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Dive into the research topics where Kathryn A. McGuire is active.

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Featured researches published by Kathryn A. McGuire.


NeuroImage | 2011

Evidence of disrupted functional connectivity in the brain after combat-related blast injury

Scott R. Sponheim; Kathryn A. McGuire; Seung Suk Kang; Nicholas D. Davenport; Selin Aviyente; Edward M. Bernat; Kelvin O. Lim

Non-impact blast-related mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) appears to be present in soldiers returning from deployments to Afghanistan and Iraq. Although mTBI typically results in cognitive deficits that last less than a month, there is evidence that disrupted coordination of brain activity can persist for at least several months following injury (Thatcher et al., 1989, 2001). In the present study we examined whether neural communication may be affected in soldiers months after blast-related mTBI, and whether coordination of neural function is associated with underlying white matter integrity. The investigation included an application of a new time-frequency based method for measuring electroencephalogram (EEG) phase synchronization (Aviyente et al., 2010) as well as fractional anisotropy measures of axonal tracts derived from diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). Nine soldiers who incurred a blast-related mTBI during deployments to Afghanistan or Iraq were compared with eight demographically similar control subjects. Despite an absence of cognitive deficits, the blast-related mTBI group exhibited diminished EEG phase synchrony of lateral frontal sites with contralateral frontal brain regions suggesting diminished interhemispheric coordination of brain activity as a result of blast injury. For blast injured (i.e., blast-related mTBI) soldiers we found that EEG phase synchrony was associated with the structural integrity of white matter tracts of the frontal lobe (left anterior thalamic radiations and the forceps minor including the anterior corpus callosum). Analyses revealed that diminished EEG phase synchrony was not the consequence of combat-stress symptoms (e.g., post-traumatic stress and depression) and commonly prescribed medications. Results provide evidence for poor coordination of frontal neural function after blast injury that may be the consequence of damaged anterior white matter tracts.


Psychology and Aging | 1993

Dimensionality and clustering in the semantic network of patients with Alzheimer's disease

Agnes S. Chan; Nelson Butters; David P. Salmon; Kathryn A. McGuire

: The organization of semantic memory in patients with Alzheimers disease (AD) was investigated with a triadic comparison task. A multidimensional scaling statistic was used to analyze proximity data and to generate 3-dimensional cognitive maps that were then compared by a discriminant function analysis. The results suggest that the structure of semantic memory in AD patients differs from that of elderly normal controls (NC) in 2 ways. First, AD patients are less consistent in using the attributes (predation, domesticity, and size) of concepts. Second, AD patients focus primarily on concrete perceptual information (size), whereas NC Ss stress abstract conceptual knowledge (domesticity). These results are consistent with the notion that AD is characterized by a breakdown in the structure of semantic knowledge.


Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology | 2010

Evaluation Context Impacts Neuropsychological Performance of OEF/OIF Veterans with Reported Combat-Related Concussion

Nathaniel W Nelson; James B. Hoelzle; Kathryn A. McGuire; Amanda G. Ferrier-Auerbach; Molly J. Charlesworth; Scott R. Sponheim

Although soldiers of Operations Iraqi Freedom (OIF) and Enduring Freedom (OEF) encounter combat-related concussion at an unprecedented rate, relatively few studies have examined how evaluation context, insufficient effort, and concussion history impact neuropsychological performances in the years following injury. The current study explores these issues in a sample of 119 U.S. veterans (OEF/OIF forensic concussion, n = 24; non-OEF/OIF forensic concussion, n = 20; OEF/OIF research concussion, n = 38; OEF/OIF research without concussion, n = 37). The OEF/OIF forensic concussion group exhibited significantly higher rates of insufficient effort relative to the OEF/OIF research concussion group, but a comparable rate of insufficient effort relative to the non-OEF/OIF forensic concussion group. After controlling for effort, the research concussion and the research non-concussion groups demonstrated comparable neuropsychological performance. Results highlight the importance of effort assessment among OEF/OIF and other veterans with concussion history, particularly in forensic contexts.


Biological Psychiatry | 2006

Neural Anomalies During Sustained Attention in First-Degree Biological Relatives of Schizophrenia Patients

Scott R. Sponheim; Kathryn A. McGuire; John J. Stanwyck

BACKGROUND A deficit in sustained attention might serve as an endophenotype for schizophrenia and therefore be a useful tool in understanding the genetic underpinnings of the disorder. We sought to detail functional brain abnormalities associated with sustained attention (i.e., vigilance) in individuals with genetic liability for schizophrenia. METHODS We gathered electrophysiological data from 23 schizophrenia patients, 28 first-degree biological relatives of schizophrenia patients, and 23 nonpsychiatric control subjects while they performed a degraded-stimulus continuous performance task. Inclusion of sensory control trials allowed separation of target detection and vigilance effects on brain potentials. RESULTS Schizophrenia patients, but not relatives, showed a behavioral deficit in sustained attention. During target detection, relatives exhibited diminished late positive amplitudes (P3b, i.e., P300) over parietal brain regions and augmented early posterior (P1) and right frontal (anterior N1) potentials. Electrophysiological anomalies were still evident after the exclusion of three relatives with histories of psychosis. CONCLUSIONS Genetic liability for schizophrenia is associated with augmented early and diminished late brain potentials during sustained attention. Electrophysiological anomalies suggestive of right frontal-posterior parietal dysfunction might represent neural expression of genetic liability for schizophrenia. Electrophysiological indices also seem to be more sensitive than behavioral measures in assessing genetic liability for schizophrenia.


Schizophrenia Research | 2004

Verbal memory processes in schizophrenia patients and biological relatives of schizophrenia patients: intact implicit memory, impaired explicit recollection

Scott R. Sponheim; Vaughn R. Steele; Kathryn A. McGuire

Verbal memory deficits are arguably the most common cognitive abnormalities in biological relatives of schizophrenia patients. Because verbal memory is a complex cognitive function, it is necessary to differentiate its intact and compromised aspects in order to reveal aberrant neural systems that reflect genetic risk in relatives of schizophrenia patients. Using an experimental verbal memory task, we examined encoding, free-recall, repetition priming, and recognition of verbal material in 22 schizophrenia patients, 22 first-degree biological relatives of schizophrenia patients, and 23 nonpsychiatric control participants. Schizophrenia patients exhibited intact repetition priming, but worse size judgment task performance (encoding), recall, and recognition than the control participants. Biological relatives of schizophrenia patients exhibited intact size judgment task performance, repetition priming, and recognition, but a free-recall deficit. Although size judgment task performance at encoding was associated with recall of verbal material in schizophrenia and control groups, in the relative group encoding performance was associated with the degree of repetition priming. Findings are consistent with impaired explicit recollection of verbal material, but intact implicit verbal memory in schizophrenia patients and biological relatives of schizophrenia patients.


Journal of The International Neuropsychological Society | 2012

Neuropsychological outcomes of U.S. Veterans with report of remote blast-related concussion and current psychopathology

Nathaniel W Nelson; James B. Hoelzle; Bridget M. Doane; Kathryn A. McGuire; Amanda G. Ferrier-Auerbach; Molly J. Charlesworth; Gregory Lamberty; Melissa A. Polusny; Paul A. Arbisi; Scott R. Sponheim

This study explored whether remote blast-related MTBI and/or current Axis I psychopathology contribute to neuropsychological outcomes among OEF/OIF veterans with varied combat histories. OEF/OIF veterans underwent structured interviews to evaluate history of blast-related MTBI and psychopathology and were assigned to MTBI (n = 18), Axis I (n = 24), Co-morbid MTBI/Axis I (n = 34), or post-deployment control (n = 28) groups. A main effect for Axis I diagnosis on overall neuropsychological performance was identified (F(3,100) = 4.81; p = .004), with large effect sizes noted for the Axis I only (d = .98) and Co-morbid MTBI/Axis I (d = .95) groups relative to the control group. The latter groups demonstrated primary limitations on measures of learning/memory and processing speed. The MTBI only group demonstrated performances that were not significantly different from the remaining three groups. These findings suggest that a remote history of blast-related MTBI does not contribute to objective cognitive impairment in the late stage of injury. Impairments, when present, are subtle and most likely attributable to PTSD and other psychological conditions. Implications for clinical neuropsychologists and future research are discussed. (JINS, 2012, 18, 1-11).


Brain Injury | 2011

Neuropsychological evaluation of blast-related concussion: Illustrating the challenges and complexities through OEF/OIF case studies

Nathaniel W Nelson; James B. Hoelzle; Kathryn A. McGuire; Amanda G. Ferrier-Auerbach; Molly J. Charlesworth; Scott R. Sponheim

Background/objective: Soldiers of Operations Enduring Freedom (OEF) and Iraqi Freedom (OIF) sustain blast-related mild traumatic brain injury (concussion) with alarming regularity. This study discusses factors in addition to concussion, such as co-morbid psychological difficulty (e.g. post-traumatic stress) and symptom validity concerns that may complicate neuropsychological evaluation in the late stage of concussive injury. Case report: The study presents the complexities that accompany neuropsychological evaluation of blast concussion through discussion of three case reports of OEF/OIF personnel. Discussion: The authors emphasize uniform assessment of blast concussion, the importance of determining concussion severity according to acute-injury characteristics and elaborate upon non-concussion-related factors that may impact course of cognitive limitation. The authors conclude with a discussion of the need for future research examining the impact of blast concussion (particularly recurrent concussion) and neuropsychological performance.


Developmental Neuropsychology | 1998

Genetic influences on the spontaneous EEG: An examination of 15-year- old and 17-year-old twins

Kathryn A. McGuire; Joanna Katsanis; William G. Iacono; Matt McGue

In this study, the authors investigated the presence of genetic influences and development on the spontaneous electroencephalogram (EEG) by examining the similarity of 15‐ and 17‐year‐old monozygotic (MZ) and dizygotic (DZ) twins. A total of 50 (nMZ = 33, nDZ = 17) 15‐year‐old and 69 (nMZ = 45, nDZ = 24) 17‐year‐old twin pairs were assessed. Spontaneous EEG was recorded from the vertex and 2 lateral posterior sites while participants rested with eyes closed. Measures of both absolute and relative power were derived for delta, theta, alpha, and beta frequency bands. The intraclass correlations of all bands across all sites for both absolute and relative power were significant for the MZ twins, indicating moderate to high degrees of MZ similarity on these measures. All MZ intraclass correlations were larger than the corresponding DZ correlations, and they were significantly larger for over 70% of the MZ‐DZ comparisons involving the 2 age cohorts. Biometric modeling of EEG spectral data suggested a substanti...


Clinical Neuropsychologist | 2011

Self-Report of Psychological Function Among OEF/OIF Personnel Who Also Report Combat-Related Concussion

Nathaniel W Nelson; James B. Hoelzle; Kathryn A. McGuire; Anita H. Sim; Daniel J. Goldman; Amanda G. Ferrier-Auerbach; Molly J. Charlesworth; Paul A. Arbisi; Scott R. Sponheim

MMPI-2 RF profiles of 128 U.S. soldiers and veterans with history of concussion were examined. Participants evaluated in forensic (n = 42) and clinical (n = 43) settings showed significantly higher validity and clinical elevations relative to a research group (n = 43). In the full sample, a multivariate GLM identified main effects for disability claim status and Axis I diagnosis across numerous MMPI-2 RF scales. Participants with co-morbid PTSD and concussion showed significant Restructured Clinical and Specific Problem scale elevations relative to those without Axis I diagnosis. Participants with PTSD and active disability claims were especially prone to elevate on FBS/FBS-r and RBS. Implications for neuropsychologists who routinely administer the MMPI-2/RF in the context of combat-related concussion are discussed.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2008

Elevated nailfold plexus visibility aggregates in families and is associated with a specific negative symptom pattern in schizophrenia.

John P. Vuchetich; Jennifer L. Liska; Daphne P. Dionisio; John J. Stanwyck; Kathryn A. McGuire; Scott R. Sponheim

Twenty-four individuals with schizophrenia and 28 of their first-degree biological relatives were studied using clinical scales, functional ratings, and neuropsychological tests. An assessment of Nailfold Plexus Visibility (NPV) was also performed on these individuals. In keeping with the literature, we found an increased prevalence of high NPV in our schizophrenia subjects relative to controls and community norms, and also found that high NPV patients had significantly more negative symptoms and poorer social functioning. Measures of negative symptoms indicative of the deficit syndrome did a better job of distinguishing high from low NPV subjects than did more broadly defined negative symptom indices. As predicted, the prevalence of high NPV in first-degree relatives of high NPV schizophrenia subjects was increased compared with relatives of low NPV schizophrenia subjects. These two relative groups did not differ on overall level of schizotypy symptoms or on negative symptom schizotypy indices. However, relatives of low NPV patients scored significantly higher on scales of positive symptom schizotypy. Overall, these results support the hypothesis that high NPV is a marker of risk for a distinct subtype of schizophrenia.

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Melissa A. Polusny

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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