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Featured researches published by Gregg Cohen.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1988

MRI abnormalities in tardive dyskinesia

Carmen C. Mion; Nancy C. Andreasen; Stephan Arndt; Victor W. Swayze; Gregg Cohen

Most investigators studying tardive dyskinesia (TD) hypothesize that the condition is due to a neurochemical abnormality of the striatum. Recently, numerous CT studies have been done to verify brain abnormalities in patients with TD; the findings have, however, been conflicting. The present study was designed to detect possible neuropathological abnormalities in the basal ganglia in a young sample of schizophrenic patients with TD as compared with schizophrenic patients without TD and normal controls. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was used to measure the volumes of the caudate, putamen, globus pallidus, lateral ventricle, and intracranium. The volumes of the caudate nuclei of the patients with TD were significantly smaller than the volumes of the caudate nuclei of the patients without TD and normal controls. This abnormality in the caudate may be related to some previous conditions, which may prove a substrate that is necessary for TD to establish itself in association with neuroleptic use. Further studies are necessary to confirm our findings and to determine the pathophysiologic nature of these structural alterations and the role played by neuroleptics, whether primary or secondary.


NeuroImage | 1994

Evaluating and Validating Two Methods for Estimating Brain Structure Volumes: Tessellation and Simple Pixel Counting

Stephan Arndt; Victor W. Swayze; T. Cizadlo; Daniel S. O'Leary; Gregg Cohen; William T. C. Yuh; James C. Ehrhardt; Nancy C. Andreasen

Developments in imaging technology have made three-dimensional visualization of internal brain structures possible with excellent resolution. Since improved visualization implies improved measurement, these advances hold promise to more accurately measure the volumes of internal structures. As new technologies and techniques emerge, evaluating the relative benefits of measurement methods becomes necessary. We compared and evaluated two methods of estimating volumes from images of brain structures. One method counted pixels within a region of interest, while the other method tessellated the surface between tracings on adjacent slices. Our study assessed both measurement error for true phantom volumes and method disparity for in vivo structures in a randomly selected sample of subjects (n = 100). For our comparisons, we focused on the temporal lobe, ventricular system, and hippocampus. Bias, independence of measurement errors and maximal discrimination of individual differences are properties that are relevant to validating and evaluating measurements of cerebral structure. Pixel counting proved to be the more robust of the two methods, being less sensitive to nuisance-interactions between size of object, shape, and slice thickness. Clinical and research applications of imaging techniques may have distinctive but overlapping needs when evaluating and validating new developments in imaging.


Schizophrenia Research | 1991

T1 and T2 relaxation times in schizophrenia as measured with magnetic resonance imaging

Nancy C. Andreasen; James C. Ehrhardt; Victor W. Swayze; Gary Tyrell; Gregg Cohen; Jing Shun Ku; Stephan Arndt

T1 and T2 relaxation times were measured in ten brain regions on the right and left side in a sample of 27 schizophrenic patients and 37 normal controls. The schizophrenic patients showed a prolongation of T2 relaxation time, and to a lesser extent of T1 relaxation time, which was more predominantly localized in the right hemisphere and in gray matter structures. These results may indicate that metabolic, physiological, or neurochemical brain function in schizophrenia is related in some way to a change in tissue fluid in neuronal cell bodies or interstitial gray matter.


Archives of General Psychiatry | 1992

Hypofrontality in Neuroleptic-Naive Patients and in Patients With Chronic Schizophrenia: Assessment With Xenon 133 Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography and the Tower of London

Nancy C. Andreasen; Karim Rezai; Randall Alliger; Victor W. Swayze; Michael Flaum; Peter T. Kirchner; Gregg Cohen; Daniel S. O'Leary


American Journal of Psychiatry | 1993

Intelligence and Brain Structure in Normal Individuals

Nancy C. Andreasen; Michael Flaum; Victor W. Swayze; Daniel S. O'Leary; Randall Alliger; Gregg Cohen; James C. Ehrhardt; William T. C. Yuh


Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 1992

Image processing for the study of brain structure and function: problems and programs.

Nancy C. Andreasen; Gregg Cohen; Greg Harris; T. Cizadlo; Jussi Parkkinen; Karim Rezai; Swayze V nd


JAMA Neurology | 1993

The Neuropsychology of the Prefrontal Cortex

Karim Rezai; Nancy C. Andreasen; Randy Alliger; Gregg Cohen; Victor W. Swayze; Daniel S. O'Leary


Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 1993

Voxel processing techniques for the antemortem study of neuroanatomy and neuropathology using magnetic resonance imaging.

Nancy C. Andreasen; T. Cizadlo; Greg Harris; Swayze V nd; Daniel S. O'Leary; Gregg Cohen; James C. Ehrhardt; William T. C. Yuh


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1991

Problems with ratio and proportion measures of imaged cerebral structures

Stephan Arndt; Gregg Cohen; Randall Alliger; Victor W. Swayze; Nancy C. Andreasen


JAMA Neurology | 1990

Developmental abnormalities of the corpus callosum in schizophrenia.

Victor W. Swayze; Nancy C. Andreasen; James C. Ehrhardt; William T. C. Yuh; Randall Alliger; Gregg Cohen

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Nancy C. Andreasen

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Victor W. Swayze

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

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Stephan Arndt

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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T. Cizadlo

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

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