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Carrie E. Bearden

Researcher at University of California, Los Angeles

Publications -  473
Citations -  23923

Carrie E. Bearden is an academic researcher from University of California, Los Angeles. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychosis & Prodrome. The author has an hindex of 73, co-authored 398 publications receiving 19816 citations. Previous affiliations of Carrie E. Bearden include Syracuse University & Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.

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The ENIGMA Consortium: large-scale collaborative analyses of neuroimaging and genetic data

Paul M. Thompson, +332 more
TL;DR: The ENIGMA Consortium has detected factors that affect the brain that no individual site could detect on its own, and that require larger numbers of subjects than any individual neuroimaging study has currently collected.
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Beyond hypofrontality: A quantitative meta-analysis of functional neuroimaging studies of working memory in schizophrenia

TL;DR: The complex pattern of hyper‐ and hypoactivation consistently found across studies implies that rather than focusing on DLPFC dysregulation, researchers should consider the entire network of regions involved in a given task when making inferences about the biological mechanisms of schizophrenia.
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The neuropsychology and neuroanatomy of bipolar affective disorder: a critical review

TL;DR: Preliminary functional neuroimaging evidence supports the notion of frontal and subcortical hypometabolism in bipolar illness, and the underlying functional correlate of these cognitive deficits may be white matter lesions in the frontal lobes and basal ganglia.
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Cortical abnormalities in bipolar disorder : An MRI analysis of 6503 individuals from the ENIGMA Bipolar Disorder Working Group

Derrek P. Hibar, +145 more
- 01 Apr 2018 - 
TL;DR: The largest study to date of cortical gray matter thickness and surface area measures from brain magnetic resonance imaging scans of bipolar disorder patients is performed, revealing previously undetected associations and providing an extensive analysis of potential confounding variables in neuroimaging studies of BD.