Anne-Marie Shelley
University of New South Wales
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Featured researches published by Anne-Marie Shelley.
Biological Psychiatry | 1993
Sally Andrews; Anne-Marie Shelley; Philip B. Ward; Allison M. Fox; Stanley V. Catts; Nathaniel McConaghy
Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded while schizophrenic patients and healthy controls read congruous and incongruous sentences in anticipation of a memory test. The schizophrenic group performed more poorly in both recognition memory and cued recall tests. The two groups did not differ in the amplitude of the N400 component of the ERP but the difference between the ERPs to congruous and incongruous sentences persisted longer in the schizophrenic sample. The schizophrenic sample also showed reduced parietal positivity and a reduced effect of congruity on the late positive component that follows N400. Within the schizophrenic sample, measures of attentional impairment and positive thought disorder were correlated with mean amplitude of both the N400 and the subsequent positivity. The results imply that the structure and spread of activation within semantic memory is not impaired in schizophrenia. Rather, impairments appear to lie in processes required to integrate activated information with the current context.
Neuropsychopharmacology | 1997
Anne-Marie Shelley; Stanley V. Catts; Philip B. Ward; Sally Andrews; Penny Mitchell; Patricia T. Michie; Nathaniel McConaghy
This study examines the effect of decreased catecholamine transmission on event-related potential (ERP) indices of selective attention. Intravenous clonidine (1.5 μg/kg Catapres), droperidol (15 μg/kg Droleptan), or placebo were administered to healthy adult males prior to performance of a multidimensional auditory selective attention task (SAT) in which dichotically presented sequences of tone pips varied on dimensions of location (left or right ear), pitch (high or low), and duration (short or long). Subjects were required to make a button press response to infrequent “target” stimuli that matched a prespecified stimulus on the three dimensions. ERPs were recorded during the task. Clonidine led to a significant increase of processing negativity (PN) over 200-400 ms at the irrelevant location. Droperidol led to a significant increase in reaction time (RT), a significant decrease in hit rate, and an attenuation of PN over the 200- to 400-ms and 400- to 700-ms epochs. Neither substance led to a significant change in P3 amplitude. The role of catecholamines in the selective attention subprocesses of “tuning” and “switching” is discussed.
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 1993
Nathaniel McConaghy; Stanley V. Catts; Patricia T. Michie; Allison M. Fox; Philip B. Ward; Anne-Marie Shelley
Loosening of thinking as assessed by the Object Sorting Test (OST) has been found in a percentage of normal subjects but in a higher percentage of schizophrenics, and is familially transmitted in both groups. Loosening of thinking in normal subjects is not associated with evidence of impaired function or increased psychopathology, and in recognition of this, it was termed allusive thinking rather than thought disorder. Both OST-assessed loosening and concreteness of thinking were found to be present independently in a high percentage of schizophrenics, so that both were considered to contribute to schizophrenic thought disorder. The presence of OST-assessed loosening in schizophrenics would, therefore, be predicted to correlate partially rather than totally with measures of schizophrenic thought disorder. It has been suggested that OST-assessed loosening in normal subjects is due to a genetically determined reduction in strength of an inhibitory process that limits the spread of activation of semantic associations and results in a predisposition to schizophrenia. The brain eventrelated potential P300, which is, in part, under genetic control, may index this inhibitory process. Therefore, it was predicted that in normal subjects, P300 would correlate with OSTassessed loosening of associations. If schizophrenic thought disorder is due to a further weakening of this inhibitory process, it can be predicted that P300 in schizophrenics correlates only weakly with OST-assessed loosening of thinking, but more strongly with schizophrenic thought disorder. In a study in which P300 was elicited using a difficult selective attention task with 15 unmedicated schizophrenics and 22 healthy subjects, all three predictions were supported.
Biological Psychiatry | 1991
Anne-Marie Shelley; Philip B. Ward; Stanley V. Catts; Patricia T. Michie; Sally Andrews; Neil McConaghy
American Journal of Psychiatry | 1995
Stanley V. Catts; Anne-Marie Shelley; Philip B. Ward; Barbara Liebert; Nathaniel McConaghy; Sally Andrews; Patricia T. Michie
Archives of General Psychiatry | 2000
Daniel C. Javitt; Anne-Marie Shelley; Gail Silipo; Jeffrey A. Lieberman
Biological Psychiatry | 1999
Angel Cienfuegos; Lucy March; Anne-Marie Shelley; Daniel C. Javitt
Archive | 2016
Daniel C. Javitt; Anne-Marie Shelley; Gail Silipo; Jeffrey A. Lieberman
Schizophrenia Research | 1992
Philip B. Ward; Neil McConaghy; S.V. Catts; Patricia T. Michie; Sally Andrews; Allison M. Fox; Anne-Marie Shelley
Biological Psychiatry | 1996
A. Cienfiuegos; Lucy March; Anne-Marie Shelley; Daniel C. Javitt