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Dive into the research topics where Asaf Caspi is active.

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Featured researches published by Asaf Caspi.


Schizophrenia Research | 2003

Cognitive performance in schizophrenia patients assessed before and following the first psychotic episode

Asaf Caspi; Abraham Reichenberg; Mark Weiser; Jonathan Rabinowitz; Ze’ev Kaplan; Haim Y. Knobler; Noa Davidson-Sagi; Michael Davidson

BACKGROUND The purpose of this historical prospective study was to follow the cognitive impairment in schizophrenia from the premorbid period until shortly after the onset of the first psychotic episode within the same subjects. METHODS Forty-four first episode schizophrenia patients were enrolled in the study. Their cognitive performance was assessed as part of the Israeli Draft Board aptitude assessments at ages 16-17, when all were found to be in good mental health (first assessment) and again, following the manifestation of the first psychotic episode (second assessment). Forty-four healthy comparisons were also enrolled and tested twice, at the same ages as the patients. Both times, the assessments included four subtests assessing abstract reasoning (Raven Progressive Matrices-R), mental speed and concentration (Otis-R), verbal reasoning (Similarities-R), and mathematical abilities (Arithmetic-R). RESULTS A within group analysis did not reveal statistically significant changes between the first and the second assessment among the schizophrenia patients on any measure. However, a between group comparison of changes showed that relative to the healthy comparisons, schizophrenia patients deteriorated on the RPM-R (p=0.021) and Otis-R (p<0.001), but not on the Similarities-R and Arithmetic-R. Schizophrenia patients performed worse than comparisons in all four subtests on the first and second assessments (all p<0.01). CONCLUSIONS The results indicate that most of the cognitive impairment exhibited by first-episode schizophrenia patients precedes the first psychotic episode. A decline between ages 16 and 17 and the onset of psychosis is evident in some but not all cognitive functions.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 2006

Premorbid Intellectual Functioning and Risk of Schizophrenia and Spectrum Disorders

Abraham Reichenberg; Mark Weiser; Asaf Caspi; Haim Y. Knobler; Gad Lubin; Philip D. Harvey; Jonathan Rabinowitz; Michael Davidson

Evidence from longitudinal studies indicates that lower IQ score in childhood and early adolescence increases risk of schizophrenia and schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSD). This study investigated the association between premorbid IQ and risk of SSD in a population-based cohort of 17-year-old conscripts. Fifty four thousand males assessed by the Israeli Draft Board during two consecutive years were followed by means of the Israeli National Psychiatric Hospitalization Case Registry for up to 11 years. Tests of verbal and non-verbal reasoning, mathematical knowledge and instructions comprehension and several psychosocial variables were recorded by the Draft Board. Risk for SSD increased with decreasing IQ score. Only poorer non-verbal reasoning conferred a significant increased risk for SSD after taking into account general intellectual ability. IQ was not associated with age of onset. These results confirm the importance of low intellectual functioning as a risk factor for SSD. This is unlikely to be due to prodrome.


Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2008

Advanced Parental Age at Birth Is Associated With Poorer Social Functioning in Adolescent Males: Shedding Light on a Core Symptom of Schizophrenia and Autism

Mark Weiser; Abraham Reichenberg; Nomi Werbeloff; Karine Kleinhaus; Gad Lubin; Moti Shmushkevitch; Asaf Caspi; Dolores Malaspina; Michael Davidson

BACKGROUND Evidence indicates an association between older parents at birth and increased risk for schizophrenia and autism. Patients with schizophrenia and autism and their first-degree relatives have impaired social functioning; hence, impaired social functioning is probably an intermediate phenotype of the illness. This study tested the hypothesis that advanced fathers age at birth would be associated with poorer social functioning in the general population. To test this hypothesis, we examined the association between parental age at birth and the social functioning of their adolescent male offspring in a population-based study. METHODS Subjects were 403486, 16- to 17-year-old Israeli-born male adolescents assessed by the Israeli Draft Board. The effect of parental age on social functioning was assessed in analyses controlling for cognitive functioning, the other parents age, parental socioeconomic status, birth order, and year of draft board assessment. RESULTS Compared with offspring of parents aged 25-29 years, the prevalence of poor social functioning was increased both in offspring of fathers younger than 20 years (odds ratio [OR] = 1.27, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.08-1.49) and in offspring of fathers 45 years old (OR = 1.52, 95% CI = 1.43-1.61). Male adolescent children of mothers aged 40 years and above were 1.15 (95% CI = 1.07-1.24) times more likely to have poor social functioning. CONCLUSIONS These modest associations between parental age and poor social functioning in the general population parallel the associations between parental age and risk for schizophrenia and autism and suggest that the risk pathways between advanced parental age and schizophrenia and autism might, at least partially, include mildly deleterious effects on social functioning.


Biological Psychiatry | 2003

Self-reported drug abuse in male adolescents with behavioral disturbances, and follow-up for future schizophrenia

Mark Weiser; Abraham Reichenberg; Jonathan Rabinowitz; Zeev Kaplan; Asaf Caspi; Ross Yasvizky; Mordechai Mark; Haim Y. Knobler; Daniella Nahon; Michael Davidson

BACKGROUND The prevalence of illicit drug abuse in persons with schizophrenia is greater then in the general population and has been attributed to self-medication of the symptoms of the illness; however, limited data indicate that drug abuse is already prevalent before the manifestation of psychosis, consistent with the possibility that drug abuse might be associated with increased risk for schizophrenia. METHODS The Israeli Draft Board screens the entire, unselected population of 16- to 17-year-old male adolescents for behavioral or personality disturbances. In a cohort of 270,000 male adolescents screened, 50,413 adolescents were suspected of having behavioral or personality disturbances and were questioned about drug use and abuse. These adolescents were followed for hospitalization for schizophrenia using a national, population-based psychiatric hospitalization registry; 268 of 50,413 (.5%) were hospitalized for schizophrenia over the following 5-11 years. RESULTS The prevalence of self-reported drug abuse in adolescents later hospitalized for schizophrenia was 12.4%, compared with 5.9% prevalence of drug abuse in adolescents not later hospitalized; adjusted RR = 2.016, 95% confidence interval: 1.309-3.104. CONCLUSIONS In this cohort of male adolescents with behavior disturbances, these results further support the hypothesis that drug abuse may be associated with increased risk for future schizophrenia.


Schizophrenia Research | 2007

Premorbid behavioral and intellectual functioning in schizophrenia patients with poor response to treatment with antipsychotic drugs

Asaf Caspi; Abraham Reichenberg; Mark Weiser; Jonathan Rabinowitz; Motti Shmushkevich; Gad Lubin; Daniella Nahon; Tali Vishne; Michael Davidson

INTRODUCTION Approximately one third of schizophrenia patients show partial or no response to pharmacotherapy. Despite intensive investigations, the phenomenological and biological characteristics of such patients are far from elucidated. This study examined the premorbid behavioral and intellectual functioning of schizophrenia patients who showed poor response to antipsychotic treatment. METHOD One hundred twenty-nine schizophrenia patients who showed poor response to treatment were ascertained from a national register and matched by gender, age and education to 129 patients who showed adequate response. The groups were compared on premorbid measures of behavioral and intellectual functions. RESULTS As a group, treatment-resistant male patients had significantly lower (worse) social functioning [p=0.002], and individual autonomy [p<0.0001] scores before the onset of the illness compared to treatment non-resistant patients. Male and female treatment-resistant patients did not differ from non-resistant patients in premorbid intellectual functioning [p>0.1]. CONCLUSIONS Low premorbid social functioning and individual autonomy, but not intellectual functioning, could serve as predictors of poor treatment response in schizophrenia.


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 2013

The prevalence of full and partial posttraumatic stress disorder among people with severe mental illness in Israel.

Marc Gelkopf; David Roe; Nomi Werbeloff; Ilanit Hasson-Ohayon; Kim T. Mueser; Asaf Caspi; Mark Weiser

Abstract Research has shown higher rates of trauma exposure and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among persons with severe mental illness (SMI). The aim of this study was to assess the prevalence of traumatic events and full and partial PTSD among people with SMI and their associations with trauma-related cognitions and depressive symptoms. A total of 122 persons with SMI were assessed for trauma exposure and PTSD. A subsample of 40 participants, 20 with PTSD and 20 without PTSD, were randomly selected, and their posttraumatic cognitions and depressive symptoms were assessed. The prevalence of traumatic events was 90%, and 19% met full diagnostic criteria for PTSD, and 20% had partial PTSD. The people with PTSD had more depressive symptoms and negative cognitions. PTSD in SMI is highly prevalent and underdiagnosed.


Schizophrenia Research | 2009

Refractive errors and schizophrenia

Asaf Caspi; Tali Vishne; Abraham Reichenberg; Mark Weiser; Ayelet Dishon; G. Lubin; Motti Shmushkevitz; Yossi Mandel; Shlomo Noy; Michael Davidson

BACKGROUND Refractive errors (myopia, hyperopia and amblyopia), like schizophrenia, have a strong genetic cause, and dopamine has been proposed as a potential mediator in their pathophysiology. The present study explored the association between refractive errors in adolescence and schizophrenia, and the potential familiality of this association. METHODS The Israeli Draft Board carries a mandatory standardized visual accuracy assessment. 678,674 males consecutively assessed by the Draft Board and found to be psychiatrically healthy at age 17 were followed for psychiatric hospitalization with schizophrenia using the Israeli National Psychiatric Hospitalization Case Registry. Sib-ships were also identified within the cohort. RESULTS There was a negative association between refractive errors and later hospitalization for schizophrenia. Future male schizophrenia patients were two times less likely to have refractive errors compared with never-hospitalized individuals, controlling for intelligence, years of education and socioeconomic status [adjusted Hazard Ratio=.55; 95% confidence interval .35-.85]. The non-schizophrenic male siblings of schizophrenia patients also had lower prevalence of refractive errors compared to never-hospitalized individuals. CONCLUSIONS Presence of refractive errors in adolescence is related to lower risk for schizophrenia. The familiality of this association suggests that refractive errors may be associated with the genetic liability to schizophrenia.


Early Intervention in Psychiatry | 2008

Dysthymia in male adolescents is associated with increased risk of later hospitalization for psychotic disorders: a historical-prospective cohort study.

Mark Weiser; Gad Lubin; Asaf Caspi; Jonathan Rabinowitz; Mordechai Shmushkevitz; Rinat Yoffe; Nomi Werbeloff; Demian Halperin; Michael Davidson

Aim: Retrospective studies indicate that patients with psychotic disorders and schizophrenia often suffer from depressive symptoms before the onset of psychosis. In a historical‐prospective design, we studied the association between dysthymia in adolescence and later hospitalization for psychotic disorders and schizophrenia.


Archives of Womens Mental Health | 2017

Computerized assessment of body image in anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa: comparison with standardized body image assessment tool

Asaf Caspi; Revital Amiaz; Noa Davidson; Efrat Czerniak; Eitan Gur; Nahum Kiryati; Daniel Harari; Miriam Furst; Dan J. Stein

Body image disturbances are a prominent feature of eating disorders (EDs). Our aim was to test and evaluate a computerized assessment of body image (CABI), to compare the body image disturbances in different ED types, and to assess the factors affecting body image. The body image of 22 individuals undergoing inpatient treatment with restricting anorexia nervosa (AN-R), 22 with binge/purge AN (AN-B/P), 20 with bulimia nervosa (BN), and 41 healthy controls was assessed using the Contour Drawing Rating Scale (CDRS), the CABI, which simulated the participants’ self-image in different levels of weight changes, and the Eating Disorder Inventory-2-Body Dissatisfaction (EDI-2-BD) scale. Severity of depression and anxiety was also assessed. Significant differences were found among the three scales assessing body image, although most of their dimensions differentiated between patients with EDs and controls. Our findings support the use of the CABI in the comparison of body image disturbances in patients with EDs vs. controls. Moreover, the use of different assessment tools allows for a better understanding of the differences in body image disturbances in different ED types.


medical image computing and computer assisted intervention | 2000

Computer-Based Assessment of Body Image Distortion in Anorexia Nervosa Patients

Daniel Harari; Miriam Furst; Nahum Kiryati; Asaf Caspi; Michael Davidson

A computer-based method for the assessment of body image distortions in anorexia nervosa and other eating-disordered patients is presented. At the core of the method is a realistic pictorial simulation of lifelike weight-changes, applied to a real source image of the patient. The patients, using a graphical user interface, adjust their body shapes until they meet their self-perceived appearance. Measuring the extent of virtual fattening or slimming of a body with respect to its real shape and size, allows direct, quantitative evaluation of the cognitive distortion in body image. In a preliminary experiment involving 20 anorexia-nervosa patients, 70% of the subjects chose an image with simulated visual weight gain of about 20% as their “real” body image. None of them recognized the original body image, thus demonstrating the quality of the transformed images. The method presented can be applied in the research, diagnosis, evaluation and treatment of eating disorders.

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Abraham Reichenberg

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Daniel Harari

Weizmann Institute of Science

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