51 results on '"Weissman M"'
Search Results
2. Resistance noise as a technique for measuring finite-size effects in single-layer CuMn spin-glass...
- Author
-
Fenimore, P. W. and Weissman, M. B.
- Subjects
- *
SPIN temperature , *THIN films , *TEMPERATURE - Abstract
Presents information a study which presented measurements of the spin-freezing temperature as a function of film thickness in single-layer thin films of CuMn and CuMnAu. Sample preparation and characterization; Background and analysis technique; Research findings; Discussion.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Resistance noise in uncoupled giant magnetoresistive multilayers.
- Author
-
Hardner, H. T., Weissman, M. B., Miller, B., Loloee, R., and Parkin, S. S. P.
- Subjects
- *
MULTILAYERED thin films , *NOISE - Abstract
Describes the noise behavior of a variety of nominally uncoupled or weakly coupled multilayers. Samples of multilayers that were discussed; Experiment conducted; Discussion of the results.
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Local hydrogen hopping and long-range diffusion in Nb films: An electrical noise study.
- Author
-
Nevins, B. D. and Weissman, M. B.
- Subjects
- *
THIN films , *NIOBIUM , *NOISE - Abstract
Presents a study that examined the low-frequency resistance noise of thin niobium films. Information on electrical noise measurements; Ways of distinguishing hopping from diffusion noise; Examples of noise sources.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Electrical noise measurements on magnetic films (invited).
- Author
-
Weissman, M. B. and Israeloff, N. E.
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRIC resistance , *CHROMIUM , *SPIN glasses , *ELECTROMAGNETIC noise , *MOLECULAR beam epitaxy - Abstract
Reports on the use of electrical resistivity fluctuations as a probe of magnetic dynamics in chromium and in the spin glass CuMn. Information on the specific noise generating mechanism; Results of Cr films prepared molecular beam epitaxy; Significance of the noise symmetry measurement in single crystal samples.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. 1/f noise and the field effect in gated resistors.
- Author
-
Garfunkel, G. A. and Weissman, M. B.
- Subjects
- *
SEMICONDUCTORS -- Fluctuations , *FLUCTUATIONS (Physics) - Abstract
Presents a quantitative connection made between the time-dependent field effect and 1/f noise in semiconductor devices exhibiting surface state occupancy fluctuations. Factor attributed to the origins of 1/f noise in semiconductors; Characterization of the magnitude of 1/f; Results of the response function and noise measurements.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Field-dependent susceptibility aging in CuMn spin glasses.
- Author
-
Fenimore, P. W. and Weissman, M. B.
- Subjects
- *
SPIN glasses , *METALLIC glasses - Abstract
Deals with a study which analyzed the direct current field-dependent alternating current susceptibility of CuMn spin glasses during cooling or aging in a field. Findings on the formation of a hole; Background on spin glasses; Fluctuations in the structure of metallic glasses.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Noise and Aging of Relaxor Ferroelectrics.
- Author
-
Weissman, M. B., Colla, Eugene V., and Chao, Lambert K.
- Subjects
- *
SPIN glasses , *AGING , *TEMPERATURE , *PHYSICS research - Abstract
Aging and noise are used to elucidate the types of frozen order formed in the relaxor regime. In PMN, PMN with 10% PT, and PLZT aging deep in the relaxor regime shows several features characteristic of spinglasses, including multiple independent susceptibility ‘holes’ formed at different aging temperatures. This effect requires complex cooperative glassy freezing of many local units. However, the field scale required to disrupt the aging is anomalously high compared to spinglasses, if a nanodomain is the unit corresponding to a spin. Barkhausen noise results imply cooperative moment changes involving several nanodomains near Tg, but much smaller steps below Tg. This result suggests that kinetic barriers increase at Tg without increasing coupling among nanodomains. Together, these results suggest that in prototypical relaxors the glassy state is not formed by nanodomains, although it affects their dynamics, but rather by smaller units. We tentatively propose that the canted components of the local polarizations (found in scattering experiments) are analogous to the x-y spins in a reentrant spinglass. The first tested prediction of this new picture is that spinglass-like aging effects would be absent in the uniaxial ‘relaxor’ SBN. Such effects do vanish well below Tg in SBN. © 2003 American Institute of Physics [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The effects on children of depressed mothers' remission and relapse over 9 months.
- Author
-
Weissman, M. M., Wickramaratne, P., Pilowsky, D. J., Poh, E., Hernandez, M., Batten, L. A., Flament, M. F., Stewart, J. W., and Blier, P.
- Subjects
- *
CHI-squared test , *DEPRESSION in children , *FISHER exact test , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MOTHER-child relationship , *MOTHERS , *PARENTING , *REGRESSION analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *DISEASE relapse , *DATA analysis , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
BackgroundThe high rate of depression among children of depressed mothers is well known. Suggestions that improvement in maternal acute depression has a positive effect on the child have emerged. However, data on the mechanisms of change have been sparse. The aim was to understand how remission and relapse in the mother might explain the changes in the child's outcome.MethodParticipants were 76 depressed mothers who entered into a medication clinical trial for depression and 135 of their eligible offspring ages 7–17 years. The mothers and children were assessed at baseline and periodically over 9 months by independent teams to understand the relationship between changes in children's symptoms and functioning and maternal remission or relapse. The main outcome measures were, for mothers, the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAMD), the Social Adjustment Scale (SAS) and the Parental Bonding Instrument (PBI) and, for children, the Children's Depression Inventory (CDI), the Columbia Impairment Scale (CIS), the Multidimensional Anxiety Scale for Children (MASC) and the Children's Global Assessment Scale (CGAS).ResultsMaternal remission was associated with a decrease in the child's depressive symptoms. The mother's subsequent relapse was associated with an increase in the child's symptoms over 9 months. The effect of maternal remission on the child's improvement was partially explained by an improvement in the mother's parenting, particularly the change in the mother's ability to listen and talk to her child, but also reflected in her improvement in parental bonding. These findings could not be explained by the child's treatment.ConclusionsA depressed mother's remission is associated with her improvement in parenting and a decrease in her child's symptoms. Her relapse is associated with an increase in her child's symptoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. USE OF THE ONE-AND-A-HALF-SPECTRUM TO DETERMINE BARKHAUSEN NOISE ASYMMETRY.
- Author
-
MILLS, A. C., WEISSMAN, M. B., and DURIN, G.
- Subjects
- *
BARKHAUSEN effect , *NOISE , *FERROMAGNETISM , *MAGNETIC domain , *FERROMAGNETIC materials , *MAGNETIZATION - Abstract
We demonstrate the use of the one-and-a-half spectrum as a way of looking at the time-asymmetry of Barkhausen noise. This method is of particular value because it allows us to look in the regime where individual Barkhausen pulses are no longer distinguishable. We use the one-and-a-half spectrum on Barkhausen data from two different ferromagnetic samples and find asymmetries in the noise of both. The magnitude of the asymmetry is different in the two samples and we find no clear change in the asymmetry when we move from the regime of well-separated jumps at low field rate to the continuous fluctuating signal at higher rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Origins of Non-Gaussian Noise in Metallic Manganites.
- Author
-
Weissman, M. B., Palanisami, Akilan, and Eckstein, J. N.
- Subjects
- *
NOISE measurement , *MANGANITE - Abstract
Noise measurements on manganite colossal magnetoresistive materials show large non-Gaussian effects even in the metallic regime. Domain rotation effects are implicated, but the origin of the required current inhmogeneity is obscure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
12. Increasing rates of depression.
- Author
-
Klerman, G L and Weissman, M M
- Subjects
- *
DIAGNOSIS of mental depression , *AGE distribution , *MENTAL depression , *FORECASTING , *HEALTH attitudes , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MEMORY , *SEX distribution , *TIME - Abstract
Several recent, large epidemiologic and family studies suggest important temporal changes in the rates of major depression: an increase in the rates in the cohorts born after World War II; a decrease in the age of onset with an increase in the late teenaged and early adult years; an increase between 1960 and 1975 in the rates of depression for all ages; a persistent gender effect, with the risk of depression consistently two to three times higher among women than men across all adult ages; a persistent family effect, with the risk about two to three times higher in first-degree relatives as compared with controls; and the suggestion of a narrowing of the differential risk to men and women due to a greater increase in risk of depression among young men. These trends, drawn from studies using comparable methods and modern diagnostic criteria, are evident in the United States, Sweden, Germany, Canada, and New Zealand, but not in comparable studies conducted in Korea and Puerto Rico and of Mexican-Americans living in the United States. These cohort changes cannot be fully attributed to artifacts of reporting, recall, mortality, or labeling and have implications for understanding the etiology of depression and for clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
13. Glassy aging in the relaxor-like ferroelectric Na1/2Bi1/2TiO3.
- Author
-
Colla, Eugene V., Sullivan, Kevin, and Weissman, M. B.
- Subjects
- *
SODIUM compounds , *TITANIUM oxides , *PEROVSKITE , *METALLIC glasses , *FERROELECTRIC materials , *OPTICAL susceptibility - Abstract
The dielectric susceptibility of the lead-free relaxor-like perovskite ferroelectric Na1/2Bi1/2TiO3 is shown to exhibit the same complicated spinglass-like aging behavior found in several cubic relaxors deep in the glassy state, in contrast to some uniaxial relaxors. The effects include rejuvenation and memory, including the ability to support multiple memories in parallel. Weak dependence of aging memories on changes in the electric field indicates that the aging is associated with relatively non-polar degrees of freedom, not with ferroelectric domains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Glassy aging in the relaxor-like ferroelectric Na1/2Bi1/2TiO3.
- Author
-
Colla, Eugene V., Sullivan, Kevin, and Weissman, M. B.
- Subjects
- *
RELAXOR ferroelectrics , *FERROELECTRIC ceramics , *ELECTROMAGNETIC fields , *ELECTRIC properties , *PEROVSKITE , *PHYSICS research - Abstract
The dielectric susceptibility of the lead-free relaxor-like perovskite ferroelectric Na1/2Bi1/2TiO3 is shown to exhibit the same complicated spinglass-like aging behavior found in several cubic relaxors deep in the glassy state, in contrast to some uniaxial relaxors. The effects include rejuvenation and memory, including the ability to support multiple memories in parallel. Weak dependence of aging memories on changes in the electric field indicates that the aging is associated with relatively non-polar degrees of freedom, not with ferroelectric domains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. A piece of my mind: stigma.
- Author
-
Weissman, M M
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL illness treatment , *DISCRIMINATION in insurance , *HEALTH services accessibility , *MENTAL health services - Published
- 2001
16. Panic disorder and suicidal ideation.
- Author
-
Weissman, M M, Klerman, G L, and Johnson, J
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. 1/f noise in giant magnetoresistive materials.
- Author
-
Hardner, H. T., Parkin, S. S. P., Weissman, M. B., Salamon, M. B., and Kita, E.
- Subjects
- *
NOISE , *MAGNETORESISTANCE - Abstract
Provides information on a study that characterized a large source of 1/f noise in Co/Cu multilayers exibiting giant magnetoresistance.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Depression in families: What we have learned & how we can help
- Author
-
Weissman, M.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The children of depressed parents have a persistently high risk of mental illness.
- Author
-
Weissman, M. M.
- Subjects
- *
CHILDREN of depressed persons , *PARENTS with intellectual disabilities , *CHILD psychology , *MENTAL health , *ADULTS , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *MENTAL illness ,ETIOLOGY of mental depression - Abstract
This article summarizes a study in which researchers determined that the children of depressed parents are at a persistently heightened risk of mental illness. This prospective study focused on 125 children, teenagers and young adults with at least one parent with moderate or severe major depression. During the 20 years of the study, offspring of depressed parents were three times more likely than controls to experience poor mental health which began early in life and continued at least into early middle age.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Multiple aging mechanisms in ferroelectric deuterated potassium dihydrogen phosphate.
- Author
-
Fields, Gregory A., Cieszynski, Samuel F., Zhao, Bo, Tadesse, Kidan A., Sheikh, Mohammed A., Colla, Eugene V., and Weissman, M. B.
- Subjects
- *
DIELECTRICS , *FERROELECTRIC crystals , *POTASSIUM dihydrogen phosphate , *METAL quenching , *FERROELECTRIC materials - Abstract
The anomalously large dielectric aging in ferroelectric partially deuterated potassium dihydrogen phosphate is found to have multiple distinct mechanisms. Two components cause a decrease in dielectric response over a limited range of fields around the aging field. Substantial aging occurs on time scales of ∼1000 s after a field change, as expected for a hydrogen/deuterium diffusion mechanism. A slower component can give an almost complete loss of domain-wall dielectric response at the aging field after weeks of aging. There is also a particularly unusual aging in which the dielectric response increases with time after rapid cooling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Research for practice. Well-timed antibiotics prevent postop infection.
- Author
-
Weissman M and Clarke S
- Published
- 1995
22. Non-equilibrium strain relaxation noise in the relaxor ferroelectric (PbMg1/3Nb2/3O3)1-x(PbTiO3)x.
- Author
-
Zhang, Xinyang, Kennedy, Thomas J., Colla, Eugene V., Weissman, M. B., and Viehland, D. D.
- Subjects
- *
POLARIZATION (Electrochemistry) , *PEROVSKITE , *FERROELECTRIC crystals , *PIEZOELECTRIC devices , *RELAXOR ferroelectrics - Abstract
Large low-frequency polarization noise is found in some perovskite relaxor ferroelectrics when they are partially polarized, regardless of whether the polarization is accompanied by an applied electric field. The noise appears both in the ferroelectric and relaxor states, including the nominally ergodic paraelectric state at temperatures above the susceptibility peak. Since it is present whenever the samples have non-zero average piezoelectric coefficients, but not otherwise evident, it appears to be a response to mechanical strain changes. Dependence of the noise on sample thermal history indicates that non-equilibrium strain relaxation is the source, even in the temperature range for which the sample is nominally ergodic. Non-equilibrium noise in the absence of net piezoelectricity is found at somewhat higher frequencies. Related materials lacking a metastable non-equilibrium cubic bulk phase and a symmetry-broken surface layer show very little of the anomalous low-frequency noise. The implications for a non-equilibrium origin of the skin effect are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Kinetics of nucleation of the ferroelectric transitions in PbMg1/3Nb2/3O3 and PbMg1/3Nb2/3O3-12 % PbTiO3.
- Author
-
Colla, Eugene V., Jeliazkov, Jeliazko R., Weissman, M. B., Viehland, D. D., and Zuo-Gang Ye
- Subjects
- *
NUCLEATION , *FERROELECTRIC transitions , *LEAD magnesium niobate , *LEAD titanate , *RELAXOR ferroelectrics , *POLARIZATION (Electricity) - Abstract
The nucleation kinetics of the formation of ordered ferroelectric phases from the glassy relaxor states of PbMg1/3Nb2/3O3 (PMN) and of solid solutions of PMN and PbTiO3 is investigated. A delay time, dependent on field and temperature, is found to precede a rather rapid establishment of macroscopic polarization. The qualitative form of the temperature dependence follows prior theory for the lag preceding homogeneous nucleation of a crystal from a glass. However, the increase of the lag time as the "melting" line is approached from below is stronger than expected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The role of fear and anxiety in the familial risk for major depression: a three-generation study.
- Author
-
Warner, V., Wickramaratne, P., and Weissman, M. M.
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL depression risk factors , *GENEALOGY , *ANXIETY sensitivity , *CHILDREN of depressed persons ,ETIOLOGY of mental depression - Abstract
BackgroundThe overlap between anxiety and major depressive disorder (MDD), the increased risk for depression and anxiety in offspring of depressed parents, the sequence of onset with anxiety preceding MDD, and anxiety as a predictor of depression are well established. The specificity of anxiety disorders in these relationships is unclear. This study, using a longitudinal high-risk design, examined whether anxiety disorders associated with the emotions fear and anxiety mediate the association between parental and offspring depression.MethodTwo hundred and twenty-four second-generation and 155 third-generation descendants at high and low risk for depression because of MDD in the first generation were interviewed over 20 years. Probit and Cox proportional hazard models were fitted with generation 2 (G2) or G3 depression as the outcome and parental MDD as the predictor. In G2 and G3, fear- (phobia or panic) and anxiety-related [overanxious or generalized anxiety disorder (GAD)] disorders were examined as potential mediators of increased risk for offspring depression, due to parental MDD.ResultsIn G2, fear-related disorders met criteria for mediating the association between parental MDD and offspring MDD whereas anxiety-related disorders did not. These results were consistent, regardless of the analytic methods used. Further investigation of the mediating effect of fear-related disorders by age of onset of offspring MDD suggests that the mediating effect occurs primarily in adolescent onset MDD. The results for G3 appear to follow similar patterns.ConclusionsThese findings support the separation of anxiety disorders into at least two distinct forms, particularly when examining their role in the etiology of depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. A comparison between screened NIMH and clinically interviewed control samples on neuroticism and extraversion.
- Author
-
Talati, A., Fyer, A. J., and Weissman, M. M.
- Subjects
- *
INTERVIEWING in genealogy , *BEHAVIORAL scientists , *EXTRAVERSION , *AFFECTIVE disorders , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *MENTAL depression , *PSYCHIATRIC diagnosis ,PSYCHIATRIC research - Abstract
The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) has supported the collection of DNA samples on over 4000 subjects for use primarily as controls in psychiatric genetic studies. These subjects, though screened online, were not directly interviewed or assessed on family history. We compared this sample to one that was directly interviewed using structured diagnostic assessments on comparable measures of neuroticism and extraversion. The screened sample completed an online self-report based on the Composite International Diagnostic Instrument Short-Form (CIDI-SF). The interviewed sample was assessed by clinically trained personnel using the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia (SADS-LA-IV) and Family History Screen; final diagnoses were made blind to trait scores by a clinician using the best-estimate procedure. Neuroticism and extraversion were assessed on the NEO five-factor inventory (NEO-FFI) and the revised Eysenck Personality Questionnaire short form (EPQ-R). We found that subjects in the NIMH-screened sample who did not report any psychiatric symptoms on the self-report were indistinguishable from interviewed diagnosis free and family history negative controls on neuroticism and extraversion. Subjects in the screened sample who screened positive for anxiety disorders, however, deviated significantly on these measures both from the screened subjects with no self-reported symptoms, as well as from subjects in the interviewed sample diagnosed with comparable disorders. These findings suggest that control groups generated from the NIMH sample should ideally be restricted to subjects free of any self-reported symptoms, regardless of the disorder being addressed, in order to maximize their reflection of diagnosis-free populations.Molecular Psychiatry (2008) 13, 122–130; doi:10.1038/sj.mp.4002114; published online 16 October 2007 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Inspiring hope, envisioning alternatives: the importance of peer role models in a mandated treatment program for women.
- Author
-
Sowards KA, O'Boyle K, and Weissman M
- Abstract
This article presents evidence from a program evaluation effort conducted with clients in a mandated treatment setting for druginvolved women charged with felony-level offenses. We present themes from qualitative interviews that stress the importance of identifying with a peer who is further along in recovery as a crucial mechanism for instilling hope and fostering program engagement. We also provide survey data that shows that a client's ability to imagine a life without using drugs, at intake, is a significant predictor of program success. Finally, the Stages of Change Readiness and Treatment Eagerness scale did not show any significant correlations with program success in this population. All women entered this program from very challenging situations, but we conclude that those who enter with the least hope and smallest (or absent) vision of any alternative future are especially vulnerable for a bad outcome. We urge researchers and practitioners to further explore the ways in which connections with peer role models facilitate engagement and successful outcomes; and to systematically evaluate the effect of interventions designed to foster such connections on program outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Kinetics and thermodynamics of the ferroelectric transitions in PbMg1/3Nb2/3O3 and PbMg1/3Nb2/3O3-12% PbTiO3 crystals.
- Author
-
Colla, Eugene V., Jurik, Nathan, Liu, Yehan, Delgado, M. E. X., Weissman, M. B., Viehland, D. D., and Ye, Z.-G.
- Subjects
- *
FERROELECTRIC transitions , *HIGH temperature physics , *THERMODYNAMICS research , *POLARIZATION (Electricity) , *FREEZING - Abstract
The two-step freezing and melting of the field-induced ferroelectric order in PbMg1/3Nb2/3O3 (PMN) and (PbMg1/3Nb2/3O3)0.88(PbTiO3)0.12 (PMN-PT) is investigated. In PMN-PT, direct microscopic images show that both steps occur in the same spatial regions. The higher temperature freezing corresponds to the higher temperature melting, indicating that the stages are not just kinetically but also thermodynamically distinct. The higher-T melting step shows several indications of being a sharp first-order transition near an equilibrium temperature. The lower-T melting step shows more kinetic dependence. Partially poled PMN also spontaneously approaches saturation polarization on zero-field aging, indicating that the true equilibrium state is ferroelectric below ∼200 K. In PMN-PT, a variety of kinetic measurements on the ferroelectric state indicate that the kinetics are governed by a glassy matrix showing aging effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Polygenic interactions with environmental adversity in the aetiology of major depressive disorder.
- Author
-
Mullins, N., Power, R. A., Fisher, H. L., Euesden, J., Iniesta, R., Craig, I. W., Farmer, A. E., McGuffin, P., Breen, G., Lewis, C. M., Uher, R., Rivera, M., Jones, L., Jones, I., Craddock, N., Owen, M. J., Korszun, A., Hanscombe, K. B., Levinson, D. F., and Weissman, M. M.
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL depression risk factors , *GENETICS , *SENTINEL health events , *WOUNDS & injuries , *PHENOTYPES , *CONTROL groups , *CHILDREN - Abstract
BackgroundMajor depressive disorder (MDD) is a common and disabling condition with well-established heritability and environmental risk factors. Gene–environment interaction studies in MDD have typically investigated candidate genes, though the disorder is known to be highly polygenic. This study aims to test for interaction between polygenic risk and stressful life events (SLEs) or childhood trauma (CT) in the aetiology of MDD.MethodThe RADIANT UK sample consists of 1605 MDD cases and 1064 controls with SLE data, and a subset of 240 cases and 272 controls with CT data. Polygenic risk scores (PRS) were constructed using results from a mega-analysis on MDD by the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium. PRS and environmental factors were tested for association with case/control status and for interaction between them.ResultsPRS significantly predicted depression, explaining 1.1% of variance in phenotype (p = 1.9 × 10−6). SLEs and CT were also associated with MDD status (p = 2.19 × 10−4 and p = 5.12 × 10−20, respectively). No interactions were found between PRS and SLEs. Significant PRSxCT interactions were found (p = 0.002), but showed an inverse association with MDD status, as cases who experienced more severe CT tended to have a lower PRS than other cases or controls. This relationship between PRS and CT was not observed in independent replication samples.ConclusionsCT is a strong risk factor for MDD but may have greater effect in individuals with lower genetic liability for the disorder. Including environmental risk along with genetics is important in studying the aetiology of MDD and PRS provide a useful approach to investigating gene–environment interactions in complex traits. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. A computational analysis of flanker interference in depression.
- Author
-
Dillon, D. G., Wiecki, T., Pechtel, P., Webb, C., Goer, F., Murray, L., Trivedi, M., Fava, M., McGrath, P. J., Weissman, M., Parsey, R., Kurian, B., Adams, P., Carmody, T., Weyandt, S., Shores-Wilson, K., Toups, M., McInnis, M., Oquendo, M. A., and Cusin, C.
- Subjects
- *
BIOMARKERS , *COMPUTER simulation , *STATISTICAL correlation , *MENTAL depression , *CLASSIFICATION of mental disorders , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *SELF-evaluation , *TASK performance , *EXECUTIVE function , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background. Depression is characterized by poor executive function, but - counterintuitively - in some studies, it has been associated with highly accurate performance on certain cognitively demanding tasks. The psychological mechanisms responsible for this paradoxical finding are unclear. To address this issue, we applied a drift diffusion model (DDM) to flanker task data from depressed and healthy adults participating in the multi-site Establishing Moderators and Biosignatures of Antidepressant Response for Clinical Care for Depression (EMBARC) study. Method. One hundred unmedicated, depressed adults and 40 healthy controls completed a flanker task. We investigated the effect of flanker interference on accuracy and response time, and used the DDM to examine group differences in three cognitive processes: prepotent response bias (tendency to respond to the distracting flankers), response inhibition (necessary to resist prepotency), and executive control (required for execution of correct response on incongruent trials). Results. Consistent with prior reports, depressed participants responded more slowly and accurately than controls on incongruent trials. The DDM indicated that although executive control was sluggish in depressed participants, this was more than offset by decreased prepotent response bias. Among the depressed participants, anhedonia was negatively correlated with a parameter indexing the speed of executive control (r =-0.28, p = 0.007). Conclusions. Executive control was delayed in depression but this was counterbalanced by reduced prepotent response bias, demonstrating how participants with executive function deficits can nevertheless perform accurately in a cognitive control task. Drawing on data from neural network simulations, we speculate that these results may reflect tonically reduced striatal dopamine in depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Type I interferon signaling genes in recurrent major depression: increased expression detected by whole-blood RNA sequencing.
- Author
-
Mostafavi, S, Battle, A, Zhu, X, Potash, J B, Weissman, M M, Shi, J, Beckman, K, Haudenschild, C, McCormick, C, Mei, R, Gameroff, M J, Gindes, H, Adams, P, Goes, F S, Mondimore, F M, MacKinnon, D F, Notes, L, Schweizer, B, Furman, D, and Montgomery, S B
- Subjects
- *
TYPE I interferons , *GENE expression , *MENTAL depression genetics , *RNA sequencing , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *GENETICS of bipolar disorder , *GENETICS of schizophrenia - Abstract
A study of genome-wide gene expression in major depressive disorder (MDD) was undertaken in a large population-based sample to determine whether altered expression levels of genes and pathways could provide insights into biological mechanisms that are relevant to this disorder. Gene expression studies have the potential to detect changes that may be because of differences in common or rare genomic sequence variation, environmental factors or their interaction. We recruited a European ancestry sample of 463 individuals with recurrent MDD and 459 controls, obtained self-report and semi-structured interview data about psychiatric and medical history and other environmental variables, sequenced RNA from whole blood and genotyped a genome-wide panel of common single-nucleotide polymorphisms. We used analytical methods to identify MDD-related genes and pathways using all of these sources of information. In analyses of association between MDD and expression levels of 13 857 single autosomal genes, accounting for multiple technical, physiological and environmental covariates, a significant excess of low P-values was observed, but there was no significant single-gene association after genome-wide correction. Pathway-based analyses of expression data detected significant association of MDD with increased expression of genes in the interferon α/β signaling pathway. This finding could not be explained by potentially confounding diseases and medications (including antidepressants) or by computationally estimated proportions of white blood cell types. Although cause-effect relationships cannot be determined from these data, the results support the hypothesis that altered immune signaling has a role in the pathogenesis, manifestation, and/or the persistence and progression of MDD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Tailoring conductive filaments by electroforming polarity in memristive based TiO2 junctions.
- Author
-
Ghenzi, N., Sánchez, M. J., Rubi, D., Rozenberg, M. J., Urdaniz, C., Weissman, M., and Levy, P.
- Subjects
- *
TITANIUM dioxide , *ELECTROFORMING , *THRESHOLD voltage measurement , *SWITCHING power supplies , *POLARITY (Chemistry) , *PHYSICAL metallurgy processes - Abstract
We probe the resistive switching response of Au/TiO2/Cu junctions, on samples initialized using both polarities electroforming. A conductive path is formed in both cases: a copper metallic filament for negative electroforming and a titanium dioxide possibly Magneli phase based filament for the positive case. We measured the resistance response of formed samples and studied their remanent resistance states. Bi (tri) stable resistance states were obtained for negative (positive) electroformed samples. The temperature dependence of the resistance discloses the underlying different nature of the associated filaments. In addition, we performed ab initio calculations to estimate the observed electroforming threshold voltages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Religiosity and resilience in persons at high risk for major depression.
- Author
-
Kasen, S., Wickramaratne, P., Gameroff, M. J., and Weissman, M. M.
- Subjects
- *
CHI-squared test , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *MENTAL depression , *EPIDEMIOLOGY , *INTERVIEWING , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MATHEMATICAL models , *RESEARCH methodology , *CLASSIFICATION of mental disorders , *PARENTS , *RELIGION , *RESEARCH funding , *PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience , *SCALES (Weighing instruments) , *SPIRITUALITY , *STATISTICS , *DATA analysis , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
BackgroundFew studies have examined religiosity as a protective factor using a longitudinal design to predict resilience in persons at high risk for major depressive disorder (MDD).MethodHigh-risk offspring selected for having a depressed parent and control offspring of non-depressed parents were evaluated for psychiatric disorders in childhood/adolescence and at 10-year and 20-year follow-ups. Religious/spiritual importance, services attendance and negative life events (NLEs) were assessed at the 10-year follow-up. Models tested differences in relationships between religiosity/spirituality and subsequent disorders among offspring based on parent depression status, history of prior MDD and level of NLE exposure. Resilience was defined as lower odds for disorders with greater religiosity/spirituality in higher-risk versus lower-risk offspring.ResultsIncreased attendance was associated with significantly reduced odds for mood disorder (by 43%) and any psychiatric disorder (by 53%) in all offspring; however, odds were significantly lower in offspring of non-depressed parents than in offspring of depressed parents. In analyses confined to offspring of depressed parents, those with high and those with average/low NLE exposure were compared: increased attendance was associated with significantly reduced odds for MDD, mood disorder and any psychiatric disorder (by 76, 69 and 64% respectively) and increased importance was associated with significantly reduced odds for mood disorder (by 74%) only in offspring of depressed parents with high NLE exposure. Moreover, those associations differed significantly between offspring of depressed parents with high NLE exposure and offspring of depressed parents with average/low NLE exposure.ConclusionsGreater religiosity may contribute to development of resilience in certain high-risk individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Novel loci for major depression identified by genome-wide association study of Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression and meta-analysis of three studies.
- Author
-
Shyn, S. I., Shi, J., Kraft, J. B., Potash, J. B., Knowles, J. A., Weissman, M. M., Garriock, H. A., Yokoyama, J. S., McGrath, P. J., Peters, E. J., Scheftner, W. A., Coryell, W., Lawson, W. B., Jancic, D., Gejman, P. V., Sanders, A. R., Holmans, P., Slager, S. L., Levinson, D. F., and Hamilton, S. P.
- Subjects
- *
META-analysis , *GENETIC polymorphisms , *NEUROSCIENCES , *PHENOTYPES ,ALTERNATIVE treatment for mental depression - Abstract
We report a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of major depressive disorder (MDD) in 1221 cases from the Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D) study and 1636 screened controls. No genome-wide evidence for association was detected. We also carried out a meta-analysis of three European-ancestry MDD GWAS data sets: STAR*D, Genetics of Recurrent Early-onset Depression and the publicly available Genetic Association Information Network-MDD data set. These data sets, totaling 3957 cases and 3428 controls, were genotyped using four different platforms (Affymetrix 6.0, 5.0 and 500 K, and Perlegen). For each of 2.4 million HapMap II single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), using genotyped data where available and imputed data otherwise, single-SNP association tests were carried out in each sample with correction for ancestry-informative principal components. The strongest evidence for association in the meta-analysis was observed for intronic SNPs in ATP6V1B2 (P=6.78 × 10−7), SP4 (P=7.68 × 10−7) and GRM7 (P=1.11 × 10−6). Additional exploratory analyses were carried out for a narrower phenotype (recurrent MDD with onset before age 31, N=2191 cases), and separately for males and females. Several of the best findings were supported primarily by evidence from narrow cases or from either males or females. On the basis of previous biological evidence, we consider GRM7 a strong MDD candidate gene. Larger samples will be required to determine whether any common SNPs are significantly associated with MDD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Genome-wide association study of recurrent early-onset major depressive disorder.
- Author
-
Shi, J., Potash, J. B., Knowles, J. A., Weissman, M. M., Coryell, W., Scheftner, W. A., Lawson, W. B., DePaulo, J. R., Gejman, P. V., Sanders, A. R., Johnson, J. K., Adams, P., Chaudhury, S., Jancic, D., Evgrafov, O., Zvinyatskovskiy, A., Ertman, N., Gladis, M., Neimanas, K., and Goodell, M.
- Subjects
- *
GENETIC polymorphisms , *GENE frequency , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *MESSENGER RNA , *FATIGUE (Physiology) - Abstract
A genome-wide association study was carried out in 1020 case subjects with recurrent early-onset major depressive disorder (MDD) (onset before age 31) and 1636 control subjects screened to exclude lifetime MDD. Subjects were genotyped with the Affymetrix 6.0 platform. After extensive quality control procedures, 671 424 autosomal single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and 25 068 X chromosome SNPs with minor allele frequency greater than 1% were available for analysis. An additional 1 892 186 HapMap II SNPs were analyzed based on imputed genotypic data. Single-SNP logistic regression trend tests were computed, with correction for ancestry-informative principal component scores. No genome-wide significant evidence for association was observed, assuming that nominal P<5 × 10−8 approximates a 5% genome-wide significance threshold. The strongest evidence for association was observed on chromosome 18q22.1 (rs17077540, P=1.83 × 10−7) in a region that has produced some evidence for linkage to bipolar-I or -II disorder in several studies, within an mRNA detected in human brain tissue (BC053410) and approximately 75 kb upstream of DSEL. Comparing these results with those of a meta-analysis of three MDD GWAS data sets reported in a companion article, we note that among the strongest signals observed in the GenRED sample, the meta-analysis provided the greatest support (although not at a genome-wide significant level) for association of MDD to SNPs within SP4, a brain-specific transcription factor. Larger samples will be required to confirm the hypothesis of association between MDD (and particularly the recurrent early-onset subtype) and common SNPs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Panic disorder is associated with the serotonin transporter gene (SLC6A4) but not the promoter region (5-HTTLPR).
- Author
-
Strug, L. J., Suresh, R., Fyer, A. J., Talati, A., Adams, P. B., Li, W., Hodge, S. E., Gilliam, T. C., and Weissman, M. M.
- Subjects
- *
PANIC disorders , *SEROTONIN , *NEUROTRANSMITTERS , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *GASTROINTESTINAL hormones - Abstract
Panic disorder (PD) and social anxiety disorder (SAD) are moderately heritable anxiety disorders. We analyzed five genes, derived from pharmacological or translational mouse models, in a new case–control study of PD and SAD in European Americans: (1) the serotonin transporter (SLC6A4), (2) the serotonin receptor 1A, (3) catechol-O-methyltransferase, (4) a regulator of g-protein signaling and (5) the gastrin-releasing peptide receptor. Cases were interviewed using the schedule for affective disorders and schizophrenia and were required to have a probable or definite lifetime diagnosis of PD (N=179), SAD (161) or both (140), with first onset by age 31 and a family history of anxiety. Final diagnoses were determined using the best estimate procedure, blind to genotyping data. Controls were obtained from the National Institute of Mental Health Human Genetics Initiative; only subjects above 25 years of age who screened negative for all psychiatric symptoms were included (N=470). A total of 45 single nucleotide polymorphisms were successfully genotyped over the five selected genes using Applied Biosystems SNPlex protocol. SLC6A4 provided strong and consistent evidence of association with the PD and PD+SAD groups, with the most significant association in both groups being at rs140701 (χ2=10.72, P=0.001 with PD and χ2=8.59, P=0.003 in the PD+SAD group). This association remained significant after multiple test correction. Those carrying at least one copy of the haplotype A-A-G constructed from rs3794808, rs140701 and rs4583306 have 1.7 times the odds of PD than those without the haplotype (95% confidence interval: 1.2–2.3). The SAD only group did not provide evidence of association, suggesting a PD-driven association. The findings remained after adjustment for age and sex, and there was no evidence that the association was due to population stratification. The promoter region of the gene, 5-HTTLPR, did not provide any evidence of association, regardless of whether analyzed as a triallelic or biallelic locus, nor did any of the other four candidate genes tested. Our findings suggest that the serotonin transporter gene may play a role in PD; however, the findings require replication. Future studies should attend to the entire genetic region rather than the promoter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Mesoscopic Fluctuations in the Spin Glass Copper Manganese with Gold.
- Author
-
Merithew, R. D., Fenimore, P. W., and Weissman, M. B.
- Subjects
- *
ELECTROMAGNETIC noise , *FLUCTUATIONS (Physics) , *SPIN glasses - Abstract
Presents a study that investigated the temperature dependence of discrete spin fluctuation modes in the spin glass copper manganese with gold. Methodology; Comparison of the results with gold-iron spin glass; Correlation between the temperature and low frequency noise.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Rates of lifetime suicide attempt and rates of lifetime major depression in different ethnic groups in the United States.
- Author
-
Oquendo, M. A., Lizardi, D., Greenwald, S., Weissman, M. M., and Mann, J. J.
- Subjects
- *
SUICIDAL behavior , *ETHNIC groups , *ETHNOLOGY , *SOCIAL status , *MENTAL depression - Abstract
Oquendo MA, Lizardi D, Greenwald S, Weissman MM, Mann JJ. Rates of lifetime suicide attempt and rates of lifetime major depression in different ethnic groups in the United States.Acta Psychiatr Scand 2004: 1–6.© Blackwell Munksgaard 2004.Rates of major depression and suicide vary across ethnic groups within the US. This also may be true of suicide attempts.Data on lifetime suicidal behavior and major depression among Mexican American, Cuban American, and Puerto Rican adults who participated in the Hispanic Health and Nutrition Epidemiologic Survey were pooled with Epidemiological Catchment Area Study data for Blacks, Whites and Hispanics.Rates of major depression ranged from 9.3 (Puerto Ricans) to 3.24% (Cuban Americans). Puerto Ricans and whites had the highest rates of depression. Similarly, suicide attempt rates ranged from 9.1% for Puerto Ricans to 1.9% for Cuban Americans. Puerto Ricans had higher suicide attempt rates compared with other groups.This study underscores that there are differences between Hispanic ethnic groups. The impact of the migration process, socioeconomic status, and acculturation may underlie differences in major depression and suicide attempt rates across ethnic groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A comparative study of venlafaxine with a focused education and psychotherapy program versus venlafaxine alone in the treatment of depression in general practice.
- Author
-
Judd, F. K., Piterman, L., Cockram, A. M., McCall, L., and Weissman, M. M
- Subjects
- *
VENLAFAXINE , *NEUROTRANSMITTER uptake inhibitors , *COUNSELING , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *MENTAL depression , *GENERAL practitioners - Abstract
The efficacy of a focused education and psychotherapy program (FEPP) plus antidepressant was compared with that of usual psychosocial treatment and antidepressant in a general practice setting. The FEPP comprised interpersonal counselling (IPC) delivered in a modified way to suit the general practice setting, together with patient education and selected cognitive behavioural techniques. All patients were treated with venlafaxine-XR. Thirty-one patients entered the study, three withdrawing before completion of the 12 week trial. Both treatments produced a statistically significant reduction in BDI and POMS scores from baseline, with greater improvement evident in the FEPP plus antidepressant group. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Taking decisions seriously: young children's understanding of conventional truth.
- Author
-
Kalish, Charles, Weissman, Michelle, Kalish, C, Weissman, M, and Bernstein, D
- Subjects
- *
TRUTH , *VALUES (Ethics) , *EPISTEMICS , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Research suggests that young children may see a direct and one-way connection between facts about the world and epistemic mental states (e.g., belief). Conventions represent instances of active constructions of the mind that change facts about the world. As such, a mature understanding of convention would seem to present a strong challenge to children's simplified notions of epistemic relations. Three experiments assessed young children's abilities to track behavioral, representational, and truth aspects of conventions. In Experiment 1, 3- and 4-year-old children (N = 30) recognized that conventional stipulations would change people's behaviors. However, participants generally failed to understand how stipulations might affect representations. In Experiment 2, 3-, 5-, and 7-year-old children (N = 53) were asked to reason about the truth values of statements about pretenses and conventions. The two younger groups of children often confused the two types of states, whereas older children consistently judged that conventions, but not pretenses, changed reality. In Experiment 3, the same 3- and 5-year-olds (N = 42) participated in tasks assessing their understanding of representational diversity (e.g., false belief). In general, children's performance on false-belief and "false-convention" tasks did not differ, which suggests that conventions were understood as involving truth claims (as akin to beliefs about physical reality). Children's difficulties with the idea of conventional truth seems consistent with current accounts of developing theories of mind. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Psychiatric disorders and impairment in the children of opiate addicts: prevalances and distribution by ethnicity.
- Author
-
Nunes, Edward V., Weissman, Myrna M., Goldstein, Rise, McAvay, Gail, Beckford, Carla, Seracini, Angela, Verdeli, Helena, Wickramaratne, Priya, Nunes, E V, Weissman, M M, Goldstein, R, McAvay, G, Beckford, C, Seracini, A, Verdeli, H, and Wickramaratne, P
- Subjects
- *
CHILD psychopathology , *OPIUM abuse , *OPIOIDS , *DISEASE prevalence , *ETHNICITY , *DRUG side effects , *INTERVIEWING in psychiatry , *PSYCHIATRIC epidemiology , *CHILD behavior , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MENTAL illness , *PARENT-child relationships , *RESEARCH , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
This study examined rates of psychiatric disorders and impairment in 283 children, aged 6 to 17, of 69 Caucasian, 45 African-American, and 47 Hispanic-American methadone maintenance patients. Children were evaluated by direct and/or parental interview with the K-SADS-E. Final DSM-III-R diagnoses and Global Assessment Scale (C-GAS) were assigned by best estimate. Substantial lifetime prevalences of mood (21%), anxiety (24%) and disruptive disorders (30%), school problems (37%), and global impairment (C-GAS < 61) (25%) were observed in the children of opiate-dependent patients. There were few differences between ethnic groups. Effects of proband gender and major depression and their interactions with ethnicity on risk for childhood psychopathology were also examined. The results suggest children of patients in treatment for opiate dependence from diverse ethnic groups are at risk for psychopathology. Programs for early detection and intervention should be devised and evaluated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Risk/protective factors among addicted mothers' offspring: a replication study.
- Author
-
Weissman, Myrna M., McAvay, Gail, Goldstein, Rise B., Nunes, Edward V., Verdeli, Helen, Wickramaratne, Priya J., Weissman, M M, McAvay, G, Goldstein, R B, Nunes, E V, Verdeli, H, and Wickramaratne, P J
- Subjects
- *
CHILDREN of people with drug addiction , *PEOPLE with drug addiction , *DRUG abuse , *RESEMBLANCE (Philosophy) , *MENTAL depression , *DRUG use testing - Abstract
There are few systematic studies of the school-aged offspring of drug-dependent patients, although this information is useful for planning evidence-based prevention programs. We have completed such a study, which we compare to a similar study independently conducted in 1998. In both studies, both the parent and offspring were assessed blindly and independently by direct diagnostic interviews, and parental assessment of offspring was also obtained. The similarity in design and methods between studies provided an opportunity for replication by reanalysis of data. The major findings are a replication in two independently conducted studies of school-aged offspring of opiate- and/or cocaine-addicted mothers of the high rates of any psychiatric disorder (60% in both studies), major depression (20%, 26%), oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) (18%, 23%), conduct disorder (17%, 9%), attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) (13%, 8%), and substance abuse (5%, 10%) among offspring. Both studies also found high rates of comorbid alcohol abuse, depression, and multiple drugs of abuse in the mothers. We conclude that efforts to replicate findings by analyses of independently conducted studies are an inexpensive way to test the sturdiness of findings that can provide the empirical basis for preventive efforts. Clinically, the data in both studies suggest that both drug dependence and associated psychopathology should be assessed and treated in opiate addicts with young offspring, and the offspring should be monitored for the development of conduct and mood disorders and substance use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Cultural differences in attitudes, values, and beliefs about osteoporosis in first and second generation Japanese-American women.
- Author
-
Matsumoto D, Pun KK, Nakatani M, Kadowski D, Weissman M, McCarter L, Fletcher D, and Takeuchi S
- Abstract
This study examines attitudinal differences related to osteoporosis between first and second generation Japanese-American women. In an interview, the women completed a battery of tests assessing their attitudes, values, and beliefs about the diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up care of osteoporosis. The groups differed in their general knowledge of osteoporosis, perceptions of the disease, attributions of its causes, anticipated and preferred support mechanisms for care, and anticipated areas of concern for self- or other-care. There were also considerable differences in treatment compliance and feelings toward physicians. The findings were discussed in relation to the effects of culture on health-care attitudes and behaviors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
43. Panic attacks in the community. Social morbidity and health care utilization.
- Author
-
Klerman GL, Weissman MM, Ouellette R, Johnson J, Greenwald S, Klerman, G L, Weissman, M M, Ouellette, R, Johnson, J, and Greenwald, S
- Abstract
This article focuses on social morbidity and health care utilization in persons with panic attacks not meeting full diagnostic criteria for panic disorder. The findings are based on data from a random sample of over 18,000 adults drawn from five US communities. Panic attacks not meeting full criteria for panic disorder have a relatively high lifetime prevalence (3.6% of the adult population). Persons with panic attacks had impairment in perceived physical and emotional health, and in occupational and financial functioning, increased use of health care facilities, emergency departments, and psychoactive drugs. Persons with panic attacks were intermediate in severity between those with panic disorder and those with other psychiatric disorders. The findings could not be explained by comorbidity with other psychiatric disorders. We conclude that panic attacks have clinical significance and are associated with substantial morbidity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Understanding referential expressions in context: use of common ground by children and adolescents with mental retardation.
- Author
-
Abbeduto L, Short-Meyerson K, Benson G, Dolish J, and Weissman M
- Abstract
Listeners interpret utterances against the common ground, or network of presuppositions shared with the speaker. The first purpose of the study was to determine whether individuals with mental retardation use the major sources of common ground (i.e., physical copresence, linguistic copresence, and community membership) to resolve referential ambiguity. The second purpose was to determine whether they seek confirmation of their referent choices in accordance with the certainty of interpretation afforded by the common ground. The third purpose was to determine whether they signal noncomprehension when faced with ambiguity and common ground that is not informative. The final purpose was to evaluate the relationship between within-group variability in common ground use and measures of nonverbal cognition, receptive and expressive language, and social cognition. Participants were school-age individuals with mental retardation and typically developing children matched to them on nonverbal MA. Common ground use was examined in a role-playing task in which the participant responded to ambiguous utterances. Common ground was manipulated within participants. We determined whether referent selections were appropriate for the common ground, whether they were accompanied by confirmation requests, and whether noncomprehension was signaled. Both groups used all sources of common ground to resolve referential ambiguity at better than chance levels but were less successful in using community membership. Both groups also requested confirmation of their referent choices most often when the common ground was based on community membership. Both groups signaled noncomprehension when the common ground was not informative. Different aspects of common ground use were related to different predictors for the group with mental retardation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Familial aggregation of delusional depression: re-examination in a recent family study.
- Author
-
Goldstein, Risë B., Horwath, Ewald, Wickramaratne, Priya J., Wolk, Susan I., Warner, Virginia, Weissman, Myrna M., Goldstein, R B, Horwath, E, Wickramaratne, P J, Wolk, S I, Warner, V, and Weissman, M M
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL depression , *DELUSIONS , *COGNITION disorders , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *FAMILIES - Abstract
Background: Delusional (D-MDD) and nondelusional depression (ND-MDD) differ in clinical presentation, biological abnormalities, course of illness, and treatment response. Family data, however, have been less consistent regarding differential risk both for any major depression (MDD) and specifically D-MDD in relatives of D-MDD probands. In an earlier family study, we observed a 1.5-fold increase in rates of any MDD, specificity of transmission of D-MDD, and increased rates of bipolar disorders in relatives of D-MDD compared to relatives of ND-MDD probands. In a new family study, we attempted to replicate these findings.Method: A family study of 361 directly interviewed adult first-degree relatives (FDRs) of 163 probands (118 with MDD and 45 screened normal controls) was used to examine familial aggregation of any MDD, D-MDD, and bipolarity by proband delusional status.Results: Compared to FDRs of ND-MDD probands, FDRs of D-MDD probands were at modestly increased risk for any MDD. These results were unaffected by adjustment for proband ascertainment source, comorbidity, or whether probands had chronologically primary MDD. There was a trend toward increased rates of broadly defined bipolarity (bipolar I, bipolar II, or cyclothymia) in FDRs of D-MDD compared to FDRs of ND-MDD probands.Conclusion: Results from the present study were broadly consistent with those from our previous work. While other lines of evidence for D-MDD as a distinct subtype are more compelling than family data, it would be of methodologic interest to identify sources of inconsistency across studies in findings concerning the familial aggregation of delusional depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Panic disorder with smothering symptoms: evidence for increased risk in first-degree relatives.
- Author
-
Horwath, Ewald, Adams, Phillip, Wickramaratne, Priya, Pine, Daniel, Weissman, Myrna M., Horwath, E, Adams, P, Wickramaratne, P, Pine, D, and Weissman, M M
- Subjects
- *
PANIC disorders , *ANXIETY , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *FAMILIAL diseases , *RESPIRATION - Abstract
Klein's (1993: Arch Gen Psychiatry 50:306-317) "false suffocation alarm" theory of spontaneous panic attacks posits that central receptors compare CO2, O2, and lactate levels and trigger panic when an impending "false" state of suffocation is detected. Several investigators have found abnormalities of respiratory physiology in subjects with panic disorder. Twin and family studies have suggested that both panic disorder and tidal volume response to CO2 are inherited. We hypothesized that, if smothering symptoms are a marker for a hypersensitive suffocation detector and if this hypersensitivity is familial, then relatives of panic subjects with smothering symptoms would have higher rates of panic with smothering than relatives of panic subjects without smothering. We conducted a family study involving 104 panic disorder probands and 247 of their interviewed first-degree relatives. Probands and their relatives were interviewed using the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia--Lifetime Version for Anxiety Disorders to determine their panic disorder and smothering symptom status. Relatives of panic probands with smothering symptoms had an almost threefold higher risk for panic and an almost sixfold higher risk for panic with smothering symptoms when compared with relatives of panic probands without smothering. We conclude that panic disorder with smothering symptoms may be a subtype of panic disorder associated with increased familial risk and may be a group of interest to genetic investigators. These findings provide the first empiric evidence from a family study in support of Klein's false suffocation alarm theory of spontaneous panics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Impact of valvular regurgitation and ventricular dysfunction on long-term survival in patients with chest pain.
- Author
-
Fleischmann KE, Lee RT, Come PC, Goldman L, Cook EF, Weissman MA, Johnson PA, Lee TH, Fleischmann, K E, Lee, R T, Come, P C, Goldman, L, Cook, E F, Weissman, M A, Johnson, P A, and Lee, T H
- Abstract
Doppler echocardiography is often used in evaluating patients with chest pain, but information on prognostic value of this testing and data to help guide selective use are limited. We prospectively studied 448 patients admitted from the emergency department for acute chest pain to assess the utility of qualitative echocardiographic data in predicting long-term survival and the incremental value of this information over routine clinical and electrocardiographic data. Doppler echocardiograms, recorded an average of 21 hours after presentation, were analyzed independently by 2 echocardiographers for global left and right ventricular function and valvular disease. Regional function was assessed by wall motion index. Data on long-term survival were collected with an average follow-up of 35.0 +/- 12.1 months. In univariate Cox regression analysis, left ventricular function and size, wall motion index, right ventricular function, and aortic, mitral, and tricuspid insufficiency were significant predictors of total and cardiovascular mortality. In multivariate analysis, moderate or severe left ventricular dysfunction (mortality rate ratio 3.2, 95% confidence intervals 1.8 to 5.8] and more than mild valvular regurgitation (mortality rate ratio 2.0, 95% confidence interval 1.1 to 3.6) were independent predictors of mortality in a model adjusted for clinical and electrocardiographic data. These factors were more common in patients aged >60 years, in those with prior acute myocardial infarction or angina, and in those with rales on physical examination. In the absence of these clinical characteristics, only 8 of 124 patients (7%) had moderate or severe left ventricular dysfunction or valvular regurgitation. In patients with moderate or severe regurgitation, a murmur was noted on the admission physical examination in 41 of 69 cases (59%). We conclude that echocardiographic evidence of moderate or severe left ventricular dysfunction or valvular regurgitation identifies a high-risk group for overall and cardiovascular mortality in patients with chest pain, and this evidence may not be detected clinically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Panic and suicidal ideation in primary care.
- Author
-
Goodwin, Renee, Olfson, Mark, Feder, Adriana, Fuentes, Milton, Pilowsky, Daniel J., Weissman, Myrna M., Goodwin, R, Olfson, M, Feder, A, Fuentes, M, Pilowsky, D J, and Weissman, M M
- Subjects
- *
PANIC attacks , *PANIC disorders , *SUICIDAL behavior , *PRIMARY care , *MENTAL depression - Abstract
The objective of this article is to examine the relationship between panic attacks, panic disorder, and suicidal ideation among primary care patients. A probability sample of 1,007 primary care attenders from a large urban university practice was assessed for current mental disorders and suicidal ideation (past 2 week prevalence) with the PRIME-MD Patient Health Questionnaire. Controlling for major depression, substance use disorders, and sociodemographic variables simultaneously, patients with either panic attacks or panic disorder had significantly increased risks of suicidal ideation. Suicidal ideation was highly associated with major depression and comorbid panic disorder (OR = 15.4) or panic attacks (OR = 7.9). There is need for detection and possible treatment of patients with panic attacks or disorder in primary care, especially among those with co-occurring major depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Barkhausen noise probe of the ferroelectric transition in the relaxor PbMg1/3Nb2/3O3-12%PbTiO3.
- Author
-
Xinyang Zhang, Mellinger, Corbyn, Colla, Eugene V., Weissman, M. B., and Viehland, D. D.
- Subjects
- *
BARKHAUSEN effect , *FERROELECTRIC transitions , *RELAXOR ferroelectrics - Abstract
Barkhausen current noise is used to probe the slow field-driven conversion of the glassy relaxor ferroelectric state to an ordered ferroelectric state. The frequent presence of distinct micron-scale Barkhausen events well before the polarization current starts to speed up shows that the process is not a conventional nucleation-limited one. The prevalence of reverse switching events near the onset of the rapid part of the transition strongly indicates that electric dipole interactions play a key role. The combination of Barkhausen noise changes and changes in the complex dielectric response indicate that the process consists of an initial mixed-alignment domain formation stage followed by growth of the domains aligned with the applied field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Protecting the privacy of family members in research.
- Author
-
Levinson, D F, Reich, T, Todd, R D, Weissman, M M, Crowe, R R, DeLisi, L, Faraone, S V, Folstein, S, Pelias, M K, Pulver, A E, and Silverman, J M
- Subjects
- *
RIGHT of privacy , *RESEARCH laws , *MEDICAL ethics laws , *RESEARCH , *ETHICS , *FAMILIES , *GENEALOGY , *GENETIC techniques , *INFORMED consent (Medical law) , *ACQUISITION of data , *STANDARDS , *LAW - Published
- 2001
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.