All Relations between Schizophrenia and emotion

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
C Raymond Lak. Disorders of thought are severe mood disorders: the selective attention defect in mania challenges the Kraepelinian dichotomy a review. Schizophrenia bulletin. vol 34. issue 1. 2008-04-03. PMID:17515440. by contrast, the mood disorders have been characterized only as disorders of the emotions, though both depression and mania, when severe, are now recognized to include the same psychotic features traditionally considered diagnostic of schizophrenia. 2008-04-03 2023-08-12 human
Ellen S Herbener, Woojin Song, Tin T Khine, John A Sweene. What aspects of emotional functioning are impaired in schizophrenia? Schizophrenia research. vol 98. issue 1-3. 2008-03-31. PMID:17689054. what aspects of emotional functioning are impaired in schizophrenia? 2008-03-31 2023-08-12 human
Ellen S Herbener, Woojin Song, Tin T Khine, John A Sweene. What aspects of emotional functioning are impaired in schizophrenia? Schizophrenia research. vol 98. issue 1-3. 2008-03-31. PMID:17689054. disturbances in emotional functioning are a major cause of persistent functional disability in schizophrenia. 2008-03-31 2023-08-12 human
Ellen S Herbener, Woojin Song, Tin T Khine, John A Sweene. What aspects of emotional functioning are impaired in schizophrenia? Schizophrenia research. vol 98. issue 1-3. 2008-03-31. PMID:17689054. the current study assessed emotional responses by 34 individuals with schizophrenia and 35 demographically matched healthy participants to 131 images sampling a wide range of emotional arousal and valence levels. 2008-03-31 2023-08-12 human
Ellen S Herbener, Woojin Song, Tin T Khine, John A Sweene. What aspects of emotional functioning are impaired in schizophrenia? Schizophrenia research. vol 98. issue 1-3. 2008-03-31. PMID:17689054. these results demonstrate that individuals with schizophrenia report "normal" emotional responses to emotional stimuli, and thus suggests that deficits in emotional functioning associated with the disorder are likely to occur further downstream, and involve the effective integration of emotion and cognition for adaptive functioning in areas such as goal-setting, motivation, and memory. 2008-03-31 2023-08-12 human
Juan J López-Ibor, María-Inés López-Ibor, María-Andreína Méndez, María-Dolores Morón, Laura Ortiz-Terán, Alberto Fernandez, Marina Diaz-Marsá, Tomás Orti. The perception of emotion-free faces in schizophrenia: a magneto-encephalography study. Schizophrenia research. vol 98. issue 1-3. 2008-03-31. PMID:17964761. to analyze how patients suffering from schizophrenia perceive faces of unknown individuals that show no actual emotions in order to investigate the attribution of meanings to a relatively non-significant but complex sensory experience. 2008-03-31 2023-08-12 Not clear
Chetwyn C H Chan, Raymond Wong, Kai Wang, Tatia M C Le. Emotion recognition in Chinese people with schizophrenia. Psychiatry research. vol 157. issue 1-3. 2008-03-25. PMID:17928068. emotion recognition in chinese people with schizophrenia. 2008-03-25 2023-08-12 human
Chetwyn C H Chan, Raymond Wong, Kai Wang, Tatia M C Le. Emotion recognition in Chinese people with schizophrenia. Psychiatry research. vol 157. issue 1-3. 2008-03-25. PMID:17928068. people suffering from nonparanoid schizophrenia were found to have deficits in both facial and prosodic emotion recognition, after correction for the differences in the intelligence and depression scores between the two groups. 2008-03-25 2023-08-12 human
Chetwyn C H Chan, Raymond Wong, Kai Wang, Tatia M C Le. Emotion recognition in Chinese people with schizophrenia. Psychiatry research. vol 157. issue 1-3. 2008-03-25. PMID:17928068. our findings suggest that patients with schizophrenia in remission may still suffer from impairment of certain aspects of emotion recognition. 2008-03-25 2023-08-12 human
Nicholas Tarrier, Patricia Gooding, Lynsey Gregg, Judith Johnson, Richard Drak. Suicide schema in schizophrenia: the effect of emotional reactivity, negative symptoms and schema elaboration. Behaviour research and therapy. vol 45. issue 9. 2008-03-07. PMID:17466940. suicide schema in schizophrenia: the effect of emotional reactivity, negative symptoms and schema elaboration. 2008-03-07 2023-08-12 Not clear
Nicholas Tarrier, Patricia Gooding, Lynsey Gregg, Judith Johnson, Richard Drak. Suicide schema in schizophrenia: the effect of emotional reactivity, negative symptoms and schema elaboration. Behaviour research and therapy. vol 45. issue 9. 2008-03-07. PMID:17466940. suicide schemas are less likely to be activated with reductions of emotional range associated with certain negative symptoms of schizophrenia. 2008-03-07 2023-08-12 Not clear
Nicholas Tarrier, Patricia Gooding, Lynsey Gregg, Judith Johnson, Richard Drak. Suicide schema in schizophrenia: the effect of emotional reactivity, negative symptoms and schema elaboration. Behaviour research and therapy. vol 45. issue 9. 2008-03-07. PMID:17466940. the study tested whether suicide risk would increase in patients with recent onset schizophrenia with increased potential for suicide schema activation as indicated by lower levels of specific negative symptoms that reflected emotional reactivity, namely emotional withdrawal and blunted affect. 2008-03-07 2023-08-12 Not clear
Ana Carolina Guidorizzi Zanetti, Sueli Aparecida Frari Galer. [The impact of schizophrenia on the family]. Revista gaucha de enfermagem. vol 28. issue 3. 2008-02-01. PMID:18183700. considering the social repercussion on the health system and the emotional repercussion on the schizophrenic individual, with consequences to the family group, an ethnographic case study was developed aimed at describing the impact of schizophrenia on the family. 2008-02-01 2023-08-12 Not clear
Marjolijn Hoekert, René S Kahn, Marieke Pijnenborg, André Alema. Impaired recognition and expression of emotional prosody in schizophrenia: review and meta-analysis. Schizophrenia research. vol 96. issue 1-3. 2008-01-23. PMID:17766089. this function bears upon two corner stones of social functioning, language and emotion, which have both been found to be impaired in schizophrenia. 2008-01-23 2023-08-12 Not clear
Imren Hassan, Rosemarie McCabe, Stefan Prieb. Professional-patient communication in the treatment of mental illness: a review. Communication & medicine. vol 4. issue 2. 2008-01-22. PMID:18052814. the findings were disparate and included (a) patient nonverbal communication is impaired in depression and schizophrenia; (b) the use of specific therapeutic skills led to improvement in depression; high expressed emotion (criticism and emotional over-involvement) in treating schizophrenia was a state rather than trait characteristic of therapists; (c) patient gender, income, and education influenced communication about depression, anxiety, and medication; and (d) psychiatrists' varying institutional agendas, which sometimes competed with patients' agendas, strongly shaped their consultations. 2008-01-22 2023-08-12 Not clear
Michael S Ritsner, Yael Ratner, Anatoly Gibel, Ronit Weizma. Positive family history is associated with persistent elevated emotional distress in schizophrenia: evidence from a 16-month follow-up study. Psychiatry research. vol 153. issue 3. 2008-01-08. PMID:17675246. positive family history is associated with persistent elevated emotional distress in schizophrenia: evidence from a 16-month follow-up study. 2008-01-08 2023-08-12 human
Michael S Ritsner, Yael Ratner, Anatoly Gibel, Ronit Weizma. Positive family history is associated with persistent elevated emotional distress in schizophrenia: evidence from a 16-month follow-up study. Psychiatry research. vol 153. issue 3. 2008-01-08. PMID:17675246. there is some evidence that emotional reactivity to daily life stress is related to a genetic or familial liability to develop schizophrenia. 2008-01-08 2023-08-12 human
Michael S Ritsner, Yael Ratner, Anatoly Gibel, Ronit Weizma. Positive family history is associated with persistent elevated emotional distress in schizophrenia: evidence from a 16-month follow-up study. Psychiatry research. vol 153. issue 3. 2008-01-08. PMID:17675246. however, it is unclear whether the emotional distress is elevated in schizophrenia patients with positive compared to negative family history. 2008-01-08 2023-08-12 human
Michael S Ritsner, Yael Ratner, Anatoly Gibel, Ronit Weizma. Positive family history is associated with persistent elevated emotional distress in schizophrenia: evidence from a 16-month follow-up study. Psychiatry research. vol 153. issue 3. 2008-01-08. PMID:17675246. the aim of the study was to test the hypothesis that a persistent higher level of emotional distress in schizophrenia subjects is associated with a positive family history of schizophrenia. 2008-01-08 2023-08-12 human
Michael S Ritsner, Yael Ratner, Anatoly Gibel, Ronit Weizma. Positive family history is associated with persistent elevated emotional distress in schizophrenia: evidence from a 16-month follow-up study. Psychiatry research. vol 153. issue 3. 2008-01-08. PMID:17675246. this study used the talbieh brief distress inventory (tbdi), the positive and negative syndrome scale (panss; including dysphoric mood, positive and negative subscales), montgomery-asberg depression rating scale (madrs), and the distress scale for adverse symptoms (dsas) to investigate the difference in the magnitude of emotional distress scores between schizophrenia subjects with and without a positive family history of schizophrenia over time. 2008-01-08 2023-08-12 human