2020
Evidence, and replication thereof, that molecular-genetic and environmental risks for psychosis impact through an affective pathway
van Os J, Pries L, Have M, de Graaf R, van Dorsselaer S, Delespaul P, Bak M, Kenis G, Lin B, Luykx J, Richards A, Akdede B, Binbay T, Altınyazar V, Yalınçetin B, Gümüş-Akay G, Cihan B, Soygür H, Ulaş H, Cankurtaran E, Kaymak S, Mihaljevic M, Petrovic S, Mirjanic T, Bernardo M, Mezquida G, Amoretti S, Bobes J, Saiz P, García-Portilla M, Sanjuan J, Aguilar E, Santos J, Jiménez-López E, Arrojo M, Carracedo A, López G, González-Peñas J, Parellada M, Maric N, Atbaşoğlu C, Ucok A, Alptekin K, Saka M, Arango C, O'Donovan M, Rutten B, Guloksuz S. Evidence, and replication thereof, that molecular-genetic and environmental risks for psychosis impact through an affective pathway. Psychological Medicine 2020, 52: 1910-1922. PMID: 33070791, DOI: 10.1017/s0033291720003748.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsSchizophrenia spectrum disordersChildhood adversityRisk factorsNEMESIS-2Affective dysregulationNon-genetic risk factorsSignificant depressive symptomsSample of patientsRepresentative general population sampleGenetic risk factorsGeneral population sampleSchizophrenia polygenic riskPsychosis outcomesSpectrum disorderDepressive symptomsPRS-SZPolygenic riskDysregulationPatientsPopulation samplePsychosisAffective pathwayDisordersHallucinatory experiencesDelusional ideationThe jumping to conclusions reasoning bias as a cognitive factor contributing to psychosis progression and persistence: findings from NEMESIS-2
Rauschenberg C, Reininghaus U, Have M, de Graaf R, van Dorsselaer S, Simons C, Gunther N, Henquet C, Pries L, Guloksuz S, Bak M, van Os J. The jumping to conclusions reasoning bias as a cognitive factor contributing to psychosis progression and persistence: findings from NEMESIS-2. Psychological Medicine 2020, 51: 1696-1703. PMID: 32174291, PMCID: PMC8327623, DOI: 10.1017/s0033291720000446.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
2019
TwinssCan — Gene-Environment Interaction in Psychotic and Depressive Intermediate Phenotypes: Risk and Protective Factors in a General Population Twin Sample
Pries L, Snijders C, Menne-Lothmann C, Decoster J, van Winkel R, Collip D, Delespaul P, De Hert M, Derom C, Thiery E, Jacobs N, Wichers M, Guloksuz S, van Os J, Rutten B. TwinssCan — Gene-Environment Interaction in Psychotic and Depressive Intermediate Phenotypes: Risk and Protective Factors in a General Population Twin Sample. Twin Research And Human Genetics 2019, 22: 460-466. PMID: 31708010, DOI: 10.1017/thg.2019.96.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsNeurocognitive processesSalience attributionSocial defeatGeneral population twin sampleExecutive functioningCognitive phenotypesExperimental paradigmSeverity of psychopathologyAffective dysregulationSubclinical expressionDimensional phenotypesMental ill healthClinical psychopathologyTwin sampleOnset of disorderPsychotic experiencesPsychopathologyProtective factorsSchizophrenia ProjectAttributionIll healthIntermediate phenotypesGene-environment interactionsMemoryFunctioning