2022
Bidirectional relationships between cannabis use, anxiety and depressive symptoms in the mediation of the association with psychotic experience: further support for an affective pathway to psychosis
Radhakrishnan R, Pries LK, Erzin G, Have M, de Graaf R, van Dorsselaer S, Gunther N, Bak M, Rutten BPF, van Os J, Guloksuz S. Bidirectional relationships between cannabis use, anxiety and depressive symptoms in the mediation of the association with psychotic experience: further support for an affective pathway to psychosis. Psychological Medicine 2022, 53: 5551-5557. PMID: 36093677, PMCID: PMC10482707, DOI: 10.1017/s0033291722002756.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAnxiety/depressive symptomsDepressive symptomsCannabis usePE incidencePsychotic experiencesFirst longitudinal cohort studyNetherlands Mental Health SurveyLongitudinal cohort studyMental Health SurveyRole of cannabisBidirectional relationshipCohort studyHealth SurveyIncidence studyAffective symptomsSymptomsCannabisEducation statusLongitudinal studyPsychosisIncidenceAnxietyTemporal relationshipMediation analysisFurther support
2020
Evidence for an interrelated cluster of Hallucinatory experiences in the general population: an incidence study
Moriyama T, Drukker M, Guloksuz S, Have M, de Graaf R, van Dorsselaer S, Gunther N, Bak M, van Os J. Evidence for an interrelated cluster of Hallucinatory experiences in the general population: an incidence study. Psychological Medicine 2020, 51: 2034-2043. PMID: 32317030, DOI: 10.1017/s0033291720000793.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsRisk factorsProspective general population cohortGeneral population cohortIncidence of hallucinationsNon-psychotic disordersEnvironmental risk factorsTerms of prevalenceSelf-reported ratesYearly incidenceOlfactory hallucinationsVisual hallucinationsFunctional impairmentNEMESIS-2General populationPsychotic disordersHallucinatory experiencesPopulation cohortIncidence studyAuditory hallucinationsDelusional ideationCommon underlying mechanismMental disordersIncidenceNEMESIS-1Subsequent course
2018
Reasoning bias, working memory performance and a transdiagnostic phenotype of affective disturbances and psychotic experiences in the general population
Reininghaus U, Rauschenberg C, Have M, de Graaf R, van Dorsselaer S, Simons CJP, Gunther N, Pries LK, Guloksuz S, Radhakrishnan R, Bak M, van Os J. Reasoning bias, working memory performance and a transdiagnostic phenotype of affective disturbances and psychotic experiences in the general population. Psychological Medicine 2018, 49: 1799-1809. PMID: 30160228, DOI: 10.1017/s0033291718002209.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsComposite International Diagnostic InterviewAffective disturbancesPsychotic experiencesNetherlands Mental Health SurveySecond Netherlands Mental Health SurveyTransdiagnostic phenotypeJTC biasMental Health SurveyDose-response relationshipGeneral population sampleHealth SurveyGeneral populationIncidence studyHelp-seeking behaviorDiagnostic InterviewTime pointsMemory performanceConclusions reasoning biasPopulation sampleRecent findingsPhenotypeDigit span taskIndividualsFindingsPsychosisT115. REASONING BIAS, WORKING MEMORY PERFORMANCE, AND A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC PHENOTYPE OF AFFECTIVE DISTURBANCES AND PSYCHOTIC EXPERIENCES IN THE GENERAL POPULATION
Rauschenberg C, Reininghaus U, Have M, de Graaf R, van Dorsselaer S, Gunther N, Pries L, Guloksuz S, Radhakrishnan R, Bak M, van Os J. T115. REASONING BIAS, WORKING MEMORY PERFORMANCE, AND A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC PHENOTYPE OF AFFECTIVE DISTURBANCES AND PSYCHOTIC EXPERIENCES IN THE GENERAL POPULATION. Schizophrenia Bulletin 2018, 44: s160-s161. PMCID: PMC5888643, DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sby016.391.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchComposite International Diagnostic InterviewHelp-seeking behaviorAffective disturbancesGeneral populationPsychotic experiencesTransdiagnostic phenotypeNetherlands Mental Health SurveyJTC biasSecond Netherlands Mental Health SurveyMental Health SurveyRepresentative general population sampleDose-response relationshipGeneral population sampleMemory performanceSocio-demographic characteristicsRisk factorsHealth SurveyIncidence studySocio-environmental factorsDiagnostic InterviewCognitive deficitsMental healthSymptom domainsTime pointsPsychosis
2016
Exposure to environmental factors increases connectivity between symptom domains in the psychopathology network
Guloksuz S, van Nierop M, Bak M, de Graaf R, ten Have M, van Dorsselaer S, Gunther N, Lieb R, van Winkel R, Wittchen H, van Os J. Exposure to environmental factors increases connectivity between symptom domains in the psychopathology network. BMC Psychiatry 2016, 16: 223. PMID: 27391407, PMCID: PMC4939022, DOI: 10.1186/s12888-016-0935-1.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsMental disordersSymptom dimensionsNetherlands Mental Health SurveyNEMESIS-1Symptom connectivityContinuous symptom dimensionsEnvironmental exposuresSelf-report Symptom Checklist-90Mental Health SurveySymptom Checklist-90Health SurveyPsychotic symptomsIncidence studyPopulation cohortSelf-reported psychopathologyConclusionsOur findingsDiagnostic categoriesSymptom domainsIndependent population cohortsRisk loadPsychopathology StudyDisordersRegression analysisCohortSymptoms