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Marie-Odile Krebs

Researcher at University of Paris

Publications -  340
Citations -  13880

Marie-Odile Krebs is an academic researcher from University of Paris. The author has contributed to research in topics: Schizophrenia & Psychosis. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 311 publications receiving 11680 citations. Previous affiliations of Marie-Odile Krebs include Paris Descartes University & Centre national de la recherche scientifique.

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Longitudinal Analyses of Blood Transcriptome During Conversion to Psychosis

TL;DR: This longitudinal study of transcriptomic changes in individuals with at-risk mental state revealed alterations during conversion to psychosis in pathways and genes relevant to schizophrenia.
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History of psychosurgery at Sainte-Anne Hospital, Paris, France, through translational interactions between psychiatrists and neurosurgeons

TL;DR: The history of Sainte-Anne Hospital's Neurosurgery Department sheds light on the initiation-yet fast reconsideration-of psychosurgery in France, which was probably due to the historically strong collaboration between psychiatrists and neurosurgeons in France.
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Effects of atypical neuroleptics on alertness and visual orienting in stabilized schizophrenic patients: a preliminary study

TL;DR: Patients treated with atypical neuroleptics had a phasic alertness ability similar to controls and an impairment of disengagement was present in those patients, indicating that atypICAL neurolePTics could have a positive influence on certain but not all attentional domains.
Proceedings Article

Enrich classifications in psychiatry with textual data: an ontology for psychiatry including social concepts.

TL;DR: A modular approach to develop an ontology of psychiatry, ONTOPSYCHIA, based on Patient Discharges Summaries and divided into three modules is proposed, taking into account the social aspects of the patient life described in PDS.
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Association of the intronic rs2072621 polymorphism of the X-linked GPR50 gene with affective disorder with seasonal pattern.

TL;DR: A case-control study found an association between Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) and a single nucleotide polymorphism (intronic rs2072621) of the gene encoding GPR50 (an orphan member of the G protein-coupled melatonin receptor subfamily) in females as discussed by the authors.