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Stephen T. Zavitz
Researcher at Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research
Publications - 2
Citations - 693
Stephen T. Zavitz is an academic researcher from Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Perception. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 2 publications receiving 559 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The NKI-Rockland Sample: A Model for Accelerating the Pace of Discovery Science in Psychiatry.
Kate B. Nooner,Kate B. Nooner,Stanley J. Colcombe,Russell H. Tobe,Maarten Mennes,Maarten Mennes,Melissa M. Benedict,Alexis L. Moreno,Laura J. Panek,Shaquanna Brown,Stephen T. Zavitz,Qingyang Li,Sharad Sikka,David A. Gutman,Saroja Bangaru,Rochelle Tziona Schlachter,Stephanie M. Kamiel,Ayesha R. Anwar,Caitlin M. Hinz,Michelle S. Kaplan,Anna B. Rachlin,Samantha Adelsberg,Brian Cheung,Ranjit Khanuja,Chao-Gan Yan,Cameron Craddock,V.D. Calhoun,V.D. Calhoun,William Courtney,Margaret D. King,Dylan Wood,Christine L. Cox,A. M. Clare Kelly,Adriana Di Martino,Eva Petkova,Eva Petkova,Philip T. Reiss,Philip T. Reiss,Nancy Duan,Dawn Thomsen,Bharat B. Biswal,Barbara J. Coffey,Barbara J. Coffey,Matthew J. Hoptman,Matthew J. Hoptman,Daniel C. Javitt,Daniel C. Javitt,Nunzio Pomara,Nunzio Pomara,John J. Sidtis,John J. Sidtis,Harold S. Koplewicz,Francisco X. Castellanos,Francisco X. Castellanos,Bennett L. Leventhal,Michael P. Milham,Michael P. Milham +56 more
TL;DR: The conceptual basis of the NKI-RS is described, including study design, sampling considerations, and steps to synchronize phenotypic and neuroimaging assessment, and it is hoped that familiarity with the conceptual underpinnings will facilitate harmonization with future data collection efforts aimed at advancing psychiatric neuroscience and nosology.
Dissertation
Adults' Understanding of Extraordinary Mental, Perceptual, and Physical Capacities
TL;DR: The authors found that participants attributed human-like limitations to God's capabilities, and participants anthropomorphized attention and presence more than perception or physical power, while religious practices were associated with decreased use of anthropomorphic concepts, such as belief in God's existence and frequency of reading religious materials.