13 results on '"Gur, RubenC."'
Search Results
2. Parallel psychometric and cognitive modeling analyses of the Penn Face Memory Test in the Army Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembers.
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Thomas, MichaelL., Brown, GregoryG., Gur, RubenC., Hansen, JohnA., Nock, MatthewK., Heeringa, Steven, Ursano, RobertJ., and Stein, MurrayB.
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PSYCHOMETRICS ,MEMORY testing ,COGNITIVE testing ,SUICIDE risk factors ,AMERICAN military personnel - Abstract
Objective:The psychometric properties of the Penn Face Memory Test (PFMT) were investigated in a large sample (4,236 participants) of U.S. Army Soldiers undergoing computerized neurocognitive testing. Data were drawn from the initial phase of the Army Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembers (Army STARRS), a large-scale study directed towards identifying risk and resilience factors for suicidal behavior and other stress-related disorders in Army Soldiers. In this paper, we report parallel psychometric and cognitive modeling analyses of the PFMT to determine whether ability estimates derived from the measure are precise and valid indicators of memory in the Army STARRS sample.Method:Single-sample cross-validation methodology combined with exploratory factor and multidimensional item response theory techniques were used to explore the latent structure of the PFMT. To help resolve rotational indeterminacy of the exploratory solution, latent constructs were aligned with parameter estimates derived from an unequal-variance signal detection model.Results:Analyses suggest that the PFMT measures two distinct latent constructs, one associated with memory strength and one associated with response bias, and that test scores are generally precise indicators of ability for the majority of Army STARRS participants.Conclusions:These findings support the use of the PFMT as a measure of major constructs related to recognition memory and have implications for further cognitive–psychometric model development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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3. Neural correlates of social approach and withdrawal in patients with major depression.
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Derntl, Birgit, Seidel, Eva-Maria, Eickhoff, SimonB., Kellermann, Thilo, Gur, RubenC., Schneider, Frank, and Habel, Ute
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DEPRESSED persons ,SOCIAL interaction ,SENSORY perception ,SOCIAL skills ,SYMPTOMS ,SOCIAL isolation ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,AMYGDALOID body ,EMOTIONS - Abstract
Successful human interaction is based on correct recognition, interpretation, and appropriate reaction to facial affect. In depression, social skill deficits are among the most restraining symptoms leading to social withdrawal, thereby aggravating social isolation and depressive affect. Dysfunctional approach and withdrawal tendencies to emotional stimuli have been documented, but the investigation of their neural underpinnings has received limited attention. We performed an fMRI study including 15 depressive patients and 15 matched, healthy controls. All subjects performed two tasks, an implicit joystick task as well as an explicit rating task, both using happy, neutral, and angry facial expressions. Behavioral data analysis indicated a significant group effect, with depressed patients showing more withdrawal than controls. Analysis of the functional data revealed significant group effects for both tasks. Among other regions, we observed significant group differences in amygdala activation, with patients showing less response particularly during approach to happy faces. Additionally, significant correlations of amygdala activation with psychopathology emerged, suggesting that more pronounced symptoms are accompanied by stronger decreases of amygdala activation. Hence, our results demonstrate that depressed patients show dysfunctional social approach and withdrawal behavior, which in turn may aggravate the disorder by negative social interactions contributing to isolation and reinforcing cognitive biases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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4. Who is to blame? Neural correlates of causal attribution in social situations.
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Seidel, Eva-Maria, Eickhoff, SimonB., Kellermann, Thilo, Schneider, Frank, Gur, RubenC., Habel, Ute, and Derntl, Birgit
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NEUROSCIENCES ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,ATTRIBUTION (Social psychology) ,COGNITION ,SOCIAL perception - Abstract
In everyday life causal attribution is important in order to structure the complex world, provide explanations for events and to understand why our environment interacts with us in a particular way. This study used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in 30 healthy subjects to separate the neural correlates of self vs. external responsibility for social events and explore the neural basis of self-serving attributions (internal attributions of positive events and external attributions of negative events). We presented short sentences describing positive and negative social events and asked participants to imagine the event, to decide the main cause and assign it to one of the categories (internal vs. external). FMRI data were analyzed using a 2 × 2 factorial design with the factors emotional valence and attribution. Internal compared to external attribution revealed activations along the right temporoparietal junction (TPJ). The reverse contrast showed a left lateralized network mainly involving the TPJ, the precuneus and the superior/medial frontal gyrus. These results confirmed the involvement of a fronto-temporoparietal network in differentiating self and external responsibility. Analysis of the self-serving bias yielded activation in the dorsal anterior cingulate and in the dorsal striatum, suggesting a rewarding value of these attributions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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5. Brain activation during autobiographical relationship episode narratives: A core conflictual relationship theme approach.
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Loughead, JamesW., Luborsky, Lester, Weingarten, CarolP., Krause, ElizabethD., German, RamarisE., Kirk, Daniel, and Gur, RubenC.
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CEREBRAL cortex ,MENTAL health counseling ,CLINICAL sociology ,LIMBIC system ,HIPPOCAMPUS (Brain) - Abstract
Copyright of Psychotherapy Research is the property of Taylor & Francis Ltd and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2010
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6. Amygdala activation during recognition of emotions in a foreign ethnic group is associated with duration of stay.
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Derntl, Birgit, Habel, Ute, Robinson, Simon, Windischberger, Christian, Kryspin-Exner, Ilse, Gur, RubenC., and Moser, Ewald
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AMYGDALOID body ,EXPRESSIVE behavior ,EMOTIONS ,PSYCHOLOGY ,NEUROLOGY - Abstract
Cultural differences in emotion recognition performance have frequently been reported, whereby duration of stay in a foreign culture seems to be a crucial factor. Furthermore, cultural aspects influence the neural correlates of face and emotion processing thereby also affecting the response of the amygdala. Here, the exposure to a foreign culture and its influence on the cerebral correlates of facial emotion recognition were examined in 24 Asian and 24 age-matched European males. Subjects performed an explicit emotion recognition task and were imaged with a 3 T MR-scanner. Results demonstrate a significant cultural influence on the specific recognition of disgust and anger, with higher accuracy among the Europeans, while the functional data indicate generally elevated amygdala activation in Asians compared to Europeans. Moreover, a significant inverse correlation between duration of stay and amygdala response emerged, with stronger activation in those subjects with shorter duration of stay in Europe. The observed amygdala hyperactivation in Asians may reflect novelty aspects but might also be associated with greater effort and motivation in immigrants, thus it possibly reflects one neural correlate of the “alien-effect”. We conclude that exposure to a foreign culture and duration of stay affect the behavioral and neural response to facial expressions of emotions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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7. Explicit identification and implicit recognition of facial emotions: I. Age effects in males and females across 10 decades.
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Williams, LeanneM., Mathersul, Danielle, Palmer, DonnaM., Gur, RubenC., Gur, RaquelE., and Gordon, Evian
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MENTAL illness ,FACE perception ,EMOTIONS ,SEX differences (Biology) - Abstract
A number of psychiatric and neurological disorders are characterized by impairments in facial emotion recognition. Recognition of individual emotions has implicated limbic, basal ganglionic, and frontal brain regions. Since these regions are also implicated in age-related decline and sex differences in emotion processing, an understanding of normative variation is important for assessing deficits in clinical groups. An internet-based test (“WebNeuro”) was administered to 1,000 healthy participants (6 to 91 years, 53% female) to assess explicit identification of basic expressions of emotion (happiness, sadness, fear, anger, disgust, neutral). A subsequent implicit recognition condition was based on a priming protocol, in which explicit identification provided the “study” phase. Responses were most accurate for happiness and slowest for fear in the explicit condition, but least accurate for happiness and fastest for fear in the implicit condition. The effects of age, by contrast, showed a similar pattern for both explicit and implicit conditions, following a nonlinear distribution in which performance improved from childhood through adolescence and early adulthood and declined in later adulthood. Females were better than males at explicit identification of fear in particular. These findings are consistent with the priority of threat-related signals, but indicate opposing biases depending on whether emotion processing is conscious or nonconscious. The lifespan trends in emotion processing over 10 decades point to an interaction of brain-based (maturation, stability, and then atrophy of cortical and subcortical systems) and experiential contributing factors. These findings provide a robust normative platform for assessing clinical groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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8. Explicit identification and implicit recognition of facial emotions: II. Core domains and relationships with general cognition.
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Mathersul, Danielle, Palmer, DonnaM., Gur, RubenC., Gur, RaquelE., Cooper, Nick, Gordon, Evian, and Williams, LeanneM.
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SOCIAL perception ,PSYCHIATRY ,COGNITION ,SEX differences (Biology) ,FACTOR analysis ,MEMORY - Abstract
Both general and social cognition are important in providing endophenotypic markers and predicting real-world functional outcomes of clinical psychiatric disorders. However, to date, focus has been on general cognition, rather than on core domains of social/emotional cognition. This study sought to determine core domains of emotion processing for both explicit identification and implicit recognition and their relationships with core domains of general cognition. Age effects and sex differences were also investigated. A sample of 1,000 healthy individuals (6 to 91 years, 53.5% female) undertook the WebNeuro tests of emotion identification and recognition and tests of general cognitive function. Factor analysis revealed seven core domains of emotion processing: speed of explicit emotion identification, speed of implicit emotion recognition, implicit emotion recognition accuracy, “threat” processing, sadness-disgust identification, “positive emotion” processing, and general “face perception.” Seven corresponding core domains of general cognition were identified: information-processing speed, executive function, sustained attention/vigilance, verbal memory, working-memory capacity, inhibition/impulsivity, and sensorimotor function. Factors of emotion processing generally showed positive associations with those of general cognitive function, suggesting commonality in processing speed in particular. Moreover, age had a consistent nonlinear impact on both emotion processing and general cognitive factors, while sex differences were more specific. These findings contribute to a normative and standardized structure for assessment of emotional and general cognition in clinical groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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9. The International Research Training Group on 'Brain-Behavior Relationship of Normal and Disturbed Emotions in Schizophrenia and Autism' as an Example of German-American Cooperation in Doctoral Training.
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Schneider, Frank and Gur, RubenC.
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INTELLECTUAL cooperation , *SCIENTIFIC community , *SCIENTISTS , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *AUTISM , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *POSITRON emission tomography , *MAGNETOENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *RESEARCH - Abstract
The International Research Training Group 'Brain-Behavior Relationship of Normal and Disturbed Emotions in Schizophrenia and Autism' (IRTG 1328), funded by the German Research Council (DFG), is a German-American cooperation. Its major aims are interdisciplinary and international scientific cooperation and the support of young scientists with aspirations to cutting edge research careers. The IRTG offers a study program that structures an internationally collaborative doctoral process. The participants in the IRTG apply advanced brain imaging techniques, including structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI and fMRI), positron emission tomography (PET), magnetoencephalography (MEG), receptor distribution, and microstructural, architectonic brain mapping to study the neurobiological basis of emotion processing in schizophrenia and autism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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10. No effect of donepezil on neurocognition and social cognition in young persons with stable schizophrenia.
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Kohler, ChristianG., Martin, ElizabethA., Kujawski, Evan, Bilker, Warren, Gur, RaquelE., and Gur, RubenC.
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CHOLINESTERASE inhibitors ,COGNITION disorders treatment ,SOCIAL perception ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,PLACEBOS ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,NEUROPSYCHIATRY ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Cognitive dysfunction is common in schizophrenia and linked with psychosocial dysfunction. We examined the possible effect of a 16-week trial of donepezil on cognition in young persons with stable schizophrenia. Twenty-six outpatients who met criteria for age, duration of illness, clinical stability, and medications were randomly assigned to 16-week treatment with donepezil or placebo using a double blind design. At beginning and conclusion of the trial, participants completed standardised computerised assessment of neurocognition and social cognition. Symptomatology and functioning were assessed using standard rating scales for negative and positive symptoms, depression and mania, and quality of life. No treatment effects were found on any cognitive functions or clinical symptoms in placebo or donepezil groups. Similar to other studies using acetylcholinesterase inhibitors in more heterogeneous and symptomatic groups of patients with schizophrenia, donepezil does not appear to enhance cognitive abilities. Persistent cognitive impairment in schizophrenia with pervasive effects on psychosocial functioning and outcome, urge the search for agents that may offer improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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11. Olfactory Functioning in Schizophrenia: Relationship to Clinical, Neuropsychological, and Volumetric MRI Measures
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Moberg, PaulJ., Arnold, StevenE., Doty, RichardL., Gur, RaquelE., Balderston, CatherineC., Roalf, DavidR., Gur, RubenC., Kohler, ChristianG., Kanes, StephenJ., Siegel, StevenJ., and Turetsky, BruceI.
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SCHIZOPHRENIA ,COGNITION disorders ,SMELL disorders ,TEMPORAL lobectomy ,FRONTAL lobe ,OLFACTORY threshold ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests - Abstract
Deficits in odor identification and detection threshold sensitivity have been observed in schizophrenia but their relationship to clinical, cognitive, and biologic measures have not been clearly established. Our objectives were to examine the relationship between measures of odor identification and detection threshold sensitivity and clinical, neuropsychological, and anatomic brain measures. Twenty-one patients with schizophrenia and 20 healthy controls were administered psychophysical tests of odor identification and detection threshold sensitivity to phenyl ethyl alcohol. In addition, clinical symptom ratings, neuropsychological measures of frontal and temporal lobe function and whole brain MRIs were concurrently obtained. Patients exhibited significant deficits in odor identification but normal detection threshold sensitivity. Poorer odor identification scores were associated with longer duration of illness, increased negative and disorganized symptoms, and the deficit syndrome, as well as impairments in verbal and nonverbal memory. Better odor detection thresholds were specifically associated with first-rank or productive symptoms. Larger left temporal lobe volumes with MRI were associated with better odor identification in controls but not in patients. Given the relevance of the neural substrate, and the evidence of performance deficits, psychophysical probes of the integrity of the olfactory system hold special promise for illuminating aspects of the neurobiology underlying schizophrenia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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12. The noradrenergic response to acute stress: correlates with clinical phenomenology, regional brain function, and neurophysiology in schizophrenia
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Mozley, David, primary, Gur, RaquelE., additional, Kreider, Margaret, additional, Winokur, AndrewC., additional, Harper, Lyn, additional, and Gur, RubenC., additional
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- 1989
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13. Neuropsychological investigations of schizophrenia
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Gur, RubenC., primary
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- 1989
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