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Robin M. Murray

Researcher at King's College London

Publications -  1583
Citations -  128883

Robin M. Murray is an academic researcher from King's College London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychosis & Schizophrenia. The author has an hindex of 171, co-authored 1539 publications receiving 116362 citations. Previous affiliations of Robin M. Murray include University of Cambridge & National Institutes of Health.

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Translating the epidemiology of psychosis into public mental health: evidence, challenges and future prospects

TL;DR: This analysis demonstrates potential importance in another light to move beyond current epidemiological approaches to elucidate exact socio-environmental factors that underpin urbanicity and ethnic minority status as markers of increased risk by incorporating gene-environment interactions that adopt a multi disciplinary perspective.
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The relationship of environmental temperature to the incidence and outcome of schizophrenia.

TL;DR: New analyses of data from two multicentre studies carried out by the WHO found the morbid risk of developing schizophrenia, as broadly defined by the Determinants of Outcome Study, was positively related to the mean daily range of temperature.
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Structural brain network analysis in families multiply affected with bipolar I disorder.

TL;DR: Structural brain network analysis is used to investigate connectivity abnormalities in multiply affected BP type I families, to assess the utility of dysconnectivity as a biomarker and its endophenotypic potential and no differences between groups were found.
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Analgesic abuse and dementia

TL;DR: Psychometric and psychiatric studies on eight patients who had abused compound analgesics containing phenacetin showed that four had definite evidence and two possible evidence of organic dementia, suggesting gross abuse of Phenacetin may overwhelm the antioxidant protection of the body, leading to premature deposition of lipofuscin and accelerated neuronal ageing.
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Abnormalities in connectivity of white-matter tracts in patients with familial and non-familial schizophrenia

TL;DR: The hypothesis that loss of WM integrity may be an important pathophysiological feature of schizophrenia, with particular implications for brain dysmaturation in non-familial and familial schizophrenia, is supported.