Nadine Revheim

Nathan Kline Institute · Cognitive Neuroscience and Schizophrenia
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Topics (6)

Research experience

  • Jul 2000–
    present
    Research: Research Scientist-Psychologist
    USA
  • Jul 2000
    Research: Nathan Kline Institute
    Nathan S. Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research · Schizophrenia Research Center · Daniel C. Javitt, MD, Ph.D.
    USA · Orangeburg

Other

  • Scientific Memberships
    APA, NYSPA, HVPA, AOTA, International Neuroethics Society

Publications (22) View all

  • Article: Auditory emotion recognition impairments in schizophrenia: relationship to acoustic features and cognition.
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    ABSTRACT: Schizophrenia is associated with deficits in the ability to perceive emotion based on tone of voice. The basis for this deficit remains unclear, however, and relevant assessment batteries remain limited. The authors evaluated performance in schizophrenia on a novel voice emotion recognition battery with well-characterized physical features, relative to impairments in more general emotional and cognitive functioning. The authors studied a primary sample of 92 patients and 73 comparison subjects. Stimuli were characterized according to both intended emotion and acoustic features (e.g., pitch, intensity) that contributed to the emotional percept. Parallel measures of visual emotion recognition, pitch perception, general cognition, and overall outcome were obtained. More limited measures were obtained in an independent replication sample of 36 patients, 31 age-matched comparison subjects, and 188 general comparison subjects. Patients showed statistically significant large-effect-size deficits in voice emotion recognition (d=1.1) and were preferentially impaired in recognition of emotion based on pitch features but not intensity features. Emotion recognition deficits were significantly correlated with pitch perception impairments both across (r=0.56) and within (r=0.47) groups. Path analysis showed both sensory-specific and general cognitive contributions to auditory emotion recognition deficits in schizophrenia. Similar patterns of results were observed in the replication sample. The results demonstrate that patients with schizophrenia show a significant deficit in the ability to recognize emotion based on tone of voice and that this deficit is related to impairment in detecting the underlying acoustic features, such as change in pitch, required for auditory emotion recognition. This study provides tools for, and highlights the need for, greater attention to physical features of stimuli used in studying social cognition in neuropsychiatric disorders.
    American Journal of Psychiatry 02/2012; 169(4):424-32. · 12.54 Impact Factor
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    Article: Spirituality, schizophrenia, and state hospitals: program description and characteristics of self-selected attendees of a spirituality therapeutic group.
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    ABSTRACT: Spiritual matters can be an important part in the recovery process of patients with schizophrenia. A spirituality-based therapeutic group was developed for patients hospitalized on a research specialty unit jointly operated by a state hospital and a research institute. This report offers a description of this program and examines potential associations between spirituality and coping in patients with schizophrenia who either attended or did not attend the inpatient spirituality group. We compared group attendees (n = 20) with non-attendees (n = 20) cross-sectionally, using measures of spirituality, self-efficacy (i.e. the confidence in one's ability), quality of life, and hopefulness, and religious/personal demographic profiles. For the total sample, spirituality status was significantly correlated with self-efficacy for both social functioning and negative symptoms. Significant differences were found between group attendees and non-attendees for spirituality status, but not for self-efficacy or quality of life. For group attendees, spirituality status was significantly correlated with self-efficacy for positive symptoms, negative symptoms and social functioning. Group attendees were significantly more hopeful than non-attendees and hopefulness was significantly associated with degree of spirituality status. These findings lend support for offering spirituality groups and positive coping during recovery from psychiatric disabilities.
    Psychiatric Quarterly 12/2010; 81(4):285-92. · 1.26 Impact Factor
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    Article: Impaired visual object processing across an occipital-frontal-hippocampal brain network in schizophrenia: an integrated neuroimaging study.
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    ABSTRACT: Perceptual closure is the ability to identify objects based on partial information and depends on the function of a distributed network of brain regions that include the dorsal and the ventral visual streams, prefrontal cortex (PFC), and hippocampus. To evaluate network-level interactions during perceptual closure in schizophrenia using parallel event-related potential (ERP), functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), and neuropsychological assessment. Case-control study. Inpatient and outpatient facilities associated with the Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research. Patients Twenty-seven patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder and 23 healthy controls. Intervention Event-related potentials were obtained from 24 patients and 20 healthy volunteers in response to fragmented (closeable) and control-scrambled (noncloseable) line drawings. Functional MRI was performed in 11 patients and 12 controls. Main Outcome Measure Patterns of between-group differences for predefined ERP components and fMRI regions of interest were determined using both analysis of variance and structural equation modeling. Global neuropsychological performance was assessed using standard neuropsychological batteries. Patients showed impaired generation of event-related components reflecting early sensory and later closure-related activity. In fMRI, patients showed impaired activation of the dorsal and ventral visual regions, PFC, and hippocampus. Impaired activation of dorsal stream visual regions contributed significantly to impaired PFC activation, which contributed significantly to impaired activation of the hippocampus and ventral visual stream. Impaired ventral stream and hippocampal activation contributed significantly to deficits on neuropsychological measures of perceptual organization. Schizophrenia is associated with severe activation deficits across a distributed network of sensory and higher order cognitive regions. Deficit in early visual processing within the dorsal visual stream contributes significantly to impaired frontal activation, which, in turn, leads to dysregulation of the hippocampus and ventral visual stream. Dysfunction within this network underlies deficits in more traditional neurocognitive measures, supporting distributed models of brain dysfunction in schizophrenia.
    Archives of general psychiatry 08/2010; 67(8):772-82. · 12.26 Impact Factor
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    Article: Has an important test been overlooked? Closure flexibility in schizophrenia.
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    ABSTRACT: Deficits in visual processing are now recognized as a core feature of schizophrenia. In the 1940s, Louis Thurstone developed a series of tests designed to evaluate specific aspects of visual perceptual processing including the Closure Flexibility Test (CFT), which was designed to measure "the ability to hold a configuration in mind despite distraction." The present study evaluated patients' performance on this task and its relationship to other tests of neuropsychological function, particularly to a measure of sustained visual attention. Thirty-nine patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder and 40 controls participated. The CFT was administered both in its original form (10 min) and also in a briefer form (3 min) in which only a portion of stimuli were given. Patients showed highly significant large effect-size deficits on both the original (d=1.6) and brief (d=1.2) CFT. Between-group deficits in performance survived co-variation for IQ. In addition, the CFT score was significantly related to performance on the MATRICS measure of attention/vigilance, the Continuous Performance Test-Identical Pairs version (CPT-IP). This correlation remained significant even after controlling for non-specific intercorrelations among neurocognitive measures. Results confirm the severity of early visual processing deficits in schizophrenia. In addition, the CFT is a brief, easy to administer alphabet-independent, paper-and-pencil test with established psychometric properties that may be useful as an index of the sustained visual attention construct in schizophrenia.
    Biological Psychiatry 05/2010; 118(1-3):20-5. · 8.28 Impact Factor
  • Article: It's all in the cards: effect of stimulus manipulation on Wisconsin Card Sorting Test performance in schizophrenia.
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    ABSTRACT: Patients with schizophrenia can be taught the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) sorting rules based upon expanded feedback. However, few task manipulations have been reported that differentially improve patient performance without altering the nature of feedback provided. The present study tests the hypothesis that deficits in WCST performance in schizophrenia reflect, in part, impaired ability to manipulate abstract stimulus features, rather than impaired ability to utilize feedback. We developed a modified stimulus set - the Rockland Face Sorting Test (RFST) - in which abstract shapes were replaced with faces, which we hypothesized would be more tractable to sorting by patients. Task rules and feedback remained unchanged. Relative RFST and WCST performance was examined in 19 patients as well as 15 normative controls. A comparison group of 15 patients received only repeated WCST administrations. Patients performed significantly better on the RFST vs. the WCST in categories completed, total correct responses and conceptual level responses, whereas no improvement was seen in either the normative or repeated WCST comparison groups. Furthermore, progressive improvement was seen following repeated RFST administration. These findings demonstrate that stimulus characteristics, as well as executive deficits, contribute to impaired WCST performance in schizophrenia.
    Psychiatry Research 07/2009; 168(3):198-204. · 2.52 Impact Factor

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