2016
Cognitive remediation for adults with schizophrenia: Does age matter?
Corbera S, Wexler BE, Poltorak A, Thime WR, Kurtz MM. Cognitive remediation for adults with schizophrenia: Does age matter? Psychiatry Research 2016, 247: 21-27. PMID: 27863314, PMCID: PMC5248553, DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2016.10.084.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsCognitive remediationSubstantial individual differencesEarly chronic groupsOlder client populationNovel behavioral interventionSubsample of clientsRole of ageMemory measuresIndividual differencesStrategy acquisitionCognitive outcomesCognitive deficitsTask practiceRandomized control trialBehavioral interventionsTrend levelEmpirical supportSchizophreniaTreatment responseAge matterClient populationEarly-stage groupAge rangeGreater improvementAdultsExecutive Dysfunction Predicts Treatment Response to Neuroplasticity-Based Computerized Cognitive Remediation (nCCR-GD) in Elderly Patients with Major Depression
Morimoto SS, Gunning FM, Wexler BE, Hu W, Ilieva I, Liu J, Nitis J, Alexopoulos GS. Executive Dysfunction Predicts Treatment Response to Neuroplasticity-Based Computerized Cognitive Remediation (nCCR-GD) in Elderly Patients with Major Depression. American Journal Of Geriatric Psychiatry 2016, 24: 816-820. PMID: 27591163, PMCID: PMC5873289, DOI: 10.1016/j.jagp.2016.06.010.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsExecutive dysfunctionCognitive remediation interventionsComputerized cognitive remediationPoor treatment responseFavorable treatment responseTreatment responseCognitive remediationRemediation interventionsMajor depressionNeuropsychological performanceElderly patientsOlder adultsLate-life depressionMontgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale scoreTreatment-resistant major depressionDepression Rating Scale scoresRating Scale scoresDepressionAntidepressant treatmentTreatment trialsScale scorePatientsBaselineGreater reductionDysfunction
1991
Cerebral laterality, perception of emotion, and treatment response in obsessive-compulsive disorder
Wexler B, Goodman W. Cerebral laterality, perception of emotion, and treatment response in obsessive-compulsive disorder. Biological Psychiatry 1991, 29: 900-908. PMID: 2049488, DOI: 10.1016/0006-3223(91)90056-r.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsObsessive-compulsive disorderEmotion-related wordsNeutral wordsCerebral lateralityLower right-ear advantagesPerception of emotionPositive emotional valenceRight ear advantageDichotic listening testEmotional valenceStimulus pairsOCD patientsListening testsWordsHealthy controlsDepressed patientsSerotonin reuptake inhibitorsLateralityEmotionsDisordersReuptake inhibitorsSevere illnessTreatment responseValencePatients