Christian Thoresen
Oslo University Hospital
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Publication
Featured researches published by Christian Thoresen.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Martin Tesli; Kristina C. Skåtun; Olga Therese Ousdal; Andrew Anand Brown; Christian Thoresen; Ingrid Agartz; Ingrid Melle; Srdjan Djurovic; Jimmy Jensen; Ole A. Andreassen
Objectives Several genetic studies have implicated the CACNA1C SNP rs1006737 in bipolar disorder (BD) and schizophrenia (SZ) pathology. This polymorphism was recently found associated with increased amygdala activity in healthy controls and patients with BD. We performed a functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) study in a sample of BD and SZ cases and healthy controls to test for altered amygdala activity in carriers of the rs1006737 risk allele (AA/AG), and to investigate if there were differences across the diagnostic groups. Methods Rs1006737 was genotyped in 250 individuals (N = 66 BD, 61 SZ and 123 healthy controls), all of Northern European origin, who underwent an fMRI negative faces matching task. Statistical tests were performed with a model correcting for sex, age, diagnostic category and medication status in the total sample, and then in each diagnostic group. Results In the total sample, carriers of the risk allele had increased activation in the left amygdala. Group-wise analyses showed that this effect was significant in the BD group, but not in the other diagnostic groups. However, there was no significant interaction effect for the risk allele between BD and the other groups. Conclusions These results indicate that CACNA1C SNP rs1006737 affects amygdala activity during emotional processing across all diagnostic groups. The current findings add to the growing body of knowledge of the pleiotropic effect of this polymorphism, and further support that ion channel dysregulation is involved in the underlying mechanisms of BD and SZ.
Psychology Crime & Law | 2006
Christian Thoresen; Kyrre L⊘nnum; Annika Melinder; Ulf Stridbeck; Svein Magnussen
Abstract Has the increased public and professional awareness of the challenges of interviewing children in forensic contexts led to changes and improvements in police interviewing practices? A representative sample (n=91) of police interviews conducted during the period of 1985–2002 from a large Norwegian police district was analysed. The results indicated that interviewer strategies have improved; there was a decrease in the use of suggestive, yes/no and option-posing questions and this decrease was accompanied by a comparable increase in the use of cued recall questions. The frequency of open-ended invitations was low and did not change much over time. Factors that might have led to the observed changes are briefly discussed.
NeuroImage: Clinical | 2016
Beathe Haatveit; Jimmy Jensen; Dag Alnæs; Tobias Kaufmann; Christine Lycke Brandt; Christian Thoresen; Ole A. Andreassen; Ingrid Melle; Torill Ueland; Lars T. Westlye
Background Schizophrenia is associated with cognitive impairment and brain network dysconnectivity. Recent efforts have explored brain circuits underlying cognitive dysfunction in schizophrenia and documented altered activation of large-scale brain networks, including the task-positive network (TPN) and the task-negative default mode network (DMN) in response to cognitive demands. However, to what extent TPN and DMN dysfunction reflect overlapping mechanisms and are dependent on cognitive state remain to be determined. Methods In the current study, we investigated the recruitment of TPN and DMN using independent component analysis in patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders (n = 29) and healthy controls (n = 21) during two different executive tasks probing planning/problem-solving and spatial working memory. Results We found reduced load-dependent DMN deactivation across tasks in patients compared to controls. Furthermore, we observed only moderate associations between the TPN and DMN activation across groups, implying that the two networks reflect partly independent mechanisms. Additionally, whereas TPN activation was associated with task performance in both tasks, no such associations were found for DMN. Conclusion These results support a general load-dependent DMN dysfunction in schizophrenia spectrum disorder across two demanding executive tasks that is not merely an epiphenomenon of cognitive dysfunction.
Cognitive Neuropsychiatry | 2014
Christian Thoresen; Tor Endestad; Niels Petter Sigvartsen; Andres Server; Ingeborg Bolstad; Mikael Johansson; Ole A. Andreassen; Jimmy Jensen
Introduction Impaired monitoring of internally generated information has been proposed to be one component in the development and maintenance of delusions. The present study investigated the neural correlates underlying the monitoring processes and whether they were associated with delusions. Methods Twenty healthy controls and 19 patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders were administrated a reality monitoring paradigm during functional magnetic resonance imaging. During encoding participants were instructed to associate a statement with either a presented (viewed condition) or an imagined picture (imagined condition). During the monitoring session in the scanner, participants were presented with old and new statements and their task was to identify whether a given statement was associated with the viewed condition, imagined condition, or if it was new. Results Patients showed significantly reduced accuracy in the imagined condition with performance negatively associated with degree of delusions. This was accompanied with reduced activity in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and left hippocampus in the patient group. The severity of delusions was negatively correlated with the blood-oxygenation-level dependent response in the left hippocampus. Conclusions The results suggest that weakened monitoring is associated with delusions in patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorder, and that this may be mediated by a frontotemporal dysfunction.
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2012
Christian Thoresen; Jimmy Jensen; Niels Petter Sigvartsen; Ingeborg Bolstad; Andres Server; Per H. Nakstad; Ole A. Andreassen; Tor Endestad
This study investigated the effect of arousal on short-term relational memory and its underlying cortical network. Seventeen healthy participants performed a picture by location, short-term relational memory task using emotional pictures. Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to measure the blood-oxygenation-level dependent signal relative to task. Subjects’ own ratings of the pictures were used to obtain subjective arousal ratings. Subjective arousal was found to have a dose-dependent effect on activations in the prefrontal cortex, amygdala, hippocampus, and in higher order visual areas. Serial position analyses showed that high arousal trials produced a stronger primacy and recency effect than low arousal trials. The results indicate that short-term relational memory may be facilitated by arousal and that this may be modulated by a dose–response function in arousal-driven neuronal regions.
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2010
Annika Melinder; Kristen Weede Alexander; Young Il Cho; Gail S. Goodman; Christian Thoresen; Kyrre Lønnum; Svein Magnussen
Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2012
Kristin Lie Romm; Ingrid Melle; Christian Thoresen; Ole A. Andreassen; Jan Ivar Røssberg
Applied Cognitive Psychology | 2009
Christian Thoresen; Kyrre Lønnum; Annika Melinder; Svein Magnussen
Applied Cognitive Psychology | 2015
Miriam Sinkerud Johnson; Svein Magnussen; Christian Thoresen; Kyrre Lønnum; Lisa Victoria Burrell; Annika Melinder
PLOS ONE | 2013
Martin Tesli; Kristina C. Skåtun; Olga Therese Ousdal; Andrew Anand Brown; Christian Thoresen; Ingrid Agartz; Ingrid Melle; Srdjan Djurovic; Jimmy Jensen; Ole A. Andreassen