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Claudio Imperatori

Researcher at Sapienza University of Rome

Publications -  124
Citations -  2050

Claudio Imperatori is an academic researcher from Sapienza University of Rome. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Binge eating. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 103 publications receiving 1330 citations. Previous affiliations of Claudio Imperatori include European University.

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Aberrant EEG functional connectivity and EEG power spectra in resting state post-traumatic stress disorder: a sLORETA study.

TL;DR: In power spectra and connectivity analysis PTSD patients showed a widespread increase of theta activity in parietal lobes and in frontal lobes, which could reflect the alteration of memory systems and emotional processing consistently altered in PTSD patients.
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Stay home, stay safe, stay green: The role of gardening activities on mental health during the Covid-19 home confinement

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the relation between gardening and psychopathological distress during the lockdown of the first wave of Covid-19 in Italy and found that engagement in gardening activities promotes psychological health, through a reduction of covid-related stress.
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COVID-19 Related Distress Is Associated With Alcohol Problems, Social Media and Food Addiction Symptoms: Insights From the Italian Experience During the Lockdown

TL;DR: The results seem to confirm the general concerns about the negative impacts of the COVID-19 emergency on addictive behaviors, suggesting that this issue should be carefully monitored.
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Childhood trauma in obese and overweight women with food addiction and clinical-level of binge eating

TL;DR: Clinicians should carefully assess the presence of CT in individuals who report dysfunctional eating patterns in order to develop treatment approaches specifically for obese and overweight patients with a history of CT.
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Default mode network alterations in individuals with high-trait-anxiety: An EEG functional connectivity study

TL;DR: The results suggest that high-trait-anxiety individuals fail to synchronize DMN during RS, reflecting a possible top-down cognitive control deficit and may help the understanding of the individual differences in functional brain networks associated with trait anxiety.