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Barbara A. Cornblatt
Researcher at The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research
Publications - 289
Citations - 16349
Barbara A. Cornblatt is an academic researcher from The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychosis & Prodrome. The author has an hindex of 63, co-authored 253 publications receiving 14246 citations. Previous affiliations of Barbara A. Cornblatt include Hofstra University & Yale University.
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Impact of childhood adversity on corticolimbic volumes in youth at clinical high-risk for psychosis.
Allison M. LoPilato,Katrina Goines,Jean Addington,Carrie E. Bearden,Kristin S. Cadenhead,Tyrone D. Cannon,Barbara A. Cornblatt,Daniel H. Mathalon,Thomas H. McGlashan,Larry J. Seidman,Diana O. Perkins,Ming T. Tsuang,Scott W. Woods,Elaine F. Walker +13 more
TL;DR: It is found that deprivation exposure during childhood was uniquely associated with smaller cortical volume and smaller right hippocampal volume in CHR youth, suggesting that deprivation exposures during childhood contribute to the subtle volumetric reductions observed in clinical high-risk samples.
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O3.2. brain hyperactivation during memory retrieval precedes and predicts conversion to psychosis in individuals at clinical high risk
Hengyi Cao,Sarah McEwen,Yoonho Chung,Oliver Y. Chén,Carrie E. Bearden,Jean Addington,Bradley G. Goodyear,Kristin S. Cadenhead,Heline Mirzakhanian,Barbara A. Cornblatt,Ricardo E. Carrión,Daniel H. Mathalon,Thomas H. McGlashan,Diana O. Perkins,Aysenil Belger,Larry J. Seidman,Heidi W. Thermenos,Ming T. Tsuang,Theo G.M. van Erp,Elaine F. Walker,Stephan Hamann,Alan Anticevic,Scott W. Woods,Tyrone D. Cannon +23 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that hyperactivation during memory retrieval may mark processes associated with conversion to psychosis, and such measures have potential as biomarkers for psychosis prediction.
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Demographic correlates of attenuated positive psychotic symptoms
Rachel N. Waford,Allison N. Macdonald,Katrina Goines,Derek M. Novacek,Hanan D. Trotman,F Walker Elaine,Jean Addington,Carrie E. Bearden,Kristin S. Cadenhead,Tyrone D. Cannon,Barbara A. Cornblatt,Robert K. Heinssen,Daniel H. Mathalon,Ming T. Tsuang,Diana O. Perkins,Larry J. Seidman,Scott W. Woods,Thomas H. McGlashan +17 more
TL;DR: Overall, sex, age and education were modestly related to unusual thought content and perceptual abnormalities, only, suggesting minimal implication for designating clinical high risk status and predicting psychosis-risk.
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Pharmacological Treatment of Cognition in Schizophrenia: An Idea Whose Method Has Come
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Six-year outcomes in first admission adolescent inpatients: clinical and cognitive characteristics at admission as predictors.
David L. Pogge,Brie Insalaco,Hilary Bertisch,Lale Bilginer,John M. Stokes,Barbara A. Cornblatt,Philip D. Harvey +6 more
TL;DR: Attentional deficits during a first psychiatric admission predicted risk for manifesting psychosis at 6-year follow-up to a more substantial degree than either a psychosis diagnosis or psychotic symptoms at admission.