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N. Colter

Researcher at Northwick Park Hospital

Publications -  9
Citations -  1237

N. Colter is an academic researcher from Northwick Park Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Temporal lobe & Brain asymmetry. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 9 publications receiving 1226 citations.

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Schizophrenia as an Anomaly of Development of Cerebral Asymmetry: A Postmortem Study and a Proposal Concerning the Genetic Basis of the Disease

TL;DR: A postmortem study finds that ventricular enlargement affects the posterior and particularly the temporal horn of the lateral cerebral ventricle, consistent with the view that schizophrenia is a disorder of the genetic mechanisms that control the development of cerebral asymmetry.
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Gliosis in schizophrenia: A survey

TL;DR: It seems unlikely that a specific pattern of pathologically significant gliosis is present in schizophrenic brains and negative findings are of note because of previously reported structural differences in the temporal lobe in the schizophrenic group in this series.
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Is there gliosis in schizophrenia? Investigation of the temporal lobe.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the atrophy/aplasia in schizophrenia is not associated with pathologically significant gliosis, suggesting that the structural change in schizophrenic brains is due to an embryonic insult or developmental anomaly of an, as yet, undetermined nature.
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Developmental arrest of cerebral asymmetries in early onset schizophrenia.

TL;DR: The present study reexamines reversals of cerebral asymmetry in a large sample of patients with schizophrenia by combining conventional measures of frontal and occipital asymmetry with a measure of temporal lobe asymmetry and measures of the lateral ventricle.
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Reduction in temporal lobe size in siblings with schizophrenia: a magnetic resonance imaging study.

TL;DR: Temporal lobe volume was significantly decreased by approximately 10% in these early onset schizophrenic siblings compared with normal controls, adding to recent post-mortem and neuroradiological evidence for morphological alteration in the temporal lobes in schizophrenia.