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Dive into the research topics where John L. Woodard is active.

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Featured researches published by John L. Woodard.


Epilepsia | 2005

Screening for Major Depression in Epilepsy with Common Self‐report Depression Inventories

Jana E. Jones; Bruce P. Hermann; John L. Woodard; John J. Barry; Frank Gilliam; Andres M. Kanner; Kimford J. Meador

Summary:u2002 Purpose: Major depression is a common psychiatric comorbidity in chronic epilepsy that is frequently unrecognized and untreated. A variety of self‐report mood inventories are available, but their validity as well as ability to detect major depression in epilepsy remains uncertain. The purpose of this study was to determine the ability of two common depressive symptom inventories to identify major depression in people with epilepsy.


Genetics in Medicine | 2004

Who seeks genetic susceptibility testing for Alzheimer’s disease? Findings from a multisite, randomized clinical trial

J. Scott Roberts; Melissa Barber; Tamsen Brown; L. Adrienne Cupples; Lindsay A. Farrer; Susan LaRusse; Stephen G. Post; Kimberly A. Quaid; Lisa D. Ravdin; Norman Relkin; A. Dessa Sadovnick; Peter J. Whitehouse; John L. Woodard; Robert C. Green

Purpose: Alzheimer’s disease, for which one form of the apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotype is a risk factor, provides a paradigm in which to examine response to susceptibility testing for common, complex diseases. This study’s main purposes were to estimate interest in such testing and to examine demographic predictors of study participation.Methods: In this 3-site, randomized clinical trial (RCT), the intervention was a risk assessment program wherein genetic counselors educated adult children of AD patients about lifetime risk of disease based on their gender, family history, and APOE genotype. Two groups of participants were followed from initial contact to RCT enrollment: those who were systematically contacted through research registries, and those who were self-referred.Results: Of 196 systematically contacted participants, 47, or 24%, progressed from initial contact to RCT enrollment. These participants were more likely to be below age 60 (adjusted OR = 3.83, P < 0.01) and college educated (adjusted OR = 3.48, P < 0.01). Of 179 self-referred participants, 115, or 64%, progressed from initial contact to RCT enrollment. Most self-referred participants had a college education and were female (79%).Conclusions: In the first RCT to examine genetic susceptibility testing for AD, uptake rates were sufficiently high to merit concern that future test demand may strain available education and counseling resources. Findings suggest that susceptibility testing for AD may be of particular interest to women, college educated persons, and persons below age 60.


Neuropsychologia | 2005

Medial temporal lobe activity for recognition of recent and remote famous names: an event-related fMRI study

Kelli L. Douville; John L. Woodard; Michael Seidenberg; Sarah K. Miller; Catherine L. Leveroni; Kristy A. Nielson; Malgorzata Franczak; Piero Antuono; Stephen M. Rao

Previous neuroimaging studies examining recognition of famous faces have identified activation of an extensive bilateral neural network [Gorno Tempini, M. L., Price, C. J., Josephs, O., Vandenberghe, R., Cappa, S. F., Kapur, N. et al. (1998). The neural systems sustaining face and proper-name processing. Brain, 121, 2103-2118], including the medial temporal lobe (MTL) and specifically the hippocampal complex [Haist, F., Bowden, G. J., & Mao, H. (2001). Consolidation of human memory over decades revealed by functional magnetic resonance imaging. Nature Neuroscience, 4, 1139-1145; Leveroni, C. L., Seidenberg, M., Mayer, A. R., Mead, L. A., Binder, J. R., & Rao, S. M. (2000). Neural systems underlying the recognition of familiar and newly learned faces. Journal of Neuroscience, 20, 878-886]. One model of hippocampal functioning in autobiographical, episodic memory retrieval argues that the hippocampal complex remains active in retrieval tasks regardless of time or age of memory (multiple trace theory, MTT), whereas another proposal posits that the hippocampal complex plays a time-limited role in retrieval of autobiographical memories. The current event-related fMRI study focused on the medial temporal lobe and its response to recognition judgments of famous names from two distinct time epochs (1990s and 1950s) in 15 right-handed healthy older adults (mean age=70 years). A pilot study with an independent sample of young and older subjects ensured that the stimuli were representative of a recent and remote time period. Increased MR signal activity was observed on a bilateral basis for both the hippocampus and parahippocampal gyrus (PHG) during recognition of familiar names from both the recent and remote time periods when compared to non-famous names. However, the impulse response functions in the right hippocampus and right PHG demonstrated a differential response to stimuli from different time epochs, with the 1990s names showing the greatest MR signal intensity change, followed by the 1950s names, followed by foils. The finding that recognition of famous names produced significant bilateral MTL activation regardless of time epoch relative to foils provides support for the MTT model. However, the finding of a temporal gradient in the right MTL also provides support for the HC model, given the greater MTL response associated with recently famous names relative to remotely famous names.


Journal of The International Neuropsychological Society | 2008

The moderating role of negative affect on objective verbal memory performance and subjective memory complaints in healthy older adults.

Moira C. Dux; John L. Woodard; John E. Calamari; Michael Messina; Shalini Arora; Heather M. Chik; Noelle K. Pontarelli

Subjective memory complaints (SMCs) are part of the diagnostic criteria for Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI), yet little is known about their etiology. In some previous studies, no direct relation has been found between SMCs and objective memory performance, yet significant correlations have been identified between SMCs and psychological factors such as depression and anxiety. In the current study, we examined whether negative affect moderated the relation between objective memory functioning and SMCs in a sample of healthy, non-demented participants aged 65 and older. As predicted, several negative affect measures moderated the relationship between objective cognitive functioning and SMCs. In the absence of objective memory impairment as indexed by the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test (RAVLT) and the Dementia Rating Scale-2nd Edition (DRS-2), higher levels of negative affect were associated with increased levels of SMCs. Moreover, a lower order negative affect factor, anxiety sensitivity, significantly moderated the relation between objective memory functioning and SMCs, after controlling for higher order measures of general negative affectivity. Findings suggest that negative affect, particularly anxiety sensitivity, distorts the subjective appraisal of ones own memory, such that people high on negative affect factors report more episodes of forgetting, even in the absence of objective cognitive impairments.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2006

Age-related functional recruitment for famous name recognition: An event-related fMRI study

Kristy A. Nielson; Kelli L. Douville; Michael Seidenberg; John L. Woodard; Sarah K. Miller; Malgorzata Franczak; Piero Antuono; Stephen M. Rao

Recent neuroimaging research shows that older adults exhibit recruitment, or increased activation on various cognitive tasks. The current study evaluated whether a similar pattern also occurs in semantic memory by evaluating age-related differences during recognition of Recent (since the 1990s) and Enduring (1950s to present) famous names. Fifteen healthy older and 15 healthy younger adults performed the name recognition task with a high and comparable degree of accuracy, although older adults had slower reaction time in response to Recent famous names. Event-related functional MRI showed extensive networks of activation in the two groups including posterior cingulate, right hippocampus, temporal lobe and left prefrontal regions. The Recent condition produced more extensive activation than the Enduring condition. Older adults had more extensive and greater magnitude of activation in 15 of 20 regions, particularly for the Recent condition (15 of 15; 7 of 15 also differed for Enduring); young adults did not show greater activation magnitude in any region. There were no group differences for non-famous names, indicating that age differences are task-specific. The results support and extend the existing literature to semantic memory tasks, indicating that older adult brains use functional recruitment to support task performance, even when task performance accuracy is high.


Assessment | 2008

Anxiety Sensitivity and Obsessive--Compulsive Disorder

John E. Calamari; Neil A. Rector; John L. Woodard; Robyn J. Cohen; Heather M. Chik

Anxiety sensitivity (AS), a cognitive risk factor for anxiety disorders, was evaluated in a homogeneous obsessive—compulsive disorder (OCD) sample. A total of 280 individuals with OCD completed measures. Evaluation of the Anxiety Sensitivity Index revealed a latent structure that was congruent with previous studies showing a single higher order and three lower order factors, although greater variance was accounted for by the general factor than in a previous study. AS was significantly associated with OCD symptom severity after controlling for other putative cognitive risk factors, although the additional variance explained was small. Variability in the relationship of AS to OCD symptom severity was found across OCD symptom subgroups. Results suggest that AS might be an important aspect of OCD-relevant cognition for specific OCD subgroups, and the need for experimental evaluation is discussed.


Aging Neuropsychology and Cognition | 2005

Development of a Brief Cognitive Screen for Mild Cognitive Impairment and Neurocognitive Disorder

John L. Woodard; Elinor S.W. Dorsett; James G. Cooper; Bruce P. Hermann; Mark A. Sager

Abstract The purpose of this study was to develop and evaluate a brief cognitive screen for possible Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) and other neurocognitive impairment in a sample of general medical patients. Two hundred community-dwelling general medical patients aged 65 or older participated in this study. Age and education corrected scores from the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test and Mattis Dementia Rating Scale were used to classify participants into three groups: MCI, neurocognitive disorder, cognitively intact. Groups were then compared on an independent set of measures: the Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer’s Disease (CERAD) neuropsychological battery, Mini-Mental State Examination, and Clock Drawing Test. The MCI group constituted 9% of the sample, while 10.5% of the sample was classified into the neurocognitive disorder group. The CERAD Verbal Category Fluency and CERAD Word List Memory Test Delayed Recall measures were individually and collectively the most effective in differentiating cognitively intact elders from persons in both the MCI and neurocognitive disorder groups. We conclude that these two brief measures appear to be effective for detecting possible MCI or neurocognitive disorder, thereby facilitating identification of candidates who would benefit from more detailed neuropsychological assessment.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 2004

Value of Signal Detection Theory Indexes for Wechsler Memory Scale-III Recognition Measures

John L. Woodard; Bradley N. Axelrod; Kristen L. Mordecai; Kerri D. Shannon

This study investigated the utility of signal detection theory (SDT) indexes in conjunction with the Wechsler Memory Scale-III (WMS-III) to supplement the age-scaled scores that are typically calculated for recognition measures. Participants included 23 dementia patients and 22 patients with major depressive disorder who were administered the WMS-III as part of a larger neuropsychological evaluation. Each clinical group was compared against a demographically matched control group drawn from the WMS-III standardization sample. Discriminability indexes (e.g., d′) identified significant group differences in the dementia patients relative to their control group on Faces 1, Logical Memory, and Verbal Paired Associates (VPA), as well as in the depressed patients relative to their controls on VPA. A liberal response bias (e.g., c) was revealed for the dementia patients relative to their controls for VPA. False alarms, but not hits, were significantly different between dementia patients and their controls. Our results suggest that WMS-III recognition measures can be enhanced through the use of SDT indexes of discriminability and response bias. They can jointly convey information regarding memory performance and the decision-making process that are both inherent in most yes/no recognition memory paradigms.


Psychological Assessment | 2000

Parsimonious prediction of Wechsler Memory Scale--III memory indices.

Bradley N. Axelrod; John L. Woodard

Equations for prorating the Wechsler Memory Scale--III (WMS-III) Index scores were derived and validated on a sample of 252 mixed clinical cases. Regression equations were performed using age-scaled scores as predictors and the sum of age-scaled scores for Immediate Memory (IM) and General Memory (GM) as the criteria. Including Logical Memory and Verbal Paired Associates with either Faces or Family Pictures resulted in estimated scores that accounted for 95% to 97% of the variance for IM and GM. Over 80% of these cases had estimated sum of scaled scores that fell within 3 points of actual sum of scaled scores, within 1 standard error of measurement. When only Logical Memory and Verbal Paired Associates were included, estimations accounted for only 87% of the variance, and only 60% of the estimated scores fell within 3 points of actual sum of scaled scores. The regression equations are presented, as are the confidence intervals derived from a bootstrapping procedure that created 15,000 different samples.


Assessment | 2001

Cross Validation of Prediction Equations for Wechsler Memory Scale-Ill Indexes

Bradley N. Axelrod; John D. Dingell; Joseph J. Ryan; John L. Woodard

Six prediction equations were previously found to predict to Wechsler Memory Scale-III (WMS-3) Immediate Memory Index (IM) and General Memory Index (GM) using twoor three-subtest combinations. The equations were cross-validated on a sample of 214 mixed clinical patients from an entirely different location in the Midwest. The two three-subtest prediction equations (including Logical Memory, Verbal Paired Associates, and either Faces or Family Pictures) better estimated IM and GM than did the two-subtest equations (Logical Memory and Verbal Paired Associates). Correlations for the former equations correlated .97 and .96 with full WMS-3 IM and GM, respectively. In addition, at least 95% of the predicted scores were within two SEMs of obtained IM and GM scores. The twosubtest equations correlated only .89 for IM and .92 for GM. The predicted scores that fell within two SEMs captured 78% and 88% of the cases for IM and GM, respectively. The results provide support for the use of the three-subtest prorated forms of the WMS-3 to estimate IM and GM.

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Michael Seidenberg

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Stephen M. Rao

Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science

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J. Carson Smith

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Melissa A. Lancaster

Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science

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Monica Matthews

Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science

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Sally Durgerian

Medical College of Wisconsin

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John E. Calamari

Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science

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