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.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Do schizophrenic patients who managed to get to university have a non-developmental form of illness?
TL;DR: University-educated schizophrenic patients who were functioning well enough to enter university prior to illness onset may have a non-developmental subtype of schizophrenia.
Journal ArticleDOI
Eye tracking in schizophrenia: Does the antisaccade task measure anything that the smooth pursuit task does not?
Jolanta Zanelli,Helen Simon,Sophia Rabe-Hesketh,Muriel Walshe,Colm McDonald,Robin M. Murray,James H. MacCabe +6 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that the antisaccade distractibility error score is related to gain and qualitative measures of smooth pursuit, although the relationship with number of saccades did not conform to this pattern.
Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical utility of magnetic resonance imaging in first-episode psychosis.
Irina Falkenberg,Stefania Benetti,Marie Raffin,Phillipe Wuyts,William Pettersson-Yeo,Paola Dazzan,Kevin Morgan,Robin M. Murray,Tiago Reis Marques,Anthony S. David,Jozef Jarosz,Andrew Simmons,Steve C.R. Williams,Philip McGuire +13 more
TL;DR: Rates of neuroradiological abnormalities in FEP are likely to be underestimated in research samples that often exclude patients with organic abnormalities, however, the majority of findings do not require intervention.
Journal ArticleDOI
Personality dimensions and neuropsychological performance in first-degree relatives of patients with schizophrenia and affective psychosis
TL;DR: One hundred first-degree relatives of patients with schizophrenia (SR) and 88 first degree relatives of affective psychotic patients (APR) completed the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire which measures extraversion, neuroticism, and psychoticism; they were also administered the National Adult Reading Test (NART), the Trail Making Test (TMT), and a Verbal Fluency Test (VFT) as mentioned in this paper.
Journal Article
Correlation and familial aggregation of dimensions of psychosis in affected sibling pairs
TL;DR: This is the first study in a large non-European population to confirm that schizophrenia dimensions and clinical characteristics show significant familiality, implying possible heritability, and supports their use in the delineation of homogeneous subsets for future genetic studies.