Decisional Processing in Paranoid and Non-Paranoid Schizophrenics

1984 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 591-601 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael J. Lyons ◽  
Samuel C. Fulkerson

40 schizophrenic subjects, divided into paranoid/non-paranoid categories and 14 normal controls were presented a task which involved making “same-different” judgments during random presentations of a series of visual comparison stimuli with a standard which represented the midpoint of the stimulus continuum. Using Sternberg's Choice RT paradigm for studying the locus of cognitive deficit, difficulty at the response-selection stage was manipulated while holding other stages constant. It was predicted that paranoids would have shorter RTs at easy decision points and longer RTs at difficult decision points relative to non-paranoids. The directions of the differences were as predicted but did not attain statistical significance. Both schizophrenic groups, compared to normals, made significantly fewer “same” responses on those trials where the comparison and standard were most similar.

2021 ◽  
Vol 215 ◽  
pp. 103292
Author(s):  
Lizhu Yan ◽  
Guochun Yang ◽  
Weizhi Nan ◽  
Xun Liu ◽  
Shimin Fu

Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 34-34
Author(s):  
Waled Bahaj ◽  
Anas Albawaliz ◽  
Madeline E Begemann ◽  
Anuj Shrestha ◽  
Brett Sperry ◽  
...  

Introduction: Carfilzomib is a proteasome inhibitor that is known to be associated with cardiotoxicity. Current clinical data on Carfilzomib associated with cardiotoxicity is generated in clinical trials from which patients with severe cardiovascular comorbidities were excluded. In this study, we have reported real-word experience on outcome of cardiotoxicity in patients managed by physicians in a community setting. Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis evaluating for cardiac complications in MM patients who received Carfilzomib at our institution in the last 5 years. Pre- and post-therapy echocardiogram findings were compared. Chi-square tests were used to compare categorical variables with an α level set at 0.05 for statistical significance. Results: Among the 28 identified patients who had pre- and post- Carfilzomib therapy echocardiogram imaging, (18 patients, 64%) had at least one echocardiographic abnormality. The main changes were in heart functions (10/28), whereas systolic dysfunction is seen in 9 patients while only one patient had diastolic dysfunction, pulmonary artery pressure (6/28), and wall motion abnormalities (5/28). (11/28) patients had disease progression. We did not notice any correlation to variables such as; age, duration of therapy, dose differences, and number of lines of therapies. Furthermore, two patients were rechallenged with Carfilzomib after echocardiographic worsening; one of them tolerated the treatment well, while the other had further worsening that led to holding the therapy. Conclusion: Several echocardiographic changes could be related to Carfilzomib therapy. Our study was limited due to the sample size and the retrospective nature of the analysis. Larger studies are needed to detect and correlate more echocardiogram variables in this population. Rechallenging these patients with Carfilzomib, particularly during relapse stages, will remain a difficult decision especially if the therapy was effective. Disclosures Raza: Advisory board Incyte, Amgen, Celgene, Kite, Janseen, Takeda: Consultancy, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Moderna: Current equity holder in publicly-traded company; Drrx: Divested equity in a private or publicly-traded company in the past 24 months; Gilead, Sierra, Abbot, Acasti, Amicus: Current equity holder in private company; Received Honorarium/speaker bureu from Janseen, Celgene, Takeda: Ended employment in the past 24 months, Honoraria, Speakers Bureau.


2017 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 405-409 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judith A Gadde ◽  
Vinil Shah ◽  
Greta B Liebo ◽  
Geir A Ringstad ◽  
I Jonathan Pomeraniec ◽  
...  

Purpose The relationship between syringomyelia and presyrinx, characterized by edema in the spinal cord, has not been firmly established. Patients with syringomyelia have abnormal spinal canal tapering that alters cerebrospinal fluid flow dynamics, but taper ratios in presyrinx have never been reported. We tested the hypothesis that presyrinx patients have abnormal spinal canal tapering. Materials and methods At six medical institutions, investigators searched the PACS system for patients with Chiari I and spinal cord edema unassociated with tumor, trauma, or other evident cause. In each case taper ratios were calculated for C1 to C4 and C4 to C7. In two age- and gender-matched control groups, Chiari I patients with no syringomyelia and patients with normal MR scans, the same measurements were made. Differences between groups were tested for statistical significance with t tests. Results The study enrolled 21 presyrinx patients and equal numbers of matched Chiari I and normal controls. C4 to C7 taper ratios were positive and steeper in presyrinx patients than in the normal controls ( p = 0.04). The upper cervical spine, C1 to C4, tapered negatively in cases and controls without significant differences between the groups. The difference in degree of tonsillar herniation was statistically significant between presyrinx patients and Chiari I controls ( p = 0.01). Conclusions Presyrinx patients have greater than normal positive tapering in the lower cervical spine and greater degree of tonsillar herniation than the controls.


2009 ◽  
Vol 62 (9) ◽  
pp. 1784-1804 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara Treccani ◽  
Roberto Cubelli ◽  
Sergio Della Sala ◽  
Carlo Umiltà

The present study aimed at investigating the processing stage underlying stimulus–stimulus (S–S) congruency effects by examining the relation of a particular type of congruency effect (i.e., the flanker effect) with a stimulus–response (S–R) spatial correspondence effect (i.e., the Simon effect). Experiment 1 used a unilateral flanker task in which the flanker also acted as a Simon-like accessory stimulus. Results showed a significant S–S Congruency × S–R Correspondence interaction: An advantage for flanker–response spatially corresponding trials was observed in target–flanker congruent conditions, whereas, in incongruent conditions, there was a noncorresponding trials’ advantage. The analysis of the temporal trend of the correspondence effects ruled out a temporal-overlap account for the observed interaction. Moreover, results of Experiment 2, in which the flanker did not belong to the target set, demonstrated that this interaction cannot be attributed to perceptual grouping of the target–flanker pairs and referential coding of the target with respect to the flanker in the congruent and incongruent conditions, respectively. Taken together, these findings are consistent with a response selection account of congruency effects: Both the position and the task-related attribute of the flanker would activate the associated responses. In noncorresponding-congruent trials and corresponding-incongruent trials, this would cause a conflict at the response selection stage.


1981 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helen Tager-Flusberg

ABSTRACTComprehension and strategy use by autistic children were tested in two experiments. Eighteen autistic subjects were compared with thirty normal 3- and 4-year-olds, matched on the PPVT and Raven's Colored Progressive Matrices. In Experiment I subjects were asked to act out active and passive, biased and reversible sentences. The autistic group's overall comprehension was lower than that of the normal controls; although the autistic subjects did use a word-order strategy, they did not generally use a probable-event strategy. These findings were confirmed in Experiment II, in which the same procedure with anomalous three-word items was used. The results are interpreted as evidence that in autism there is a semantic-cognitive deficit in utilizing conceptual knowledge about relational aspects of the environment and that this deficit underlies the comprehension difficulties of autistic persons.


2017 ◽  
Vol 75 (8) ◽  
pp. 539-545
Author(s):  
Isabella Araújo Mota ◽  
Maria das Graças Coriolano ◽  
Otávio Gomes Lins

ABSTRACT The Bereitschaftspotential (BP) is a negative wave observed in EEG retrograde averaging, preceding a motor act. The objective was to study the BP preceding voluntary eyelid blinks in Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients during off and on phases of levodopa. Methods Ten PD patients in stages 1 and 2 of the Hoehn & Yahr classification were compared to 18 healthy controls. Artifact-free EEG segments of two seconds preceding the onset of the blink potential were averaged and analyzed, and the statistical significance of the measured amplitudes were evaluated by analysis of variance models. Results The presence of a BP in the PD patients was demonstrated. The mean amplitudes at 0 ms were respectively 0.6 µV and 3.3 µV for the BP patients and the normal controls, respectively. Conclusions The BP amplitudes were significantly smaller in PD patients than normal participants. The amplitudes of the BP were not modified by levodopa.


Author(s):  
YOUNG-WON KIM ◽  
IL-SEOK OH

A good classifier ensemble should show high complementarity among classifiers to produce a high recognition rate and it should also have a small size to be efficient. This paper proposes a classifier ensemble selection algorithm operating in a coarse-to-fine paradigm. For the algorithm to be successful, the original classifier pool should be sufficiently diverse. So this paper produces a large classifier pool by combining several different classification algorithms and several feature subsets. The coarse selection stage reduces greatly the size of the classifier pool using a clustering algorithm. The fine selection finds the near-optimal ensemble using genetic algorithms. A hybrid genetic algorithm with improved searching capability is also proposed. The experimentation used handwritten numeral datasets and UCI datasets. The experimental results and the test of statistical significance showed that the proposed algorithm is superior to the conventional ones.


2018 ◽  
Vol 56 (12) ◽  
pp. 1491-1498
Author(s):  
Daniel Merkel ◽  
Hannah Stahlheber ◽  
Victoria Chupina ◽  
Christoph Schneider

Abstract Purpose The quality of an ultrasound device’s B-scan mode is decisive in obtaining clear and informative images. High demands are placed upon ultrasound devices, particularly in cases where evidence of small lesions of parenchymal organs is being gathered. Methods We tested the quality of the B-scan mode in ultrasound devices of 7 different manufacturers. We performed ultrasound examinations of 3 predefined abdominal sections on 4 healthy subjects with 7 different ultrasound devices. Documentation was compiled digitally by recording video sequences. Any characteristics identifying the manufacturer were removed. Subsequently, the sequences were organized into corresponding pairs. The resulting 252 video pairs were shown side by side to a panel of 10 experienced ultrasound examiners who evaluated the quality of the scans by way of direct visual comparison. Results Two of the 7 devices were clearly judged to be of higher quality. In part, the differences in the overall evaluation and within the subgroups reached levels of statistical significance. The ranking of the tested devices did not correlate with their suggested retail prices. Conclusion There are relevant differences in the quality of the B-scan mode of modern high-end devices. The suggested retail prices do not correlate with the B-scan quality of the ultrasound devices.


Author(s):  
J. Carter ◽  
T. Wasser ◽  
S. Statler ◽  
A.D. Rae-Grant

Objectives:To assess the utility of a bedside measure of sensation (the Vibration Quantitation Scale (VQS)) in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) and in normal controls. To correlate the VQS with the Kurtzke Expanded Disability Severity Score (EDSS) and sensory abnormalities in these patients.Methods:We developed the VQS and tested its performance in patients with MS of various ages, MS types, and EDSS scores. We compared this with controls (normal volunteers or patients with other neurological diseases) who did not have sensory symptoms. In a subgroup, two examiners measured VQS independently at the same patient visit. Astandard C-128 tuning fork was used for the VQS measurement.Results:The VQS had a good inter-observer reproducibility (r=0.920, p<0.001). The VQS fell with increasing age in normals consistent with declining sensory function. The VQS was significantly lower in the multiple sclerosis patients compared with age - matched controls (p<0.001). Abnormalities in VQS were present in patients with brief duration of MS (<5 years) and low EDSS scores, correlating with the presence of sensory abnormalities early in the disease course in some patients. There was a strong correlation between the VQS and EDSS (r=-0.509). The VQS correlated with abnormal sensation in the hands (r=0.310), but did not meet statistical significance for abnormal sensation in the feet or face. Asecond cohort of MS patients was studied using a modified VQS measure (single stimulation, omitting forehead measurement). This reconfirmed the correlation between the modified VQS and EDSS as well as with age. The modified VQS may be useful in clinical practice since it takes little time and is strongly correlated with the EDSS (r=0.578).Conclusion:The VQS provides a continuous sensory scale applicable in most patients with MS, which is measurable with standard bedside equipment, and which may avoid some of the pitfalls of sensory scoring in MS.


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