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Sarah Raz

Researcher at University of Memphis

Publications -  18
Citations -  589

Sarah Raz is an academic researcher from University of Memphis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Ventriculomegaly. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 16 publications receiving 578 citations. Previous affiliations of Sarah Raz include University of Texas at Austin.

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Structural brain abnormalities in the major psychoses: a quantitative review of the evidence from computerized imaging.

TL;DR: This quantitative review focuses on estimating the extent of neuroanatomical abnormalities detected via neuroimaging in schizophrenia and affective disorders, and on examining sample characteristics and methodological factors that may affect study outcome.
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Neonatal hypoxic risk in preterm birth infants: the influence of sex and severity of respiratory distress on cognitive recovery.

TL;DR: Findings revealed an appreciable female advantage in cognitive recovery from RDS, yet the association between severity of RDS and outcome did not reach conventional statistical significance level.
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A Female Advantage in Cognitive Recovery from Early Cerebral Insult.

TL;DR: Gender differences in cognitive outcome were examined in children born prematurely who had incurred early cerebral lesions and in a high-risk comparison group as discussed by the authors, showing that a significant gender difference in cognitive recovery was observed in the lesion group.
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Influence of slight to moderate risk for birth hypoxia on acquisition of cognitive and language function in the preterm infant: a cross-sectional comparison with preterm-birth controls.

TL;DR: In the preterm infant, even minor risk for birth hypoxia may result in discernible deviation from the expected developmental trajectory, and increasing acidosis was linearly related to decreases in cognitive skills, with the bend in the curve occurring well within the normal range of pH values.
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Sex differences in early vulnerability to cerebral injury and their neurodevelopmental implications.

TL;DR: Gender was found to provide a unique contribution to extent of ventricular dilation, an index of intracranial hemorrhage severity, and male sex was associated not only with greater ventriculomegaly, but also with a higher grade of ICH.