T
Tonya White
Researcher at Erasmus University Rotterdam
Publications - 333
Citations - 17330
Tonya White is an academic researcher from Erasmus University Rotterdam. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Brain morphometry. The author has an hindex of 60, co-authored 292 publications receiving 13269 citations. Previous affiliations of Tonya White include ETH Zurich & University of Minnesota.
Papers
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Functional MRI pain studies in children? Yes, we (s)can!
TL;DR: Non-clinical structural and functional brain MRI scans were conducted in 98 children to determine the possible effects of neonatal pain on pain processing later in life and to report the child’s level of “fun” and “fear” using the WongBaker faces rating scale.
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Client Aggression Towards Therapists: Is It More or Less Likely with Transgendered Clients?
TL;DR: For example, this paper found that male-to-female trans gender clients were significantly more likely to threaten or assault their therapists than non-gender dysphoric clients (p = 0.0094).
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The effect of acute tyrosine phenylalanine depletion on emotion-based decision-making in healthy adults.
TL;DR: Investigating dopamine's role in emotion-based decision-making through a common measure of this construct, the Iowa Gambling Task, using Acute Tyrosine Phenylalanine Depletion finds that ATPD subtly attenuated reward salience and altered the approach by which individuals achieved successful performance, without resulting in frank group differences in task performance.
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The effect of prenatal lithium exposure on the neuropsychological development of the child.
Eline M. P. Poels,Lisanne Schrijver,Tonya White,Sabine J. Roza,Milan Zarchev,Hilmar H. Bijma,Adriaan Honig,Inge L. van Kamp,Witte J.G. Hoogendijk,Astrid M. Kamperman,Veerle Bergink,Veerle Bergink +11 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate neuropsychological functioning in lithium-exposed children with the aim to provide further knowledge on the long-term effects of lithium use during pregnancy.
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The longitudinal relationship between set-shifting at 4 years of age and eating disorder related features at 9 years of age in the general pediatric population
Cathelijne Steegers,Gwen C. Dieleman,Valeria Moskalenko,Susana Santos,Susana Santos,Manon H.J. Hillegers,Manon H.J. Hillegers,Tonya White,Tonya White,Pauline W Jansen,Pauline W Jansen,Pauline W Jansen +11 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the association of set-shifting abilities as a measure of cognitive flexibility in preadolescents with anorexia nervosa-related features.