klosterkötter, J, Lasser, I, Winklbaur, B, Delespaul, PA, Boyette, L-L, Isvoranu, A-M, Schirmbeck, F, Velthorst, E, Simons, CJP, Barrantes-Vidal, N, Bressan, R, Kempton, MJ, Krebs, M-O, McGuire, P, Nelson, B, Nordentoft, M, Riecher-Rössler, A, Ruhrmann, S, Rutten, BP, Sachs, G, Valmaggia, LR, van der Gaag, M, Borsboom, D, de Haan, L, van Os, J, Calem, M, Tognin, S, Modinos, G, Kraan, TC, van Dam, DS, Burger, N, McGorry, P, Amminger, GP, Pantelis, C, Politis, A, Goodall, J, Borgwardt, S, Studerus, E, Gadelha, A, Brietzke, E, Asevedo, G, Asevedo, E, Zugman, A, Domínguez-Martínez, T, Cristóbal-Narváez, P, Kwapil, TR, Monsonet, M, Hinojosa, L, Kazes, M, Daban, C, Bourgin, J, Gay, O, Mam-Lam-Fook, C, Nordholm, D, Randers, L, Krakauer, K, Glenthøj, L, Glenthøj, B, Gebhard, D, Arnhold, J, Klosterkötter, J, Lasser, I, Winklbaur, B, and Delespaul, PA
- Abstract
Aberrant perceptional experiences are a potential early marker of psychosis development. Earlier studies have found experimentally assessed speech illusions to be associated with positive symptoms in patients with psychotic disorders, but findings for attenuated symptoms in individuals without psychotic disorders have been inconsistent. Also, the role of affect is unclear. The aim of this study was to use the network approach to investigate how speech illusions relate to individual symptoms and onset of a psychotic disorder. We estimated a network model based on data from 289 Clinical High-Risk (CHR) subjects, participating in the EU-GEI project. The network structure depicts statistical associations between (affective and all) speech illusions, cross-sectional individual attenuated positive and affective symptoms, and transition to psychotic disorder after conditioning on all other variables in the network. Speech illusions were assessed with the White Noise Task, symptoms with the BPRS and transition during 24-month follow-up with the CAARMS. Affective, not all, speech illusions were found to be directly, albeit weakly, associated with hallucinatory experiences. Hallucinatory experiences, in turn, were associated with delusional ideation. Bizarre behavior was the only symptom in the network steadily predictive of transition. Affective symptoms were highly interrelated, with depression showing the highest overall strength of connections to and predictability by other symptoms. Both speech illusions and transition showed low overall predictability by symptoms. Our findings suggest that experimentally assessed speech illusions are not a mere consequence of psychotic symptoms or disorder, but that their single assessment is likely not useful for assessing transition risk.
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- 2020
10. Clinical, cognitive and neuroanatomical associations of serum NMDAR autoantibodies in people at clinical high risk for psychosis
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Pollak, TA, Kempton, MJ, Iyegbe, C, Vincent, A, Irani, SR, Coutinho, E, Menassa, DA, Jacobson, L, de Haan, L, Ruhrmann, S, Sachs, G, Riecher-Roessler, A, Krebs, M-O, Amminger, P, Glenthoj, B, Barrantes-Vidal, N, van Os, J, Rutten, BPF, Bressan, RA, van der Gaag, M, Yolken, R, Hotopf, M, Valmaggia, L, Stone, J, David, AS, McGuire, P, Calem, M, Tognin, S, Modinos, G, Velthorst, E, Kraan, TC, van Dam, DS, Burger, N, Nelson, B, McGorry, P, Pantelis, C, Politis, A, Goodall, J, Borgwardt, S, Ittig, S, Studerus, E, Smieskova, R, Gadelha, A, Brietzke, E, Asevedo, G, Asevedo, E, Zugman, A, Rosa, A, Racioppi, A, Monsonet, M, Hinojosa-Marques, L, Kwapil, TR, Kazes, M, Daban, C, Bourgin, J, Gay, O, Mam-Lam-Fook, C, Nordholm, D, Randers, L, Krakauer, K, Glenthoj, L, Nordentoft, M, Gebhard, D, Arnhold, J, Klosterkoetter, J, Lasser, I, Winklbaur, B, Delespaul, PA, Pollak, TA, Kempton, MJ, Iyegbe, C, Vincent, A, Irani, SR, Coutinho, E, Menassa, DA, Jacobson, L, de Haan, L, Ruhrmann, S, Sachs, G, Riecher-Roessler, A, Krebs, M-O, Amminger, P, Glenthoj, B, Barrantes-Vidal, N, van Os, J, Rutten, BPF, Bressan, RA, van der Gaag, M, Yolken, R, Hotopf, M, Valmaggia, L, Stone, J, David, AS, McGuire, P, Calem, M, Tognin, S, Modinos, G, Velthorst, E, Kraan, TC, van Dam, DS, Burger, N, Nelson, B, McGorry, P, Pantelis, C, Politis, A, Goodall, J, Borgwardt, S, Ittig, S, Studerus, E, Smieskova, R, Gadelha, A, Brietzke, E, Asevedo, G, Asevedo, E, Zugman, A, Rosa, A, Racioppi, A, Monsonet, M, Hinojosa-Marques, L, Kwapil, TR, Kazes, M, Daban, C, Bourgin, J, Gay, O, Mam-Lam-Fook, C, Nordholm, D, Randers, L, Krakauer, K, Glenthoj, L, Nordentoft, M, Gebhard, D, Arnhold, J, Klosterkoetter, J, Lasser, I, Winklbaur, B, and Delespaul, PA
- Abstract
Serum neuronal autoantibodies, such as those to the NMDA receptor (NMDAR), are detectable in a subgroup of patients with psychotic disorders. It is not known if they are present before the onset of psychosis or whether they are associated with particular clinical features or outcomes. In a case-control study, sera from 254 subjects at clinical high risk (CHR) for psychosis and 116 healthy volunteers were tested for antibodies against multiple neuronal antigens implicated in CNS autoimmune disorders, using fixed and live cell-based assays (CBAs). Within the CHR group, the relationship between NMDAR antibodies and symptoms, cognitive function and clinical outcomes over 24 month follow-up was examined. CHR subjects were not more frequently seropositive for neuronal autoantibodies than controls (8.3% vs. 5.2%; OR = 1.50; 95% CI: 0.58-3.90). The NMDAR was the most common target antigen and NMDAR IgGs were more sensitively detected with live versus fixed CBAs (p < 0.001). Preliminary phenotypic analyses revealed that within the CHR sample, the NMDAR antibody seropositive subjects had higher levels of current depression, performed worse on the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Task (p < 0.05), and had a markedly lower IQ (p < 0.01). NMDAR IgGs were not more frequent in subjects who later became psychotic than those who did not. NMDAR antibody serostatus and titre was associated with poorer levels of functioning at follow-up (p < 0.05) and the presence of a neuronal autoantibody was associated with larger amygdala volumes (p < 0.05). Altogether, these findings demonstrate that NMDAR autoantibodies are detectable in a subgroup of CHR subjects at equal rates to controls. In the CHR group, they are associated with affective psychopathology, impairments in verbal memory, and overall cognitive function: these findings are qualitatively and individually similar to core features of autoimmune encephalitis and/or animal models of NMDAR antibody-mediated CNS disease. Overall the current
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- 2020
11. Preparation and fusion properties of protoplasts from mature pollen of Nicotiana tabacum
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Desprez, B., Chupeau, Y., and Bourgin, J.-P.
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- 1995
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12. Selection for spontaneous tomato haploids using a conditional lethal marker
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Hamza, S., Camilleri, C., Pollien, J. -M., Vaucheret, H., Bourgin, J. -P., and Chupeau, Y.
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- 1993
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13. Sexual and somatic hybridization in the genusLycopersicon
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Lefrançois, C., Chupeau, Y., and Bourgin, J. P.
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- 1993
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14. Development of a blood-based molecular biomarker test for identification of schizophrenia before disease onset
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Chan, M K, Krebs, M-O, Cox, D, Guest, P C, Yolken, R H, Rahmoune, H, Rothermundt, M, Steiner, J, Leweke, F M, van Beveren, N J M, Niebuhr, D W, Weber, N S, Cowan, D N, Suarez-Pinilla, P, Crespo-Facorro, B, Mam-Lam-Fook, C, Bourgin, J, Wenstrup, R J, Kaldate, R R, Cooper, J D, and Bahn, S
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- 2015
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15. Longitudinal Analyses of Blood Transcriptome During Conversion to Psychosis
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Chaumette, Boris, Kebir, Oussama, Pouch, Juliette, Ducos, Bertrand, Selimi, Fekrije, Gaillard, Raphael, Krebs, Marie-Odile, Amado, I., Gaillard, C., Plaze, M., Magaud, E., Kazes, M., Mam-Lam-Fook, C., Daban, C., Gay, O., Bourgin, J., Martinez, G., Vacheron, M-N, Viala, A., Laqueille, X., Dervaux, Alain, Petitjean, F., Canceil, O., Garnier, B., Fishmann-Mathis, M., Gal, B., Benoit, J. P., Moro, M. R., Centre Hospitalier Sainte Anne [Paris], Assistance publique - Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP) (AP-HP), Institut de psychiatrie et neurosciences de Paris (IPNP - U1266 Inserm), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Paris Cité (UPCité), GHU Paris Psychiatrie et Neurosciences, Groupement de recherche en Psychiatrie (GDR Psychiatrie (3557)), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut de biologie de l'ENS Paris (IBENS), Département de Biologie - ENS Paris, École normale supérieure - Paris (ENS-PSL), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École normale supérieure - Paris (ENS-PSL), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), ABCD : Biophysique des Biomolécules, Laboratoire de physique de l'ENS - ENS Paris (LPENS (UMR_8023)), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École normale supérieure - Paris (ENS-PSL), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre interdisciplinaire de recherche en biologie (CIRB), Labex MemoLife, Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Collège de France (CdF (institution))-Ecole Superieure de Physique et de Chimie Industrielles de la Ville de Paris (ESPCI Paris), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-École normale supérieure - Paris (ENS-PSL), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Service de Neuropathologie [Sainte-Anne], Hôpital Sainte-Anne, Unité de Biostatistique et de Recherche Clinique (UBRC), Université de Caen Normandie (UNICAEN), Normandie Université (NU)-Normandie Université (NU)-CHU Caen, Normandie Université (NU)-Tumorothèque de Caen Basse-Normandie (TCBN)-Tumorothèque de Caen Basse-Normandie (TCBN), Université Paris Cité (UPCité), Molecular virology and immunology – Physiopathology and therapeutic of chronic viral hepatitis (Team 18) (Inserm U955), Institut Mondor de Recherche Biomédicale (IMRB), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-IFR10-Université Paris-Est Créteil Val-de-Marne - Paris 12 (UPEC UP12)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-IFR10-Université Paris-Est Créteil Val-de-Marne - Paris 12 (UPEC UP12), Hôpital Louis Mourier - AP-HP [Colombes], Institut de psychiatrie et neurosciences (U894 / UMS 1266), Université Paris Descartes - Paris 5 (UPD5)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), CHU Amiens-Picardie, Groupe de Recherche sur l'alcool et les pharmacodépendances - UMR INSERM_S 1247 (GRAP), Université de Picardie Jules Verne (UPJV)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), and Monash University [Clayton]
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Adult ,Male ,Risk ,Psychosis ,Longitudinal study ,Adolescent ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Prodromal Symptoms ,Biology ,Transcriptome ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Gene expression ,medicine ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,RNA, Messenger ,Gene ,Genetics ,Sequence Analysis, RNA ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Psychotic Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,DNA methylation ,Cohort ,Disease Progression ,Female ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Regular Articles - Abstract
International audience; The biological processes associated with the onset of schizophrenia remain largely unknown. Current hypotheses favor gene x environment interactions as supported by our recent report about DNA methylation changes during the onset of psychosis. Here, we conducted the first longitudinal transcriptomic analysis of blood samples from 31 at-risk individuals who later converted to psychosis and 63 at-risk individuals who did not. Individuals were followed for a maximum of 1 year. Blood samples were collected at baseline and at the end of follow-up and individuals served as their own controls. Differentially expressed genes between the 2 groups were identified using the RNA sequencing of an initial discovery subgroup (n = 15 individuals). The most promising results were replicated using high-throughput real-time qPCR in the whole cohort (n = 94 individuals). We identified longitudinal changes in 4 brain-expressed genes based on RNAseq analysis. One of these genes (CPT1A) was replicated in the whole cohort. The previously observed hypermethylation in NRP1 and GSTM5 during the onset of psychosis correlated with a decrease in corresponding gene expression. RNA sequencing also identified 2 co-expression networks that were impaired after conversion compared with baseline-the Wnt pathway including AKT1, CPT1A and semaphorins, and the Toll-like receptor pathway, related to innate immunity. This longitudinal study of transcriptomic changes in individuals with at-risk mental state revealed alterations during conversion to psychosis in pathways and genes relevant to schizophrenia. These results may be a first step toward better understanding psychosis onset. They may also help to identify new biomarkers and targets for disease-modifying therapeutic strategies.
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- 2018
16. White matter changes in microstructure associated with a maladaptive response to stress in rats
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Magalhães, R., Bourgin, J., Boumezbeur, F., Marques, P., Bottlaender, M., Poupon, C., Djemaï, B., Duchesnay, E., Mériaux, S., Sousa, Nuno, Jay, T. M., Cachia, A., and Universidade do Minho
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Male ,Science & Technology ,Brain ,Amygdala ,Hippocampus ,White Matter ,Adaptation, Physiological ,Rats, Inbred F344 ,Corpus Callosum ,Rats ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Anterior Cerebellar Commissure ,Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,External Capsule ,Animals ,Anisotropy ,Corticosterone ,Stress, Psychological - Abstract
In today's society, every individual is subjected to stressful stimuli with different intensities and duration. This exposure can be a key trigger in several mental illnesses greatly affecting one's quality of life. Yet not all subjects respond equally to the same stimulus and some are able to better adapt to them delaying the onset of its negative consequences. The neural specificities of this adaptation can be essential to understand the true dynamics of stress as well as to design new approaches to reduce its consequences. In the current work, we employed ex vivo high field diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to uncover the differences in white matter properties in the entire brain between Fisher 344 (F344) and Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats, known to present different responses to stress, and to examine the effects of a 2-week repeated inescapable stress paradigm. We applied a tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) analysis approach to a total of 25 animals. After exposure to stress, SD rats were found to have lower values of corticosterone when compared with F344 rats. Overall, stress was found to lead to an overall increase in fractional anisotropy (FA), on top of a reduction in mean and radial diffusivity (MD and RD) in several white matter bundles of the brain. No effect of strain on the white matter diffusion properties was observed. The strain-by-stress interaction revealed an effect on SD rats in MD, RD and axial diffusivity (AD), with lower diffusion metric levels on stressed animals. These effects were localized on the left side of the brain on the external capsule, corpus callosum, deep cerebral white matter, anterior commissure, endopiriform nucleus, dorsal hippocampus and amygdala fibers. The results possibly reveal an adaptation of the SD strain to the stressful stimuli through synaptic and structural plasticity processes, possibly reflecting learning processes., We thank Neurospin (high field MRI center CEA Saclay) for providing its support for MRI acquisition. JB was supported by grants from Fondation pour la Recherche Médicale (FRM) and Groupe Pasteur Mutualité (GPM). This work was supported by a grant from ANR (SIGMA). This work was performed on a platform of France Life Imaging (FLI) network partly funded by the grant ANR-11-INBS-0006. This work and RM were supported by a fellowship of the project FCT-ANR/NEU-OSD/0258/2012 founded by FCT/MEC (www.fct.pt) and by Fundo Europeu de Desenvolvimento Regional (FEDER). AC was supported by a grant from the Fondation NRJ., info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
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- 2017
17. Identifying a neuroanatomical signature of schizophrenia, reproducible across sites and stages, using machine learning with structured sparsity
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de Pierrefeu, A., primary, Löfstedt, T., additional, Laidi, C., additional, Hadj‐Selem, F., additional, Bourgin, J., additional, Hajek, T., additional, Spaniel, F., additional, Kolenic, M., additional, Ciuciu, P., additional, Hamdani, N., additional, Leboyer, M., additional, Fovet, T., additional, Jardri, R., additional, Houenou, J., additional, and Duchesnay, E., additional
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- 2018
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18. Détection précoce des troubles psychiques en milieu scolaire : le dispositif Fil Harmonie
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Oppetit, A., primary, Brébant, C., additional, Monchablon, D., additional, Bourgin, J., additional, Gaillard, R., additional, Olié, J.-P., additional, Krebs, M.-O., additional, and Morvan, Y., additional
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- 2018
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19. Amino-acid-transport mutant of Nicotiana tabacum L.
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Borstlap, A.C., Schuurmans, J., and Bourgin, J.-P.
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- 1985
20. Altered feedback sensitivity of acetohydroxyacid synthase from valine-resistant mutants of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.)
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Relton, J.M., Wallsgrove, R.M., Bourgin, J.-P., and Bright, S.W.J.
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- 1986
21. Protoplasts and the Isolation of Plant Mutants
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Bourgin, J. P., Potrykus, I., editor, Harms, C. T., editor, Hinnen, A., editor, Hütter, R., editor, King, P. J., editor, and Shillito, R. D., editor
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- 1983
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22. White matter changes in microstructure associated with a maladaptive response to stress in rats
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Magalhães, R, primary, Bourgin, J, additional, Boumezbeur, F, additional, Marques, P, additional, Bottlaender, M, additional, Poupon, C, additional, Djemaï, B, additional, Duchesnay, E, additional, Mériaux, S, additional, Sousa, N, additional, Jay, T M, additional, and Cachia, A, additional
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- 2017
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23. Development of blood-based molecular biomarker test for identification of Schizophrenia prior to disease onset
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Chan, MK, Krebs, MO, Cox, D, Guest, P, Yolked, R, Rahmoune, H, Rothermundt, M, Steiner, J, Leweke, FM, Beveren, JM, Niebuhr, DW, Webers, NS, Cowan, DN, Suarez-Pinilla, P, Crespo-Facorro, B, Mam-Lam-Fook, C, Bourgin, J, Wenstrup, RJ, Kaldate, RR, Cooper, JD, Bahn, Sabine, Psychiatry, and Neurosciences
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- 2015
24. Identifying a neuroanatomical signature of schizophrenia, reproducible across sites and stages, using machine learning with structured sparsity.
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Pierrefeu, A., Löfstedt, T., Laidi, C., Hadj‐Selem, F., Bourgin, J., Hajek, T., Spaniel, F., Kolenic, M., Ciuciu, P., Hamdani, N., Leboyer, M., Fovet, T., Jardri, R., Houenou, J., and Duchesnay, E.
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SCHIZOPHRENIA ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,PSYCHOSES ,MACHINE learning ,NEUROANATOMY ,NEUROBIOLOGY - Abstract
Objective: Structural MRI (sMRI) increasingly offers insight into abnormalities inherent to schizophrenia. Previous machine learning applications suggest that individual classification is feasible and reliable and, however, is focused on the predictive performance of the clinical status in cross‐sectional designs, which has limited biological perspectives. Moreover, most studies depend on relatively small cohorts or single recruiting site. Finally, no study controlled for disease stage or medication's effect. These elements cast doubt on previous findings' reproducibility. Method: We propose a machine learning algorithm that provides an interpretable brain signature. Using large datasets collected from 4 sites (276 schizophrenia patients, 330 controls), we assessed cross‐site prediction reproducibility and associated predictive signature. For the first time, we evaluated the predictive signature regarding medication and illness duration using an independent dataset of first‐episode patients. Results: Machine learning classifiers based on neuroanatomical features yield significant intersite prediction accuracies (72%) together with an excellent predictive signature stability. This signature provides a neural score significantly correlated with symptom severity and the extent of cognitive impairments. Moreover, this signature demonstrates its efficiency on first‐episode psychosis patients (73% accuracy). Conclusion: These results highlight the existence of a common neuroanatomical signature for schizophrenia, shared by a majority of patients even from an early stage of the disorder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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25. Détection précoce des troubles psychiques en milieu scolaire : le dispositif Fil Harmonie
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Oppetit, A., Brébant, C., Monchablon, D., Bourgin, J., Gaillard, R., Olié, J.-P., Krebs, M.-O., and Morvan, Y.
- Abstract
L’objectif de cette étude est de décrire le fonctionnement du dispositif Fil Harmonie, ligne téléphonique réservée aux professionnels de l’Académie de Paris faisant face à une situation d’un élève en souffrance psychologique ou psychiatrique.
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- 2024
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26. Stress et transition psychotique : revue de la littérature
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Chaumette, B., primary, Kebir, O., additional, Mam Lam Fook, C., additional, Bourgin, J., additional, Godsil, B.P., additional, Gaillard, R., additional, Jay, T.M., additional, and Krebs, M.-O., additional
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- 2016
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27. Development of a blood-based molecular biomarker test for identification of schizophrenia before disease onset
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Chan, M.K. (Man K.), Krebs, M.-O. (M-O), Cox, D., Guest, P.C. (Paul), Yolken, R.H., Rahmoune, H. (Hassan), Rothermundt, M. (Matthias), Steiner, J. (Johann), Leweke, F.M. (Marcus), Beveren, N.J.M. (Nico) van, Niebuhr, D. (David), Weber, N. (Natalya), Cowan, D. (David), Suarez-Pinilla, P., Crespo-Facorro, B. (Benedicto), Mam-Lam-Fook, C., Bourgin, J., Wenstrup, R.J. (Richard), Kaldate, R.R., Cooper, J.D. (Jason), Bahn, S. (Sabine), Chan, M.K. (Man K.), Krebs, M.-O. (M-O), Cox, D., Guest, P.C. (Paul), Yolken, R.H., Rahmoune, H. (Hassan), Rothermundt, M. (Matthias), Steiner, J. (Johann), Leweke, F.M. (Marcus), Beveren, N.J.M. (Nico) van, Niebuhr, D. (David), Weber, N. (Natalya), Cowan, D. (David), Suarez-Pinilla, P., Crespo-Facorro, B. (Benedicto), Mam-Lam-Fook, C., Bourgin, J., Wenstrup, R.J. (Richard), Kaldate, R.R., Cooper, J.D. (Jason), and Bahn, S. (Sabine)
- Abstract
Recent research efforts have progressively shifted towards preventative psychiatry and prognostic identification of individuals before disease onset. We describe the development of a serum biomarker test for the identification of individuals at risk of developing schizophrenia based on multiplex immunoassay profiling analysis of 957 serum samples. First, we conducted a meta-analysis of five independent cohorts of 127 first-onset drug-naive schizophrenia patients and 204 controls. Using least absolute shrinkage and selection operator regression, we identified an optimal panel of 26 biomarkers that best discriminated patients and controls. Next, we successfully validated this biomarker panel using two independent validation cohorts of 93 patients and 88 controls, which yielded an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.97 (0.95-1.00) for schizophrenia detection. Finally, we tested its predictive performance for identifying patients before onset of psychosis using two cohorts of 445 pre-onset or at-risk individuals. The predictive performance achieved by the panel was excellent for identifying USA military personnel (AUC: 0.90 (0.86-0.95)) and help-seeking prodromal individuals (AUC: 0.82 (0.71-0.93)) who developed schizophrenia up to 2 years after baseline sampling. The performance increased further using the latter cohort following the incorporation of CAARMS (Comprehensive Assessment of At-Risk Mental State) positive subscale symptom scores into the model (AUC: 0.90 (0.82-0.98)). The current findings may represent the first successful step towards a test that could address the clinical need for early intervention in psychiatry. Further developments of a combined molecular/symptom-based test will aid clinicians in the identification of vulnerable patients early in the disease process, allowing more effective therapeutic intervention before overt disease onset.
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- 2015
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28. Development of a blood-based molecular biomarker test for identification of schizophrenia before disease onset
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Chan, MK, Krebs, MO, Cox, D, Guest, PC, Yolken, RH, Rahmoune, H, Rothermundt, M, Steiner, J, Leweke, FM, Beveren, JM, Niebuhr, DW, Weber, NS, Cowan, DN, Suarez-Pinilla, P, Crespo-Facorro, B, Mam-Lam-Fook, C, Bourgin, J, Wenstrup, RJ, Kaldate, RR, Cooper, JD, Bahn, Sabine, Chan, MK, Krebs, MO, Cox, D, Guest, PC, Yolken, RH, Rahmoune, H, Rothermundt, M, Steiner, J, Leweke, FM, Beveren, JM, Niebuhr, DW, Weber, NS, Cowan, DN, Suarez-Pinilla, P, Crespo-Facorro, B, Mam-Lam-Fook, C, Bourgin, J, Wenstrup, RJ, Kaldate, RR, Cooper, JD, and Bahn, Sabine
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- 2015
29. Pathologies émergentes du jeune adulte et de l’adolescent : comment les sujets accèdent-ils aux soins ?
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Oppetit-Roger, A., primary, Bourgin, J., additional, and Krebs, M.O., additional
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- 2015
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30. Cellular genetic study of a somatic instability in a tobacco mutant: in vitro isolation of valine-resistant spontaneous mutants
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Grandbastien, M. A., Missonier, C., Goujaud, J., Bourgin, J. P., Deshayes, A., and Caboche, M.
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- 1989
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31. Direct selection of cybrids by streptomycin and valine resistance in tobacco
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Bourgin, J. P., Missonier, C., and Goujaud, J.
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- 1986
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32. 2816 – Obsessive compulsive symptoms and premorbid adjustment as predictors of transition to psychosis in ultra-high risk subjects
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Bourgin, J., primary, Magaud, E., additional, Gut, A., additional, Kazes, M., additional, and Krebs, M.-O., additional
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- 2013
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33. Psychopathological outcome in young adult help-seekers: Influence of cannabis intake
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Krebs, M., primary, Magaud, E., additional, Bourgin, J., additional, Kebir, O., additional, Morvan, Y., additional, Gut, A., additional, Gaillard, R., additional, Plaze, M., additional, and Kazes, M., additional
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- 2012
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34. Methylomic changes during conversion to psychosis
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Kebir, O, Chaumette, B, Rivollier, F, Miozzo, F, Lemieux Perreault, L P, Barhdadi, A, Provost, S, Plaze, M, Bourgin, J, Gaillard, R, Mezger, V, Dubé, M-P, and Krebs, M-O
- Abstract
The onset of psychosis is the consequence of complex interactions between genetic vulnerability to psychosis and response to environmental and/or maturational changes. Epigenetics is hypothesized to mediate the interplay between genes and environment leading to the onset of psychosis. We believe we performed the first longitudinal prospective study of genomic DNA methylation during psychotic transition in help-seeking young individuals referred to a specialized outpatient unit for early detection of psychosis and enrolled in a 1-year follow-up. We used Infinium HumanMethylation450 BeadChip array after bisulfite conversion and analyzed longitudinal variations in methylation at 411 947 cytosine–phosphate–guanine (CpG) sites. Conversion to psychosis was associated with specific methylation changes. Changes in DNA methylation were significantly different between converters and non-converters in two regions: one located in 1q21.1 and a cluster of six CpG located in GSTM5 gene promoter. Methylation data were confirmed by pyrosequencing in the same population. The 100 top CpGs associated with conversion to psychosis were subjected to exploratory analyses regarding the related gene networks and their capacity to distinguish between converters and non-converters. Cluster analysis showed that the top CpG sites correctly distinguished between converters and non-converters. In this first study of methylation during conversion to psychosis, we found that alterations preferentially occurred in gene promoters and pathways relevant for psychosis, including oxidative stress regulation, axon guidance and inflammatory pathways. Although independent replications are warranted to reach definitive conclusions, these results already support that longitudinal variations in DNA methylation may reflect the biological mechanisms that precipitate some prodromal individuals into full-blown psychosis, under the influence of environmental factors and maturational processes at adolescence.
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- 2017
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35. Volumetric thoracic growth in children with moderate and severe scoliosis compared to subjects without spinal deformity.
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Charles YP, Dimeglio A, Marcoul M, Bourgin J, Marcoul A, and Bozonnat M
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- 2008
36. Volumetric thoracic growth in children with moderate and severe scoliosis compared to subjects without spinal deformity.
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Dangerfield, Peter H., Charles, Y.P., Dimeglio, A., Marcoul, M., Bourgin, J.-F., Marcoul, A., and Bozonnat, M.-C.
- Abstract
Idiopathic scoliosis leads to a three-dimensional thoracic deformity. The purpose of this study is to measure thoracic dimensions and volume related to growth and to verify the influence of moderate and severe scoliosis. 176 children (36 boys, 140 girls; 4–16 years) with scoliosis <45 degrees and 17 patients (2 boys, 15 girls) with scoliosis >65 degrees were compared to 239 children without spinal deformity (97 boys, 142 girls) using an optical system. Thoracic volume, perimeter, anterior-posterior and transversal diameters, T1–T12 and sternal lengths were calculated. These measurements were related to age and sitting height. Thoracic volume (3–16 dm
3 ) did not differ significantly over growth between reference and moderate scoliosis groups. At 4 years, it represents 33%, at 10 years it represents 55% of its volume compared with age 16. It triples from 4–16 years and doubles during puberty. In severe scoliosis, the age related thoracic volume was always lower than volumes in reference and moderate scoliosis groups. During growth, the transversal diameter corresponds to 30%, the anterior-posterior diameter represents 20% and the thoracic perimeter 100% of sitting height. In severe lordoscoliosis the anterior-posterior diameter represents less than 20%. Scoliosis <45 degrees does not influence thoracic volume significantly. Severe deformities seem to inhibit volumetric growth. Thoracic parameters should be related to growth parameters such as sitting height rather than age because of possible height variations in one age section. The established relationships offer a reliable orientation of thoracic proportions. They help to understand the global deformity and represent a baseline for surgical treatment using vertical expandable prosthetic titanium ribs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2008
37. Cardiac dimensions and myocardial function of infants with congenital hypothyroidism. An echocardiographic study.
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Fouron, J C, Bourgin, J H, Letarte, J, Dussault, J H, Ducharme, G, and Davignon, A
- Abstract
This study was undertaken to evaluate the cardiac dimensions and various indices of myocardial function, determined by echocardiography, in a group of 12 infants with congenital hypothyroidism. Left ventricular systolic and diastolic dimensions, posterior wall thickness, enddiastolic and systolic volumes were all significantly lower in the hypothyroid infants compared with 25 normal infants of the same age. No pericardial effusion was found. Hypothyroid infant had a lower heart rate with a reduced cardiac output. The mean velocity of circumferential fibre shortening and the shortening fraction of the left ventricle were normal. The pre-ejection period of the left ventricle (PEP), however, was abnormally prolonged as well as the ratio PEP over left ventricular ejection time (PEP/ET). This ratio correlated inversely with the end-diastolic volume, suggesting that the increased PEP/ET could be partly the result of decreased preload. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 1982
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38. VALINE-RESISTANCE, A POTENTIAL MARKER IN PLANT CELL GENETICS. I. DISTINCTION BETWEEN TWO TYPES OF VALINE-RESISTANT TOBACCO MUTANTS ISOLATED FROM PROTOPLAST-DERIVED CELLS
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Bourgin, J P, primary, Goujaud, J, additional, Missonier, C, additional, and Pethe, C, additional
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- 1985
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39. Cardiac dimensions and myocardial function of infants with congenital hypothyroidism. An echocardiographic study.
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Fouron, J C, primary, Bourgin, J H, additional, Letarte, J, additional, Dussault, J H, additional, Ducharme, G, additional, and Davignon, A, additional
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- 1982
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40. VALINE-RESISTANCE, A POTENTIAL MARKER IN PLANT CELL GENETICS. II. OPTIMIZATION OF UV MUTAGENESIS AND SELECTION OF VALINE-RESISTANT COLONIES DERIVED FROM TOBACCO MESOPHYLL PROTOPLASTS
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Grandbastien, M A, primary, Bourgin, J P, additional, and Caboche, M, additional
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- 1985
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41. The collaborative outcomes study on health and functioning during infection times in adults (COH-FIT-Adults): Design and methods of an international online survey targeting physical and mental health effects of the COVID-19 pandemic
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Solmi, Marco, Estradé, Andrés, Thompson, Trevor, Agorastos, Agorastos, Radua, Joaquim, Cortese, Samuele, Dragioti, Elena, Leisch, Friedrich, Vancampfort, Davy, Thygesen, Lau Caspar, Aschauer, Harald, Schloegelhofer, Monika, Akimova, Elena, Schneeberger, Andres, Huber, Christian, Hasler, Gregor, Conus, Philippe, Cuénod, Kim, von Känel, Roland, Arrondo, Gonzalo, Fusar-Poli, Paolo, Gorwood, Philip, Llorca, Pierre-Michel, Krebs, Marie-Odile, Scanferla, Elisabetta, Kishimoto, Taishiro, Rabbani, Golam, Skonieczna-Żydecka, Karolina, Brambilla, Paolo, Favaro, Angela, Takamiya, Akihiro, Zoccante, Leonardo, Colizzi, Marco, Bourgin, Julie, Kamiński, Karol, Moghadasin, Maryam, Seedat, Soraya, Matthews, Evan, Wells, John, Vassilopoulou, Emilia, Gadelha, Ary, Su, Kuan-Pin, Kwon, Jun Soo, Kim, Minah, Lee, Tae Young, Papsuev, Oleg, Manková, Denisa, Boscutti, Andrea, Gerunda, Cristiano, Saccon, Diego, Righi, Elena, Monaco, Francesco, Croatto, Giovanni, Cereda, Guido, Demurtas, Jacopo, Brondino, Natascia, Veronese, Nicola, Enrico, Paolo, Politi, Pierluigi, Ciappolino, Valentina, Pfennig, Andrea, Bechdolf, Andreas, Meyer-Lindenberg, Andreas, Kahl, Kai, Domschke, Katharina, Bauer, Michael, Koutsouleris, Nikolaos, Winter, Sibylle, Borgwardt, Stefan, Bitter, Istvan, Balazs, Judit, Czobor, Pal, Unoka, Zsolt, Mavridis, Dimitris, Tsamakis, Konstantinos, Bozikas, Vasilios, Tunvirachaisakul, Chavit, Maes, Michael, Rungnirundorn, Teerayuth, Supasitthumrong, Thitiporn, Haque, Ariful, Brunoni, Andre, Costardi, Carlos Gustavo, Schuch, Felipe Barreto, Polanczyk, Guilherme, Luiz, Jhoanne Merlyn, Fonseca, Lais, Aparicio, Luana, Valvassori, Samira, Nordentoft, Merete, Vendsborg, Per, Hoffmann, Sofie Have, Sehli, Jihed, Sartorius, Norman, Heuss, Sabina, Guinart, Daniel, Hamilton, Jane, Kane, John, Rubio, Jose, Sand, Michael, Koyanagi, Ai, Solanes, Aleix, Andreu-Bernabeu, Alvaro, Cáceres, Antonia San José, Arango, Celso, Díaz-Caneja, Covadonga, Hidalgo-Mazzei, Diego, Vieta, Eduard, Gonzalez-Peñas, Javier, Fortea, Lydia, Parellada, Mara, Fullana, Miquel, Verdolini, Norma, Fárková, Eva, Janků, Karolina, Millan, Mark, Honciuc, Mihaela, Moniuszko-Malinowska, Anna, Łoniewski, Igor, Samochowiec, Jerzy, Kiszkiel, Łukasz, Marlicz, Maria, Sowa, Paweł, Marlicz, Wojciech, Spies, Georgina, Stubbs, Brendon, Firth, Joseph, Sullivan, Sarah, Darcin, Asli Enez, Aksu, Hatice, Dilbaz, Nesrin, Noyan, Onur, Kitazawa, Momoko, Kurokawa, Shunya, Tazawa, Yuki, Anselmi, Alejandro, Cracco, Cecilia, Machado, Ana Inés, Estrade, Natalia, de Leo, Diego, Curtis, Jackie, Berk, Michael, Ward, Philip, Teasdale, Scott, Rosenbaum, Simon, Marx, Wolfgang, Horodnic, Adrian Vasile, Oprea, Liviu, Alexinschi, Ovidiu, Ifteni, Petru, Turliuc, Serban, Ciuhodaru, Tudor, Bolos, Alexandra, Matei, Valentin, Nieman, Dorien, Sommer, Iris, van Os, Jim, van Amelsvoort, Therese, Sun, Ching-Fang, Guu, Ta-Wei, Jiao, Can, Zhang, Jieting, Fan, Jialin, Zou, Liye, Yu, Xin, Chi, Xinli, de Timary, Philippe, van Winke, Ruud, Ng, Bernardo, Pena, Edilberto, Arellano, Ramon, Roman, Raquel, Sanchez, Thelma, Movina, Larisa, Morgado, Pedro, Brissos, Sofia, Aizberg, Oleg, Mosina, Anna, Krinitski, Damir, Mugisha, James, Sadeghi-Bahmani, Dena, Sadeghi, Masoud, Hadi, Samira, Brand, Serge, Errazuriz, Antonia, Crossley, Nicolas, Ristic, Dragana Ignjatovic, López-Jaramillo, Carlos, Efthymiou, Dimitris, Kuttichira, Praveenlal, Kallivayalil, Roy Abraham, Javed, Afzal, Afridi, Muhammad Iqbal, James, Bawo, Seb-Akahomen, Omonefe Joy, Fiedorowicz, Jess, Carvalho, Andre, Daskalakis, Jeff, Yatham, Lakshmi, Yang, Lin, Okasha, Tarek, Dahdouh, Aïcha, Gerdle, Björn, Tiihonen, Jari, Shin, Jae Il, Lee, Jinhee, Mhalla, Ahmed, Gaha, Lotfi, Brahim, Takoua, Altynbekov, Kuanysh, Negay, Nikolay, Nurmagambetova, Saltanat, Jamei, Yasser Abu, Weiser, Mark, Correll, Christoph, Thygesen, Lau, Kwon, Jun, Lee, Tae, Costardi, Carlos, Schuch, Felipe, Luiz, Jhoanne, Hoffmann, Sofie, Cáceres, Antonia, Darcin, Asli, Machado, Ana, Horodnic, Adrian, Ristic, Dragana, Kallivayalil, Roy, Afridi, Muhammad, Seb-Akahomen, Omonefe, Shin, Jae, Jamei, Yasser, RS: MHeNs - R2 - Mental Health, Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie, MUMC+: MA Med Staf Spec Psychiatrie (9), Clinical Cognitive Neuropsychiatry Research Program (CCNP), Movement Disorder (MD), Clinique des maladies mentales et de l'encéphale (CMME - Service de psychiatrie), Hôpital Sainte-Anne-Université Paris Cité (UPCité), GHU Paris Psychiatrie et Neurosciences, Institut de psychiatrie et neurosciences de Paris (IPNP - U1266 Inserm), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Paris Cité (UPCité), CHU Clermont-Ferrand, Pathologies et épithéliums : prévention, innovation, traitements, évaluation (UR 4267) (PEPITE), Université de Franche-Comté (UFC), Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté [COMUE] (UBFC)-Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté [COMUE] (UBFC), Martinez Rico, Clara, Solmi, M., Estradé, A., Thompson, T., Agorastos, A., Radua, J., Cortese, S., Dragioti, E., Leisch, F., Vancampfort, D., Thygesen, L.C., Aschauer, H., Schloegelhofer, M., Akimova, E., Schneeberger, A., Huber, C.G., Hasler, G., Conus, P., Cuénod, K.Q.D., von Känel, R., Arrondo, G., Fusar-Poli, P., Gorwood, P., Llorca, P.-M., Krebs, M.-O., Scanferla, E., Kishimoto, T., Rabbani, G., Skonieczna-Żydecka, K., Brambilla, P., Favaro, A., Takamiya, A., Zoccante, L., Colizzi, M., Bourgin, J., Kamiński, K., Moghadasin, M., Seedat, S., Matthews, E., Wells, J., Vassilopoulou, E., Gadelha, A., Su, K.-P., Kwon, J.S., Kim, M., Lee, T.Y., Papsuev, O., Manková, D., Boscutti, A., Gerunda, C., Saccon, D., Righi, E., Monaco, F., Croatto, G., Cereda, G., Demurtas, J., Brondino, N., Veronese, N., Enrico, P., Politi, P., Ciappolino, V., Pfennig, A., Bechdolf, A., Meyer-Lindenberg, A., Kahl, K.G., Domschke, K., Bauer, M., Koutsouleris, N., Winter, S., Borgwardt, S., Bitter, I., Balazs, J., Czobor, P., Unoka, Z., Mavridis, D., Tsamakis, K., Bozikas, V.P., Tunvirachaisakul, C., Maes, M., Rungnirundorn, T., Supasitthumrong, T., Haque, A., Brunoni, A.R., Costardi, C.G., Schuch, F.B., Polanczyk, G., Luiz, J.M., Fonseca, L., Aparicio, L.V., Valvassori, S.S., Nordentoft, M., Vendsborg, P., Hoffmann, S.H., Sehli, J., Sartorius, N., Heuss, S., Guinart, D., Hamilton, J., Kane, J., Rubio, J., Sand, M., Koyanagi, A., Solanes, A., Andreu-Bernabeu, A., Cáceres, A.S.J., Arango, C., Díaz-Caneja, C.M., Hidalgo-Mazzei, D., Vieta, E., Gonzalez-Peñas, J., Fortea, L., Parellada, M., Fullana, M.A., Verdolini, N., Fárková, E., Janků, K., Millan, M., Honciuc, M., Moniuszko-Malinowska, A., Łoniewski, I., Samochowiec, J., Kiszkiel, Ł., Marlicz, M., Sowa, P., Marlicz, W., Spies, G., Stubbs, B., Firth, J., Sullivan, S., Darcin, A.E., Aksu, H., Dilbaz, N., Noyan, O., Kitazawa, M., Kurokawa, S., Tazawa, Y., Anselmi, A., Cracco, C., Machado, A.I., Estrade, N., De Leo, D., Curtis, J., Berk, M., Ward, P., Teasdale, S., Rosenbaum, S., Marx, W., Horodnic, A.V., Oprea, L., Alexinschi, O., Ifteni, P., Turliuc, S., Ciuhodaru, T., Bolos, A., Matei, V., Nieman, D.H., Sommer, I., van Os, J., van Amelsvoort, T., Sun, C.-F., Guu, T.-W., Jiao, C., Zhang, J., Fan, J., Zou, L., Yu, X., Chi, X., de Timary, P., van Winke, R., Ng, B., Pena, E., Arellano, R., Roman, R., Sanchez, T., Movina, L., Morgado, P., Brissos, S., Aizberg, O., Mosina, A., Krinitski, D., Mugisha, J., Sadeghi-Bahmani, D., Sadeghi, M., Hadi, S., Brand, S., Errazuriz, A., Crossley, N., Ristic, D.I., López-Jaramillo, C., Efthymiou, D., Kuttichira, P., Kallivayalil, R.A., Javed, A., Afridi, M.I., James, B., Seb-Akahomen, O.J., Fiedorowicz, J., Carvalho, A.F., Daskalakis, J., Yatham, L.N., Yang, L., Okasha, T., Dahdouh, A., Gerdle, B., Tiihonen, J., Shin, J.I., Lee, J., Mhalla, A., Gaha, L., Brahim, T., Altynbekov, K., Negay, N., Nurmagambetova, S., Jamei, Y.A., Weiser, M., Correll, C.U., Adult Psychiatry, APH - Mental Health, ANS - Compulsivity, Impulsivity & Attention, and ANS - Mood, Anxiety, Psychosis, Stress & Sleep
- Subjects
Gerontology ,DISORDER ,STRESS ,Outcome Assessment ,IMPACT ,[SDV.MHEP.PSM] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Psychiatrics and mental health ,RA0421 ,well-being ,Pandemic ,Health care ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,adults ,Medicine ,ANXIETY ,COVID-19 ,mental health ,functioning ,physical health ,representative ,resilience ,survey ,international ,psychiatry ,depression ,anxiety ,post-traumatic ,COH-FIT ,children ,adolescents ,mental health, functioning, physical health, representative, well-being, resilience, survey, international, psychiatry, depression, anxiety, post-traumatic, COH-FIT, children, adolescents, adult ,Child ,SCALE ,Psychiatry ,education.field_of_study ,[SDV.MHEP] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology ,Public Health, Global Health, Social Medicine and Epidemiology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Professional association ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Psychopathology ,Research Paper ,Adult ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Adolescent ,Population ,Clinical Neurology ,BF ,Anxiety ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Depression ,Humans ,Mental Health ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Pandemics ,Intervention (counseling) ,MANAGEMENT ,VALIDITY ,education ,Science & Technology ,business.industry ,MORTALITY ,CARE ,Mental health ,Health Care ,Folkhälsovetenskap, global hälsa, socialmedicin och epidemiologi ,[SDV.MHEP.PSM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Psychiatrics and mental health ,Neurosciences & Neurology ,business ,[SDV.MHEP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology - Abstract
BACKGROUND: . High-quality comprehensive data on short-/long-term physical/mental health effects of the COVID-19 pandemic are needed. METHODS: . The Collaborative Outcomes study on Health and Functioning during Infection Times (COH-FIT) is an international, multi-language (n=30) project involving >230 investigators from 49 countries/territories/regions, endorsed by national/international professional associations. COH-FIT is a multi-wave, on-line anonymous, cross-sectional survey [wave 1: 04/2020 until the end of the pandemic, 12 months waves 2/3 starting 6/24 months threreafter] for adults, adolescents (14-17), and children (6-13), utilizing non-probability/snowball and representative sampling. COH-FIT aims to identify non-modifiable/modifiable risk factors/treatment targets to inform prevention/intervention programs to improve social/health outcomes in the general population/vulnerable subgrous during/after COVID-19. In adults, co-primary outcomes are change from pre-COVID-19 to intra-COVID-19 in well-being (WHO-5) and a composite psychopathology P-Score. Key secondary outcomes are a P-extended score, global mental and physical health. Secondary outcomes include health-service utilization/functioning, treatment adherence, functioning, symptoms/behaviors/emotions, substance use, violence, among others. RESULTS: . Starting 04/26/2020, up to 14/07/2021 >151,000 people from 155 countries/territories/regions and six continents have participated. Representative samples of ≥1,000 adults have been collected in 15 countries. Overall, 43.0% had prior physical disorders, 16.3% had prior mental disorders, 26.5% were health care workers, 8.2% were aged ≥65 years, 19.3% were exposed to someone infected with COVID-19, 76.1% had been in quarantine, and 2.1% had been COVID 19-positive. LIMITATIONS: . Cross-sectional survey, preponderance of non-representative participants. CONCLUSIONS: . Results from COH-FIT will comprehensively quantify the impact of COVID-19, seeking to identify high-risk groups in need for acute and long-term intervention, and inform evidence-based health policies/strategies during this/future pandemics. ispartof: JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS vol:299 pages:393-407 ispartof: location:Netherlands status: published
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- 2022
42. Physical and mental health impact of COVID-19 on children, adolescents, and their families: The Collaborative Outcomes study on Health and Functioning during Infection Times-Children and Adolescents (COH-FIT-C&A)
- Author
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Solmi, Marco, Estradé, Andrés, Thompson, Trevor, Agorastos, Agorastos, Radua, Joaquim, Cortese, Samuele, Dragioti, Elena, Leisch, Friedrich, Vancampfort, Davy, Thygesen, Lau Caspar, Aschauer, Harald, Schloegelhofer, Monika, Akimova, Elena, Schneeberger, Andres, Huber, Christian, Hasler, Gregor, Conus, Philippe, Cuénod, Kim, von Känel, Roland, Arrondo, Gonzalo, Fusar-Poli, Paolo, Gorwood, Philip, Llorca, Pierre-Michel, Krebs, Marie-Odile, Scanferla, Elisabetta, Kishimoto, Taishiro, Rabbani, Golam, Skonieczna-Żydecka, Karolina, Brambilla, Paolo, Favaro, Angela, Takamiya, Akihiro, Zoccante, Leonardo, Colizzi, Marco, Bourgin, Julie, Kamiński, Karol, Moghadasin, Maryam, Seedat, Soraya, Matthews, Evan, Wells, John, Vassilopoulou, Emilia, Gadelha, Ary, Su, Kuan-Pin, Kwon, Jun Soo, Kim, Minah, Lee, Tae Young, Papsuev, Oleg, Manková, Denisa, Boscutti, Andrea, Gerunda, Cristiano, Saccon, Diego, Righi, Elena, Monaco, Francesco, Croatto, Giovanni, Cereda, Guido, Demurtas, Jacopo, Brondino, Natascia, Veronese, Nicola, Enrico, Paolo, Politi, Pierluigi, Ciappolino, Valentina, Pfennig, Andrea, Bechdolf, Andreas, Meyer-Lindenberg, Andreas, Kahl, Kai, Domschke, Katharina, Bauer, Michael, Koutsouleris, Nikolaos, Winter, Sibylle, Borgwardt, Stefan, Bitter, Istvan, Balazs, Judit, Czobor, Pal, Unoka, Zsolt, Mavridis, Dimitris, Tsamakis, Konstantinos, Bozikas, Vasilios, Tunvirachaisakul, Chavit, Maes, Michael, Rungnirundorn, Teerayuth, Supasitthumrong, Thitiporn, Haque, Ariful, Brunoni, Andre, Costardi, Carlos Gustavo, Schuch, Felipe Barreto, Polanczyk, Guilherme, Luiz, Jhoanne Merlyn, Fonseca, Lais, Aparicio, Luana, Valvassori, Samira, Nordentoft, Merete, Vendsborg, Per, Hoffmann, Sofie Have, Sehli, Jihed, Sartorius, Norman, Heuss, Sabina, Guinart, Daniel, Hamilton, Jane, Kane, John, Rubio, Jose, Sand, Michael, Koyanagi, Ai, Solanes, Aleix, Andreu-Bernabeu, Alvaro, Cáceres, Antonia San José, Arango, Celso, Díaz-Caneja, Covadonga, Hidalgo-Mazzei, Diego, Vieta, Eduard, Gonzalez-Peñas, Javier, Fortea, Lydia, Parellada, Mara, Fullana, Miquel, Verdolini, Norma, Fárková, Eva, Janků, Karolina, Millan, Mark, Honciuc, Mihaela, Moniuszko-Malinowska, Anna, Łoniewski, Igor, Samochowiec, Jerzy, Kiszkiel, Łukasz, Marlicz, Maria, Sowa, Paweł, Marlicz, Wojciech, Spies, Georgina, Stubbs, Brendon, Firth, Joseph, Sullivan, Sarah, Darcin, Asli Enez, Aksu, Hatice, Dilbaz, Nesrin, Noyan, Onur, Kitazawa, Momoko, Kurokawa, Shunya, Tazawa, Yuki, Anselmi, Alejandro, Cracco, Cecilia, Machado, Ana Inés, Estrade, Natalia, de Leo, Diego, Curtis, Jackie, Berk, Michael, Ward, Philip, Teasdale, Scott, Rosenbaum, Simon, Marx, Wolfgang, Horodnic, Adrian Vasile, Oprea, Liviu, Alexinschi, Ovidiu, Ifteni, Petru, Turliuc, Serban, Ciuhodaru, Tudor, Bolos, Alexandra, Matei, Valentin, Nieman, Dorien, Sommer, Iris, van Os, Jim, van Amelsvoort, Therese, Sun, Ching-Fang, Guu, Ta-Wei, Jiao, Can, Zhang, Jieting, Fan, Jialin, Zou, Liye, Yu, Xin, Chi, Xinli, de Timary, Philippe, van Winke, Ruud, Ng, Bernardo, Pena, Edilberto, Arellano, Ramon, Roman, Raquel, Sanchez, Thelma, Movina, Larisa, Morgado, Pedro, Brissos, Sofia, Aizberg, Oleg, Mosina, Anna, Krinitski, Damir, Mugisha, James, Sadeghi-Bahmani, Dena, Sadeghi, Masoud, Hadi, Samira, Brand, Serge, Errazuriz, Antonia, Crossley, Nicolas, Ristic, Dragana Ignjatovic, López-Jaramillo, Carlos, Efthymiou, Dimitris, Kuttichira, Praveenlal, Kallivayalil, Roy Abraham, Javed, Afzal, Afridi, Muhammad Iqbal, James, Bawo, Seb-Akahomen, Omonefe Joy, Fiedorowicz, Jess, Carvalho, Andre, Daskalakis, Jeff, Yatham, Lakshmi, Yang, Lin, Okasha, Tarek, Dahdouh, Aïcha, Gerdle, Björn, Tiihonen, Jari, Shin, Jae Il, Lee, Jinhee, Mhalla, Ahmed, Gaha, Lotfi, Brahim, Takoua, Altynbekov, Kuanysh, Negay, Nikolay, Nurmagambetova, Saltanat, Jamei, Yasser Abu, Weiser, Mark, Correll, Christoph, Thygesen, Lau, Kwon, Jun, Lee, Tae, Costardi, Carlos, Schuch, Felipe, Luiz, Jhoanne, Hoffmann, Sofie, Cáceres, Antonia, Darcin, Asli, Machado, Ana, Horodnic, Adrian, Ristic, Dragana, Kallivayalil, Roy, Afridi, Muhammad, Seb-Akahomen, Omonefe, Shin, Jae, Jamei, Yasser, RS: MHeNs - R2 - Mental Health, Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie, MUMC+: MA Med Staf Spec Psychiatrie (9), Clinical Cognitive Neuropsychiatry Research Program (CCNP), Movement Disorder (MD), Solmi, M., Estradé, A., Thompson, T., Agorastos, A., Radua, J., Cortese, S., Dragioti, E., Leisch, F., Vancampfort, D., Thygesen, L.C., Aschauer, H., Schloegelhofer, M., Akimova, E., Schneeberger, A., Huber, C.G., Hasler, G., Conus, P., Cuénod, K.Q.D., von Känel, R., Arrondo, G., Fusar-Poli, P., Gorwood, P., Llorca, P.-M., Krebs, M.-O., Scanferla, E., Kishimoto, T., Rabbani, G., Skonieczna-Żydecka, K., Brambilla, P., Favaro, A., Takamiya, A., Zoccante, L., Colizzi, M., Bourgin, J., Kamiński, K., Moghadasin, M., Seedat, S., Matthews, E., Wells, J., Vassilopoulou, E., Gadelha, A., Su, K.-P., Kwon, J.S., Kim, M., Lee, T.Y., Papsuev, O., Manková, D., Boscutti, A., Gerunda, C., Saccon, D., Righi, E., Monaco, F., Croatto, G., Cereda, G., Demurtas, J., Brondino, N., Veronese, N., Enrico, P., Politi, P., Ciappolino, V., Pfennig, A., Bechdolf, A., Meyer-Lindenberg, A., Kahl, K.G., Domschke, K., Bauer, M., Koutsouleris, N., Winter, S., Borgwardt, S., Bitter, I., Balazs, J., Czobor, P., Unoka, Z., Mavridis, D., Tsamakis, K., Bozikas, V.P., Tunvirachaisakul, C., Maes, M., Rungnirundorn, T., Supasitthumrong, T., Haque, A., Brunoni, A.R., Costardi, C.G., Schuch, F.B., Polanczyk, G., Luiz, J.M., Fonseca, L., Aparicio, L.V., Valvassori, S.S., Nordentoft, M., Vendsborg, P., Hoffmann, S.H., Sehli, J., Sartorius, N., Heuss, S., Guinart, D., Hamilton, J., Kane, J., Rubio, J., Sand, M., Koyanagi, A., Solanes, A., Andreu-Bernabeu, A., Cáceres, A.S.J., Arango, C., Díaz-Caneja, C.M., Hidalgo-Mazzei, D., Vieta, E., Gonzalez-Peñas, J., Fortea, L., Parellada, M., Fullana, M.A., Verdolini, N., Fárková, E., Janků, K., Millan, M., Honciuc, M., Moniuszko-Malinowska, A., Łoniewski, I., Samochowiec, J., Kiszkiel, Ł., Marlicz, M., Sowa, P., Marlicz, W., Spies, G., Stubbs, B., Firth, J., Sullivan, S., Darcin, A.E., Aksu, H., Dilbaz, N., Noyan, O., Kitazawa, M., Kurokawa, S., Tazawa, Y., Anselmi, A., Cracco, C., Machado, A.I., Estrade, N., De Leo, D., Curtis, J., Berk, M., Ward, P., Teasdale, S., Rosenbaum, S., Marx, W., Horodnic, A.V., Oprea, L., Alexinschi, O., Ifteni, P., Turliuc, S., Ciuhodaru, T., Bolos, A., Matei, V., Nieman, D.H., Sommer, I., van Os, J., van Amelsvoort, T., Sun, C.-F., Guu, T.-W., Jiao, C., Zhang, J., Fan, J., Zou, L., Yu, X., Chi, X., de Timary, P., van Winke, R., Ng, B., Pena, E., Arellano, R., Roman, R., Sanchez, T., Movina, L., Morgado, P., Brissos, S., Aizberg, O., Mosina, A., Krinitski, D., Mugisha, J., Sadeghi-Bahmani, D., Sadeghi, M., Hadi, S., Brand, S., Errazuriz, A., Crossley, N., Ristic, D.I., López-Jaramillo, C., Efthymiou, D., Kuttichira, P., Kallivayalil, R.A., Javed, A., Afridi, M.I., James, B., Seb-Akahomen, O.J., Fiedorowicz, J., Carvalho, A.F., Daskalakis, J., Yatham, L.N., Yang, L., Okasha, T., Dahdouh, A., Gerdle, B., Tiihonen, J., Shin, J.I., Lee, J., Mhalla, A., Gaha, L., Brahim, T., Altynbekov, K., Negay, N., Nurmagambetova, S., Jamei, Y.A., Weiser, M., Correll, C.U., Adult Psychiatry, APH - Mental Health, ANS - Compulsivity, Impulsivity & Attention, ANS - Mood, Anxiety, Psychosis, Stress & Sleep, Martinez Rico, Clara, Clinique des maladies mentales et de l'encéphale (CMME - Service de psychiatrie), Hôpital Sainte-Anne-Université Paris Cité (UPCité), GHU Paris Psychiatrie et Neurosciences, Institut de psychiatrie et neurosciences de Paris (IPNP - U1266 Inserm), Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Université Paris Cité (UPCité), CHU Clermont-Ferrand, Pathologies et épithéliums : prévention, innovation, traitements, évaluation (UR 4267) (PEPITE), Université de Franche-Comté (UFC), and Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté [COMUE] (UBFC)-Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté [COMUE] (UBFC)
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Gerontology ,DISORDER ,[SDV.MHEP.PSM] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Psychiatrics and mental health ,Psychological intervention ,Physical health ,Adolescents ,HV ,Children ,Covid-19 ,Mental health ,Pandemic ,Resilience ,RA0421 ,Medicine ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Health Promotion ,Humans ,Mental Health ,Pandemics ,Quality of Life ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 ,SCALE ,media_common ,Psychiatry ,[SDV.MHEP] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology ,Public Health, Global Health, Social Medicine and Epidemiology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Professional association ,Psychological resilience ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Psychopathology ,Covid-19, Pandemic, Mental health, Physical health, Resilience, Children, Adolescents ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Clinical Neurology ,BF ,Article ,Quality of life (healthcare) ,Intervention (counseling) ,VALIDITY ,Science & Technology ,business.industry ,Folkhälsovetenskap, global hälsa, socialmedicin och epidemiologi ,[SDV.MHEP.PSM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Psychiatrics and mental health ,Neurosciences & Neurology ,business ,[SDV.MHEP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic has altered daily routines and family functioning, led to closing schools, and dramatically limited social interactions worldwide. Measuring its impact on mental health of vulnerable children and adolescents is crucial. METHODS: The Collaborative Outcomes study on Health and Functioning during Infection Times (COH-FIT - www.coh-fit.com) is an on-line anonymous survey, available in 30 languages, involving >230 investigators from 49 countries supported by national/international professional associations. COH-FIT has thee waves (until the pandemic is declared over by the WHO, and 6-18 months plus 24-36 months after its end). In addition to adults, COH-FIT also includes adolescents (age 14-17 years), and children (age 6-13 years), recruited via non-probability/snowball and representative sampling and assessed via self-rating and parental rating. Non-modifiable/modifiable risk factors/treatment targets to inform prevention/intervention programs to promote health and prevent mental and physical illness in children and adolescents will be generated by COH-FIT. Co-primary outcomes are changes in well-being (WHO-5) and a composite psychopathology P-Score. Multiple behavioral, family, coping strategy and service utilization factors are also assessed, including functioning and quality of life. RESULTS: Up to June 2021, over 13,000 children and adolescents from 59 countries have participated in the COH-FIT project, with representative samples from eleven countries. LIMITATIONS: Cross-sectional and anonymous design. CONCLUSIONS: Evidence generated by COH-FIT will provide an international estimate of the COVID-19 effect on children's, adolescents' and families', mental and physical health, well-being, functioning and quality of life, informing the formulation of present and future evidence-based interventions and policies to minimize adverse effects of the present and future pandemics on youth. ispartof: JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS vol:299 pages:367-376 ispartof: location:Netherlands status: published
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- 2022
43. Pre-training inter-rater reliability of clinical instruments in an international psychosis research project
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Steven Berendsen, Pim Kapitein, Frederike Schirmbeck, Mirjam J. van Tricht, Philip McGuire, Craig Morgan, Charlotte Gayer-Anderson, Matthew J. Kempton, Lucia Valmaggia, Diego Quattrone, Marta di Forti, Mark van der Gaag, James B. Kirkbride, Hannah E. Jongsma, Peter B. Jones, Maria Parellada, Celso Arango, Manuel Arrojo, Miguel Bernardo, Julio Sanjuán, José Luis Santos, Andrei Szöke, Andrea Tortelli, Pierre-Michel Llorca, Ilaria Tarricone, Giada Tripoli, Laura Ferraro, Caterina La Cascia, Antonio Lasalvia, Sarah Tosato, Paulo Rossi Menezes, Cristina Marta Del-Ben, Barnaby Nelson, Anita Riecher-Rössler, Rodrigo Bressan, Neus Barrantes-Vidal, Marie-Odile Krebs, Merete Nordentoft, Stephan Ruhrmann, Gabriele Sachs, Bart P.F. Rutten, Jim van Os, Eva Velthorst, Lieuwe de Haan, Maria Calem, Stefania Tognin, Gemma Modinos, Sara Pisani, Tamar C. Kraan, Daniella S. van Dam, Nadine Burger, Patrick McGorry, G. Paul Amminger, Athena Politis, Joanne Goodall, Stefan Borgwardt, Erich Studerus, Ary Gadelha, Elisa Brietzke, Graccielle Asevedo, Elson Asevedo, Andre Zugman, Tecelli Domínguez-Martínez, Manel Monsonet, Lidia Hinojosa, Paula Cristóbal-Narváez, Anna Racioppi, Thomas R. Kwapil, Mathilde Kazes, Claire Daban, Julie Bourgin, Olivier Gay, Célia Mam-Lam-Fook, Dorte Nordholm, Lasse Randers, Kristine Krakauer, Louise Birkedal Glenthøj, Birte Glenthøj, Dominika Gebhard, Julia Arnhold, Joachim Klosterkötter, Iris Lasser, Bernadette Winklbaur, Philippe A. Delespaul, Graduate School, Adult Psychiatry, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Mood, Anxiety, Psychosis, Stress & Sleep, APH - Mental Health, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Complex Trait Genetics, Amsterdam Neuroscience - Compulsivity, Impulsivity & Attention, Institut Pascal (IP), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Clermont Auvergne (UCA)-Institut national polytechnique Clermont Auvergne (INP Clermont Auvergne), Université Clermont Auvergne (UCA)-Université Clermont Auvergne (UCA), Berendsen S., Kapitein P., Schirmbeck F., van Tricht M.J., McGuire P., Morgan C., Gayer-Anderson C., Kempton M.J., Valmaggia L., Quattrone D., di Forti M., van der Gaag M., Kirkbride J.B., Jongsma H.E., Jones P.B., Parellada M., Arango C., Arrojo M., Bernardo M., Sanjuan J., Santos J.L., Szoke A., Tortelli A., Llorca P.-M., Tarricone I., Tripoli G., Ferraro L., La Cascia C., Lasalvia A., Tosato S., Menezes P.R., Del-Ben C.M., Nelson B., Riecher-Rossler A., Bressan R., Barrantes-Vidal N., Krebs M.-O., Nordentoft M., Ruhrmann S., Sachs G., Rutten B.P.F., van Os J., Velthorst E., de Haan L., Calem M., Tognin S., Modinos G., Pisani S., Kraan T.C., van Dam D.S., Burger N., McGorry P., Amminger G.P., Politis A., Goodall J., Borgwardt S., Studerus E., Gadelha A., Brietzke E., Asevedo G., Asevedo E., Zugman A., Dominguez-Martinez T., Monsonet M., Hinojosa L., Cristobal-Narvaez P., Racioppi A., Kwapil T.R., Kazes M., Daban C., Bourgin J., Gay O., Mam-Lam-Fook C., Nordholm D., Randers L., Krakauer K., Glenthoj L.B., Glenthoj B., Gebhard D., Arnhold J., Klosterkotter J., Lasser I., Winklbaur B., Delespaul P.A., RS: MHeNs - R3 - Neuroscience, Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie, MUMC+: MA Psychiatrie (3), RS: MHeNs - R2 - Mental Health, and MUMC+: Hersen en Zenuw Centrum (3)
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Research design ,Psychosis ,INFORMATION ,IMPACT ,Applied psychology ,MEDLINE ,Assessor selection, Pre-training inter-rater reliability, Psychosis instruments ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Biological Psychiatry ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,Observer Variation ,REPRODUTIBILIDADE DE RESULTADOS ,business.industry ,Pre-training inter-rater reliability ,Reproducibility of Results ,medicine.disease ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Inter-rater reliability ,Assessor selection ,TRIALS ,Psychotic Disorders ,Research Design ,[SDV.NEU]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC] ,MEASUREMENT ERROR ,business ,Observer variation ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Psychosis instruments - Abstract
International audience
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- 2019
44. Collaborative outcomes study on health and functioning during infection times (COH-FIT): Insights on modifiable and non-modifiable risk and protective factors for wellbeing and mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic from multivariable and network analyses.
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Solmi M, Thompson T, Cortese S, Estradé A, Agorastos A, Radua J, Dragioti E, Vancampfort D, Thygesen LC, Aschauer H, Schlögelhofer M, Aschauer E, Schneeberger A, Huber CG, Hasler G, Conus P, Cuénod KQD, von Känel R, Arrondo G, Fusar-Poli P, Gorwood P, Llorca PM, Krebs MO, Scanferla E, Kishimoto T, Rabbani G, Skonieczna-Żydecka K, Brambilla P, Favaro A, Takamiya A, Zoccante L, Colizzi M, Bourgin J, Kamiński K, Moghadasin M, Seedat S, Matthews E, Wells J, Vassilopoulou E, Gadelha A, Su KP, Kwon JS, Kim M, Lee TY, Papsuev O, Manková D, Boscutti A, Gerunda C, Saccon D, Righi E, Monaco F, Croatto G, Cereda G, Demurtas J, Brondino N, Veronese N, Enrico P, Politi P, Ciappolino V, Pfennig A, Bechdolf A, Meyer-Lindenberg A, Kahl KG, Domschke K, Bauer M, Koutsouleris N, Winter S, Borgwardt S, Bitter I, Balazs J, Czobor P, Unoka Z, Mavridis D, Tsamakis K, Bozikas VP, Tunvirachaisakul C, Maes M, Rungnirundorn T, Supasitthumrong T, Haque A, Brunoni AR, Costardi CG, Schuch FB, Polanczyk G, Luiz JM, Fonseca L, Aparicio LV, Valvassori SS, Nordentoft M, Vendsborg P, Hoffmann SH, Sehli J, Sartorius N, Heuss S, Guinart D, Hamilton J, Kane J, Rubio J, Sand M, Koyanagi A, Solanes A, Andreu-Bernabeu A, Cáceres ASJ, Arango C, Díaz-Caneja CM, Hidalgo-Mazzei D, Vieta E, Gonzalez-Peñas J, Fortea L, Parellada M, Fullana MA, Verdolini N, Andrlíková E, Janků K, Millan MJ, Honciuc M, Moniuszko-Malinowska A, Łoniewski I, Samochowiec J, Kiszkiel Ł, Marlicz M, Sowa P, Marlicz W, Spies G, Stubbs B, Firth J, Sullivan S, Darcin AE, Aksu H, Dilbaz N, Noyan O, Kitazawa M, Kurokawa S, Tazawa Y, Anselmi A, Cracco C, Machado AI, Estrade N, De Leo D, Curtis J, Berk M, Carvalho AF, Ward P, Teasdale S, Rosenbaum S, Marx W, Horodnic AV, Oprea L, Alexinschi O, Ifteni P, Turliuc S, Ciuhodaru T, Bolos A, Matei V, Nieman DH, Sommer I, van Os J, van Amelsvoort T, Sun CF, Guu TW, Jiao C, Zhang J, Fan J, Zou L, Yu X, Chi X, de Timary P, van Winkel R, Ng B, Peña de León E, Arellano R, Roman R, Sanchez T, Movina L, Morgado P, Brissos S, Aizberg O, Mosina A, Krinitski D, Mugisha J, Sadeghi-Bahmani D, Sheybani F, Sadeghi M, Hadi S, Brand S, Errazuriz A, Crossley N, Ristic DI, López-Jaramillo C, Efthymiou D, Kuttichira P, Kallivayalil RA, Javed A, Afridi MI, James B, Seb-Akahomen OJ, Fiedorowicz J, Daskalakis J, Yatham LN, Yang L, Okasha T, Dahdouh A, Tiihonen J, Shin JI, Lee J, Mhalla A, Gaha L, Brahim T, Altynbekov K, Negay N, Nurmagambetova S, Jamei YA, Weiser M, and Correll CU
- Abstract
There is no multi-country/multi-language study testing a-priori multivariable associations between non-modifiable/modifiable factors and validated wellbeing/multidimensional mental health outcomes before/during the COVID-19 pandemic. Moreover, studies during COVID-19 pandemic generally do not report on representative/weighted non-probability samples. The Collaborative Outcomes study on Health and Functioning during Infection Times (COH-FIT) is a multi-country/multi-language survey conducting multivariable/LASSO-regularized regression models and network analyses to identify modifiable/non-modifiable factors associated with wellbeing (WHO-5)/composite psychopathology (P-score) change. It enrolled general population-representative/weighted-non-probability samples (26/04/2020-19/06/2022). Participants included 121,066 adults (age=42±15.9 years, females=64 %, representative sample=29 %) WHO-5/P-score worsened (SMD=0.53/SMD=0.74), especially initially during the pandemic. We identified 15 modifiable/nine non-modifiable risk and 13 modifiable/three non-modifiable protective factors for WHO-5, 16 modifiable/11 non-modifiable risk and 10 modifiable/six non-modifiable protective factors for P-score. The 12 shared risk/protective factors with highest centrality (network-analysis) were, for non-modifiable factors, country income, ethnicity, age, gender, education, mental disorder history, COVID-19-related restrictions, urbanicity, physical disorder history, household room numbers and green space, and socioeconomic status. For modifiable factors, we identified medications, learning, internet, pet-ownership, working and religion as coping strategies, plus pre-pandemic levels of stress, fear, TV, social media or reading time, and COVID-19 information. In multivariable models, for WHO-5, additional non-modifiable factors with |B|>1 were income loss, COVID-19 deaths. For modifiable factors we identified pre-pandemic levels of social functioning, hobbies, frustration and loneliness, and social interactions as coping strategy. For P-scores, additional non-modifiable/modifiable factors were income loss, pre-pandemic infection fear, and social interactions as coping strategy. COH-FIT identified vulnerable sub-populations and actionable individual/environmental factors to protect well-being/mental health during crisis times. Results inform public health policies, and clinical practice., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest Conflict of interest statements of all authors are detailed in eTable 12., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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45. Social cognition, psychosocial development and well-being in galactosemia.
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Bry C, Propice K, Bourgin J, and Métral M
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Young Adult, Middle Aged, Galactosemias psychology, Social Cognition
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Background: Classic galactosemia is a rare inherited metabolic disease with long-term complications, particularly in the psychosocial domain. Patients report a lower quality of social life, difficulties in interactions and social relationships, and a lower mental health. We hypothesised that social cognition deficits could partially explain this psychological symptomatology. Eleven adults with galactosemia and 31 control adults participated in the study. We measured social cognition skills in cognitive and affective theory of Mind, and in basic and complex emotion recognition. We explored psychosocial development and mental well-being., Results: We found significant deficits on all 4 social cognition measures. Compared to controls, participants with galactosemia were impaired in the 2nd-order cognitive theory of mind, in affective theory of mind, and in basic and complex emotion recognition. Participants with galactosemia had a significant delay in their psychosexual development, but we found no delay in social development and no significant decrease in mental health., Conclusion: Social cognition processes seem impaired among our participants with galactosemia. We discuss the future path research may follow. More research is needed to replicate and strengthen these results and establish the links between psychosocial complications and deficits in social cognition., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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46. The impact of weight and negative body image on the body schema in undergraduate women.
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Boucher JD, Bourgin J, Lassiaz J, Propice K, and Metral M
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- Humans, Female, Young Adult, Adult, Students psychology, Adolescent, Universities, Body Dissatisfaction, Surveys and Questionnaires, Touch Perception physiology, Body Image psychology, Body Weight physiology
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Alterations of the sensory-motor body schema question the origins of such distortions. For example, in anorexia nervosa where patients think they are broader than they really are (body image) but act as if it was really the case (body schema). To date, the results of studies about what hinders the updating of the body schema so much (weight, body image) have been contradictory., Methods: We therefore conducted two studies that aimed to assess the impact of weight and body image problems on body schema in 92 young women without anorexia nervosa. For this purpose, we used a new body schema assessment tool (SKIN) that is sensitive enough to detect fine alterations of body schema in seven different body parts., Results: In Study 1, the thinness or overweight of the young women had a major impact on their tactile perception, especially because the assessed body part was a sensitive area for body dissatisfaction in young women (e.g., belly, thigh). In Study 2, the level of body dissatisfaction of the participants in its attitudinal and perceptual dimension also had a negative impact on their body schema, again in interaction with weight and body part., Conclusions: These results imply that body dissatisfaction and thinness are predictors of massive body schema distortions. An oversized body schema could maintain various weight-control behaviors, thus risking the development, maintenance, or relapse of an eating disorder., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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47. Global and risk-group stratified well-being and mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic in adults: Results from the international COH-FIT Study.
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Solmi M, Thompson T, Estradé A, Agorastos A, Radua J, Cortese S, Dragioti E, Vancampfort D, Thygesen LC, Aschauer H, Schlögelhofer M, Aschauer E, Schneeberger A, Huber CG, Hasler G, Conus P, Cuénod KQD, von Känel R, Arrondo G, Fusar-Poli P, Gorwood P, Llorca PM, Krebs MO, Scanferla E, Kishimoto T, Rabbani G, Skonieczna-Żydecka K, Brambilla P, Favaro A, Takamiya A, Zoccante L, Colizzi M, Bourgin J, Kamiński K, Moghadasin M, Seedat S, Matthews E, Wells J, Vassilopoulou E, Gadelha A, Su KP, Kwon JS, Kim M, Lee TY, Papsuev O, Manková D, Boscutti A, Gerunda C, Saccon D, Righi E, Monaco F, Croatto G, Cereda G, Demurtas J, Brondino N, Veronese N, Enrico P, Politi P, Ciappolino V, Pfennig A, Bechdolf A, Meyer-Lindenberg A, Kahl KG, Domschke K, Bauer M, Koutsouleris N, Winter S, Borgwardt S, Bitter I, Balazs J, Czobor P, Unoka Z, Mavridis D, Tsamakis K, Bozikas VP, Tunvirachaisakul C, Maes M, Rungnirundorn T, Supasitthumrong T, Haque A, Brunoni AR, Costardi CG, Schuch FB, Polanczyk G, Luiz JM, Fonseca L, Aparicio LV, Valvassori SS, Nordentoft M, Vendsborg P, Hoffmann SH, Sehli J, Sartorius N, Heuss S, Guinart D, Hamilton J, Kane J, Rubio J, Sand M, Koyanagi A, Solanes A, Andreu-Bernabeu A, Cáceres ASJ, Arango C, Díaz-Caneja CM, Hidalgo-Mazzei D, Vieta E, Gonzalez-Peñas J, Fortea L, Parellada M, Fullana MA, Verdolini N, Andrlíková E, Janků K, Millan MJ, Honciuc M, Moniuszko-Malinowska A, Łoniewski I, Samochowiec J, Kiszkiel Ł, Marlicz M, Sowa P, Marlicz W, Spies G, Stubbs B, Firth J, Sullivan S, Darcin AE, Aksu H, Dilbaz N, Noyan O, Kitazawa M, Kurokawa S, Tazawa Y, Anselmi A, Cracco C, Machado AI, Estrade N, De Leo D, Curtis J, Berk M, Carvalho AF, Ward P, Teasdale S, Rosenbaum S, Marx W, Horodnic AV, Oprea L, Alexinschi O, Ifteni P, Turliuc S, Ciuhodaru T, Bolos A, Matei V, Nieman DH, Sommer I, van Os J, van Amelsvoort T, Sun CF, Guu TW, Jiao C, Zhang J, Fan J, Zou L, Yu X, Chi X, de Timary P, van Winkel R, Ng B, Peña de León E, Arellano R, Roman R, Sanchez T, Movina L, Morgado P, Brissos S, Aizberg O, Mosina A, Krinitski D, Mugisha J, Sadeghi-Bahmani D, Sheybani F, Sadeghi M, Hadi S, Brand S, Errazuriz A, Crossley N, Ristic DI, López-Jaramillo C, Efthymiou D, Kuttichira P, Kallivayalil RA, Javed A, Afridi MI, James B, Seb-Akahomen OJ, Fiedorowicz J, Daskalakis J, Yatham LN, Yang L, Okasha T, Dahdouh A, Tiihonen J, Shin JI, Lee J, Mhalla A, Gaha L, Brahim T, Altynbekov K, Negay N, Nurmagambetova S, Jamei YA, Weiser M, and Correll CU
- Abstract
International studies measuring wellbeing/multidimensional mental health before/ during the COVID-19 pandemic, including representative samples for >2 years, identifying risk groups and coping strategies are lacking. COH-FIT is an online, international, anonymous survey measuring changes in well-being (WHO-5) and a composite psychopathology P-score, and their associations with COVID-19 deaths/restrictions, 12 a-priori defined risk individual/cumulative factors, and coping strategies during COVID-19 pandemic (26/04/2020-26/06/2022) in 30 languages (representative, weighted non-representative, adults). T-test, χ
2 , penalized cubic splines, linear regression, correlation analyses were conducted. Analyzing 121,066/142,364 initiated surveys, WHO-5/P-score worsened intra-pandemic by 11.1±21.1/13.2±17.9 points (effect size d=0.50/0.60) (comparable results in representative/weighted non-probability samples). Persons with WHO-5 scores indicative of depression screening (<50, 13% to 32%) and major depression (<29, 3% to 12%) significantly increased. WHO-5 worsened from those with mental disorders, female sex, COVID-19-related loss, low-income country location, physical disorders, healthcare worker occupations, large city location, COVID-19 infection, unemployment, first-generation immigration, to age=18-29 with a cumulative effect. Similar findings emerged for P-score. Changes were significantly but minimally related to COVID-19 deaths, returning to near-pre-pandemic values after >2 years. The most subjectively effective coping strategies were exercise and walking, internet use, social contacts. Identified risk groups, coping strategies and outcome trajectories can inform global public health strategies., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest Conflict of interest statements of all authors are detailed in eTable 8., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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48. UniPseudo: A universal pseudoword generator.
- Author
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New B, Bourgin J, Barra J, and Pallier C
- Subjects
- Humans, Psycholinguistics, Linguistics, Reading, Language
- Abstract
Pseudowords are letter strings that look like words but are not words. They are used in psycholinguistic research, particularly in tasks such as lexical decision. In this context, it is essential that the pseudowords respect the orthographic statistics of the target language. Pseudowords that violate them would be too easy to reject in a lexical decision and would not enforce word recognition on real words. We propose a new pseudoword generator, UniPseudo, using an algorithm based on Markov chains of orthographic n-grams. It generates pseudowords from a customizable database, which allows one to control the characteristics of the items. It can produce pseudowords in any language, in orthographic or phonological form. It is possible to generate pseudowords with specific characteristics, such as frequency of letters, bigrams, trigrams, or quadrigrams, number of syllables, frequency of biphones, and number of morphemes. Thus, from a list of words composed of verbs, nouns, adjectives, or adverbs, UniPseudo can create pseudowords resembling verbs, nouns, adjectives, or adverbs in any language using an alphabetic or syllabic system., Competing Interests: Declaration of conflicting interestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
49. Body ownership and kinaesthetic illusions: Dissociated bodily experiences for distinct levels of body consciousness?
- Author
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Dupraz L, Bourgin J, Pia L, Barra J, and Guerraz M
- Subjects
- Humans, Ownership, Consciousness, Body Image, Visual Perception, Hand, Illusions, Touch Perception
- Abstract
Seeing an embodied humanoid avatar move its arms can induce in the observer the illusion that its own (static) arms are moving accordingly, the kinematic signals emanating from this avatar thus being considered like those from the biological body. Here, we investigated the causal relationship between these kinaesthetic illusions and the illusion of body ownership, manipulated through visuomotor synchronisation. The results of two experiments revealed that the sense of body ownership over an avatar seen from a first-person perspective was intimately linked to visuomotor synchrony. This was not the case for kinaesthetic illusions indicating that when superimposed on the biological body, the avatar is inevitably treated at the sensorimotor level as one's own body, whether consciously considered as such or not. The question of whether these two bodily experiences (body ownership and kinaesthetic illusion) are underpinned by distinct representations, the body image, and the body schema, is discussed., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
50. Asynchronous neural maturation predicts transition to psychosis.
- Author
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Iftimovici A, Bourgin J, Houenou J, Gay O, Grigis A, Victor J, Chaumette B, Krebs MO, and Duchesnay E
- Abstract
Aim: Neuroimaging-based machine-learning predictions of psychosis onset rely on the hypothesis that structural brain anomalies may reflect the underlying pathophysiology. Yet, current predictors remain difficult to interpret in light of brain structure. Here, we combined an advanced interpretable supervised algorithm and a model of neuroanatomical age to identify the level of brain maturation of the regions most predictive of psychosis., Methods: We used the voxel-based morphometry of a healthy control dataset (N = 2024) and a prospective longitudinal UHR cohort (N = 82), of which 27 developed psychosis after one year. In UHR, psychosis was predicted at one year using Elastic-Net-Total-Variation (Enet-TV) penalties within a five-fold cross-validation, providing an interpretable map of distinct predictive regions. Using both the whole brain and each predictive region separately, a brain age predictor was then built and validated in 1605 controls, externally tested in 419 controls from an independent cohort, and applied in UHR. Brain age gaps were computed as the difference between chronological and predicted age, providing a proxy of whole-brain and regional brain maturation., Results: Psychosis prediction was performant with 80 ± 4% of area-under-curve and 69 ± 5% of balanced accuracy (P < 0.001), and mainly leveraged volumetric increases in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex and decreases in the left precentral gyrus and the right orbitofrontal cortex. These regions were predicted to have delayed and accelerated maturational patterns, respectively., Conclusion: By combining an interpretable supervised model of conversion to psychosis with a brain age predictor, we showed that inter-regional asynchronous brain maturation underlines the predictive signature of psychosis., (© 2023 The Authors. Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Japanese Society of Psychiatry and Neurology.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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