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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Neurodevelopmental Outcomes of Preterm Birth: From Childhood to Adult Life: Language Development
TL;DR: A cognitive neuroscience perspective on the development of memory in children born preterm Michelle De Haan andExecutive function development in preterm children and the role of socioeconomical status are considered.
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Improving physical health and reducing substance use in psychosis--randomised control trial (IMPACT RCT): study protocol for a cluster randomised controlled trial.
Fiona Gaughran,Daniel Stahl,Khalida Ismail,Khalida Ismail,Zerrin Atakan,John Lally,John Lally,Poonam Gardner-Sood,Anita Patel,Anthony S. David,David Hopkins,David Hopkins,Bee Harries,Philippa Lowe,Diana Orr,Maurice Arbuthnot,Robin M. Murray,Robin M. Murray,Kathryn Greenwood,Kathryn Greenwood,Shubulade Smith,Shubulade Smith +21 more
TL;DR: The main hypothesis is that the addition of IMPACT Therapy to TAU will be more effective than TAU alone in improving patients’ quality of life as measured by the Short Form-36, including mental health and physical health subscales on completion of the intervention at 12 months post randomisation.
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Frontal and anterior cingulate activation during overt verbal fluency in patients with first episode psychosis.
Maristela S. Schaufelberger,Maurien C T Senhorini,M. A. Barreiros,Edson Amaro,Paulo Rossi Menezes,Marcia Scazufca,Cláudio Campi de Castro,Adriana M. Ayres,Robin M. Murray,Philip McGuire,Geraldo F. Busatto +10 more
TL;DR: The preliminary findings of attenuated engagement of inferior prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate gyrus in patients with recent onset psychosis during phonological verbal fluency are consistent with those of previous studies, and suggest a pattern of disorganized activity of different functional anterior gyrus units in association with psychotic conditions.
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Lateral ventricle differences between first-episode schizophrenia and first-episode psychotic bipolar disorder: A population-based morphometric MRI study.
Pedro G.P. Rosa,Maristela S. Schaufelberger,Ricardo R. Uchida,Fábio L.S. Duran,Julia Lappin,Paulo Rossi Menezes,Marcia Scazufca,Philip McGuire,Robin M. Murray,Geraldo F. Busatto +9 more
TL;DR: It is shown that neuroanatomical abnormalities in subjects with schizophrenia relative to controls from the same neighbourhood are evident at the first episode of illness, but are not detectable in bipolar disorder patients.
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Urinary dimethyltryptamine and psychiatric symptomatology and classification
TL;DR: There was a general relationship between psychotic symptoms and urinary DMT, but specifically schizophrenic symptoms did not appear to be major determinants of DMT excretion.