R
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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Journal ArticleDOI
Genetic overlap between schizophrenia and selective components of executive function.
Sheena Owens,Fruhling Rijsdijk,Marco Picchioni,Daniel Stahl,Igor Nenadic,Robin M. Murray,Timothea Toulopoulou +6 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that mental flexibility is a purer cognitive process sharing very little common variance with general intellectual functioning, and the inclusion of this mental flexibility phenotype in linkage or association analysis should improve the power to detect susceptibility genes for schizophrenia.
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Increased inferior frontal activation during word generation: a marker of genetic risk for schizophrenia but not bipolar disorder?
Sergi G. Costafreda,Cynthia H.Y. Fu,Marco Picchioni,Fergus Kane,Colm McDonald,Diana Prata,Sridevi Kalidindi,Muriel Walshe,Vivienne Curtis,Elvira Bramon,Eugenia Kravariti,Nicolette Marshall,Timothea Toulopoulou,Gareth J. Barker,Anthony S. David,Michael Brammer,Robin M. Murray,Philip McGuire +17 more
TL;DR: Patients with schizophrenia and the unaffected MZ cotwins of schizophrenia probands showed increased activation in the inferior frontal cortex relative to healthy controls and bipolar patients, and this may be a marker of genetic vulnerability to schizophrenia.
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Cannabis and Psychosis: What Degree of Proof Do We Require?
Robin M. Murray,Marta Di Forti +1 more
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Parasuicide in Camberwell: Ethnic differences
TL;DR: It is suggested that ethnic minority and white DSH differ in important respects; DSH teams serving multicultural communities may need to develop special expertise to meet the needs of minority ethnic groups.
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Long-term outcomes from training in self-management of chronic pain in an elderly population: a randomized controlled trial.
Michael K. Nicholas,Ali Asghari,Ali Asghari,Fiona M. Blyth,Fiona M. Blyth,Fiona M. Blyth,Bradley M. Wood,Robin M. Murray,Rebecca McCabe,Alan J. M. Brnabic,Lee Beeston,M. Corbett,Catherine Sherrington,Sarah Overton +13 more
TL;DR: The long-term results indicate the pain self-management program group achieved and maintained significantly better results than the exercise-attention control group on the primary outcome, pain-related disability, as well as on usual pain, pain distress, depression, and fear-avoidance beliefs.