Identifying psychosis subtypes use individualized covariance structural differential networks and multi-site clustering
Ji Y, Pearlson G, Bustillo J, Kochunov P, Turner J, Jiang R, Shao W, Zhang X, Fu Z, Li K, Liu Z, Xu X, Zhang D, Qi S, Calhoun V. Identifying psychosis subtypes use individualized covariance structural differential networks and multi-site clustering. Schizophrenia Research 2023, 264: 130-139. PMID: 38128344, DOI: 10.1016/j.schres.2023.12.013.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchPsychosis subtypesSchizoaffective disorderBipolar disorderClinical phenotypeFirst-degree relativesTemporal-occipital cortexAmygdala-hippocampusClinical symptomsNeuroimaging featuresBipolar-Schizophrenia NetworkBrain alterationsHealthy controlsIntermediate Phenotypes (B-SNIP) consortiumOccipital cortexDecreased connectivitySubtypesStructural covarianceFractional amplitudeSubtype IILow-frequency fluctuationsNeurobiological heterogeneityGreater predispositionPsychosis spectrumGroup differencesDiagnostic classification