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Dive into the research topics where Guillaume Sierro is active.

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Featured researches published by Guillaume Sierro.


Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2016

Validation of the French Autism Spectrum Quotient scale and its relationships with schizotypy and Eysenckian personality traits

Guillaume Sierro; Jérôme Rossier; Christine Mohr

BACKGROUND Autism and schizophrenia spectra were long considered distinct entities. Yet, recent studies emphasized overlapping clinical and personality features suggesting common mechanisms and liabilities. Independent notions, however, highlight that the two spectra oppose each other socially (positive schizotypal hyper-mentalism versus autistic hypo-mentalism). METHODS To clarify these relationships, we used data from 921 French-speaking Swiss undergraduates to firstly validate the French Autism Spectrum Questionnaire (AQ) identifying an optimal factor structure. Secondly, we assessed relationships between this AQ structure and schizotypic personality traits. RESULTS Results from correlational and principal component analyses replicated both overlapping and opposing relationships. CONCLUSIONS We conjecture that autistic traits opposing positive schizotypy represent autistic mentalizing deficits. We discuss implications of our findings relative to theories of autism and schizophrenia spectrum relationships.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2013

Affect-related synesthesias: a prospective view on their existence, expression and underlying mechanisms.

Nele Dael; Guillaume Sierro; Christine Mohr

The literature on developmental synesthesia has seen numerous sensory combinations, with surprisingly few reports on synesthesias involving affect. On the one hand, emotion, or more broadly affect, might be of minor importance to the synesthetic experience (e.g., Sinke et al., 2012). On the other hand, predictions on how affect could be relevant to the synesthetic experience remain to be formulated, in particular those that are driven by emotion theories. In this theoretical paper, we hypothesize that a priori studies on synesthesia involving affect will observe the following. Firstly, the synesthetic experience is not merely about discrete emotion processing or overall valence (positive, negative) but is determined by or even altered through cognitive appraisal processes. Secondly, the synesthetic experience changes temporarily on a quantitative level according to (i) the affective appraisal of the inducing stimulus or (ii) the current affective state of the individual. These hypotheses are inferred from previous theoretical and empirical accounts on synesthesia (including the few examples involving affect), different emotion theories, crossmodal processing accounts in synesthetes, and non-synesthetes, and the presumed stability of the synesthetic experience. We hope that the current review will succeed in launching a new series of studies on “affective synesthesias.” We particularly hope that such studies will apply the same creativity in experimental paradigms as we have seen and still see when assessing and evaluating “traditional” synesthesias.


Schizophrenia Research: Cognition | 2015

Does chronic nicotine consumption influence visual backward masking in schizophrenia and schizotypy

Albulena Shaqiri; Julie Willemin; Guillaume Sierro; Maya Roinishvili; Luisa Iannantuoni; Linda Rürup; Eka Chkonia; Michael H. Herzog; Christine Mohr

Nicotine consumption is higher for people within the schizophrenia spectrum compared to controls. This observation supports the self-medication hypothesis, that nicotine relieves symptoms in, for example, schizophrenia patients. We tested whether performance in an endophenotype of schizophrenia (visual backward masking, VBM) is modulated by nicotine consumption in i) smoking and non-smoking schizophrenia patients, their first-degree relatives, and age-matched controls, ii) non-smoking and smoking university students, and iii) non-smoking, early and late onset nicotine smokers. Overall, our results confirmed that VBM deficits are an endophenotype of schizophrenia, i.e., deficits were highest in patients, followed by their relatives, students scoring high in Cognitive Disorganisation, and controls. Moreover, we found i) beneficial effects of chronic nicotine consumption on VBM performance, in particular with increasing age, and ii) little impact of clinical status alone or in interaction with nicotine consumption on VBM performance. Given the younger age of undergraduate students (up to 30 years) versus controls and patients (up to 66 years), we propose that age-dependent VBM deficits emerge when schizotypy effects are targeted in populations of a larger age range, but that nicotine consumption might counteract these deficits (supporting the self-medication hypothesis).


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2017

Electrophysiological correlates of visual backward masking in high schizotypic personality traits participants

Ophélie Favrod; Guillaume Sierro; Maya Roinishvili; Eka Chkonia; Christine Mohr; Michael H. Herzog; Céline Cappe

Visual backward masking is strongly deteriorated in patients with schizophrenia. Masking deficits are associated with strongly reduced amplitudes of the global field power in the EEG. Healthy participants who scored high in cognitive disorganization (a schizotypic trait) were impaired in backward masking compared to participants who scored low. Here, we show that the global field power is also reduced in healthy participants scoring high (n=25) as compared to low (n=20) in cognitive disorganization, though quantitatively less pronounced than in patients (n=10). These results point to similar mechanisms underlying visual backward masking deficits along the schizophrenia spectrum.


European Journal of Psychological Assessment | 2016

French Validation of the O-LIFE Short Questionnaire

Guillaume Sierro; Jérȏme Rossier; Oliver Mason; Christine Mohr


European Psychiatry | 2015

The measurement invariance of schizotypy in Europe

Eduardo Fonseca-Pedrero; Javier Ortuño-Sierra; Guillaume Sierro; C. Daniel; Matteo Cella; Antonio Preti; Christine Mohr; Oliver Mason


Behavioural Brain Research | 2011

Accurate performance of a rat model of schizophrenia in the water maze depends on visual cue availability and stability: A distortion in cognitive mapping abilities?

Delphine Preissmann; Guillaume Sierro; Jan-Harry Cabungcal; Françoise Schenk


Journal of Vision | 2016

Electrophysiological correlates of backward masking in students scoring high in cognitive disorganization

Ophélie Favrod; Guillaume Sierro; Maya Roinishvili; Eka Chkonia; Christine Mohr; Céline Cappe; Michael H. Herzog


Journal of Vision | 2016

Gender differences in visual perception

Albulena Shaqiri; Andreas Brand; Maya Roinishvili; Marina Kunchulia; Guillaume Sierro; Julie Willemin; Eka Chkonia; Luisa Iannantuoni; Karin S. Pilz; Christine Mohr; Michael H. Herzog


Behavioural Brain Research | 2015

Corrigendum to “Accurate performance of a rat model of schizophrenia in the water maze depends on visual cue availability and stability: A distortion in cognitive mapping abilities?” [Behav. Brain Res. 223 (2011) 145–153]

Delphine Preissmann; Guillaume Sierro; Jan-Harry Cabungcal; Françoise Schenk

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Michael H. Herzog

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Céline Cappe

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Eka Chkonia

Tbilisi State Medical University

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Albulena Shaqiri

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Andreas Brand

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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