Publications (50) View all
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Article: Cognitive training at home in schizophrenia is feasible.
Biological Psychiatry 01/2013; · 8.28 Impact Factor -
Article: The interaction of electrodermal activity and expressed emotion in predicting symptoms in recent-onset schizophrenia.
Kenneth L Subotnik, Anne M Schell, Mark S Chilingar, Michael E Dawson, Joseph Ventura, Kimberle A Kelly, Gerhard S Hellemann, Keith H Nuechterlein[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: In the present study, expressed emotion (EE) was assessed among immediate family members of 94 recent-onset schizophrenia patients at initial study entry point, and patients' electrodermal activity (EDA) was measured without the presence of family members at a baseline outpatient stabilization assessment. Psychiatric symptoms were also rated, both at the baseline outpatient test and at 1-year follow-up. Electrodermal activity × expressed emotion interactions were observed at both test points. In each case, the highest levels of negative symptoms were observed among those who exhibited greater EDA and lived in a high-EE environment. These results support the view that the combination of high family EE and sympathetic nervous system arousal confer especially high risk for poor negative symptom outcomes.Psychophysiology 06/2012; 49(8):1035-8. · 3.29 Impact Factor -
Article: Symptom Domains and Neurocognitive Functioning Can Help Differentiate Social Cognitive Processes in Schizophrenia: A Meta-Analysis.
Joseph Ventura, Rachel C Wood, Gerhard S Hellemann[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Background: The existence of deficits in several social cognitive domains has been established in schizophrenia, and those impairments are known to be a significant determinant of functional outcome. Both symptoms and neurocognition have been linked to social cognitive deficits, but the nature and the relative strength of these relationships have not been established. Methods: A meta-analysis of 154 studies (combined N = 7175) was conducted to determine the magnitude of the relationships between 3 symptom domains (reality distortion, disorganization, and negative symptoms) and 6 Measurement and Treatment Research to Improve Cognition in Schizophrenia (MATRICS) domains of neurocognition with 4 domains of social cognition. Analyses were conducted to determine whether the strength of these relationships differed depending on the symptom type or neurocognitive domain under investigation. RESULTS: The correlations between reality distortion and the domains of social cognition ranged from near zero to moderate (r's range from -.07 to -.22), as compared with the moderate association for disorganization (r's range from -.22 to -.32) and negative symptoms (r's range from -.20 to -.26). For each of the neurocognitive domains, the relationships to social cognitive domains were mostly moderate (r's range from .17 to .37), with no one neurocognitive domain being prominent. CONCLUSIONS: The effect sizes of the correlations between disorganization and negative symptoms with social cognition were relatively larger and more consistent than reality distortion. The relationship between social cognition and 6 MATRICS domains of neurocognition were mostly moderate and relatively consistent. When considering disorganization and negative symptoms, the relationship to social cognitive processes was relatively as strong as for neurocognition.Schizophrenia Bulletin 07/2011; · 8.80 Impact Factor -
Article: Remission and recovery during the first outpatient year of the early course of schizophrenia.
Joseph Ventura, Kenneth L Subotnik, Lisa H Guzik, Gerhard S Hellemann, Michael J Gitlin, Rachel C Wood, Keith H Nuechterlein[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Although in the early course of schizophrenia relapse prevention is of paramount importance, there is an increasing emphasis on establishing and maintaining sustained periods of symptom remission. Recovery in the early course of illness is also possible, although the rates of recovery are lower than for symptom remission. Symptom remission and recovery rates vary considerably across recent-onset schizophrenia studies because of a lack of consistency in treatment interventions and in applying operational outcome criteria. Patients who were within two years of their first psychotic episode (N=77) that were treated with continuous antipsychotic medication in conjunction with psychosocial interventions (without targeted work rehabilitation) were assessed during the first outpatient year after hospital discharge. Published operational criteria were used to classify symptom remission and recovery. The rate of full symptom remission maintained for 6 months was 36%, while the rate of recovery for 6 months was 10%. When the same criteria were applied for a continuous period of one year, 22% of patients were found to achieve symptom remission but only 1% of patients met recovery criteria. Using multivariate prediction, the WAIS Comprehension score was a significant predictor of 6 months of good functional outcome. Although some schizophrenia patients can achieve both symptom remission and recovery in the early course of illness, the overall rate of symptom remission during the first post-hospitalization year is much higher than the rate of recovery. This suggests that interventions targeting work and social functioning are likely necessary to raise the chances of recovery. Cognitive factors can be predictive of good functional outcome even in the early course of schizophrenia.Biological Psychiatry 07/2011; 132(1):18-23. · 8.28 Impact Factor -
SourceAvailable from: Kenneth L Subotnik
Article: Social cognition in schizophrenia, Part 1: performance across phase of illness.
Michael F Green, Carrie E Bearden, Tyrone D Cannon, Alan P Fiske, Gerhard S Hellemann, William P Horan, Kimmy Kee, Robert S Kern, Junghee Lee, Mark J Sergi, Kenneth L Subotnik, Catherine A Sugar, Joseph Ventura, Cindy M Yee, Keith H Nuechterlein[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Social cognitive impairments are consistently reported in schizophrenia and are associated with functional outcome. We currently know very little about whether these impairments are stable over the course of illness. In the current study, 3 different aspects of social cognition were assessed (emotion processing, Theory of Mind [ToM], and social relationship perception) at 3 distinct developmental phases of illness: prodromal, first episode, and chronic. In this cross-sectional study, participants included 50 individuals with the prodromal risk syndrome for psychosis and 34 demographically comparable controls, 81 first-episode schizophrenia patients and 46 demographically comparable controls, and 53 chronic schizophrenia patients and 47 demographically comparable controls. Outcome measures included total and subtest scores on 3 specialized measures of social cognition: (1) emotion processing assessed with the Mayer-Salovey-Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test, (2) ToM assessed with The Awareness of Social Inference Test, and (3) social relationship perception assessed the Relationships Across Domains Test. Social cognitive performance was impaired across all domains of social cognition and in all clinical samples. Group differences in performance were comparable across phase of illness, with no evidence of progression or improvement. Age had no significant effect on performance for either the clinical or the comparison groups. The findings suggest that social cognition in these 3 domains fits a stable pattern that has outcome and treatment implications. An accompanying article prospectively examines the longitudinal stability of social cognition and prediction of functional outcome in the first-episode sample.Schizophrenia Bulletin 02/2011; 38(4):854-64. · 8.80 Impact Factor