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Featured researches published by Li-Ren Chang.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Development and Validation of the Smartphone Addiction Inventory (SPAI)

Yu Hsuan Lin; Li-Ren Chang; Yang Han Lee; Hsien Wei Tseng; Terry B.J. Kuo; Sue-Huei Chen

Objective The aim of this study was to develop a self-administered scale based on the special features of smartphone. The reliability and validity of the Smartphone Addiction Inventory (SPAI) was demonstrated. Methods A total of 283 participants were recruited from Dec. 2012 to Jul. 2013 to complete a set of questionnaires, including a 26-item SPAI modified from the Chinese Internet Addiction Scale and phantom vibration and ringing syndrome questionnaire. There were 260 males and 23 females, with ages 22.9±2.0 years. Exploratory factor analysis, internal-consistency test, test-retest, and correlation analysis were conducted to verify the reliability and validity of the SPAI. Correlations between each subscale and phantom vibration and ringing were also explored. Results Exploratory factor analysis yielded four factors: compulsive behavior, functional impairment, withdrawal and tolerance. Test–retest reliabilities (intraclass correlations  = 0.74–0.91) and internal consistency (Cronbachs α = 0.94) were all satisfactory. The four subscales had moderate to high correlations (0.56–0.78), but had no or very low correlation to phantom vibration/ringing syndrome. Conclusion This study provides evidence that the SPAI is a valid and reliable, self-administered screening tool to investigate smartphone addiction. Phantom vibration and ringing might be independent entities of smartphone addiction.


Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2013

Father's parenting and father-child relationship among children and adolescents with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.

Li-Ren Chang; Yen-Nan Chiu; Yu-Yu Wu; Susan Shur-Fen Gau

OBJECTIVE Western literature documents impaired father-child interactions in addition to strong evidence of impaired mother-child interactions in children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). However, the parenting process of fathers and their engagement in the Asian family with children with ADHD remain unexplored. The authors compared fathering and father-child relationships between children with ADHD and those without ADHD and identified the correlates of these paternal measures. METHODS Fathering and father-child relationships were compared between 296 children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and 229 children without ADHD in Taiwan. All child participants and their parents received psychiatric interviews for the diagnosis of ADHD and other psychiatric disorders of the children, and their fathers were assessed for ADHD, anxiety and depressive symptoms. Both the fathers and children reported on the fathers parenting style, father-child interactions, behavioral problems at home, and perceived family support. RESULTS The results showed that children with ADHD received less affection/care and more overprotection and authoritarian control from their fathers. They had less active interactions with their fathers, more severe behavioral problems at home; and perceived less family support than children without ADHD. Correlates for impaired father-child interactions included childhood ADHD symptoms, any comorbidity, age at assessment, and the fathers neurotic personality and depressive symptoms. In addition, the children reported more negatively on fathering and father-child interactions than the fathers. CONCLUSIONS Our findings suggest the negative impacts of ADHD on the fathers parenting style and father-child interactions. Clinical interventions aimed at improving father-child interactions warrant more attention.


Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology | 2013

Impact of antipsychotics and anticholinergics on autonomic modulation in patients with schizophrenia.

Wei-Lieh Huang; Li-Ren Chang; Terry B.J. Kuo; Yu-Hsuan Lin; Ying-Zai Chen; Cheryl C.H. Yang

Abstract Antipsychotics are associated with cardiovascular risk, but the relationship between their anticholinergic properties and cardiac function is not clear. We hypothesize that antipsychotics with a high muscarinic affinity (HMA) may reduce parasympathetic modulation, which should be observable by means of heart rate variability (HRV) measurement. We also assume that anticholinergics, which are commonly used in patients with schizophrenia to treat drug-induced parkinsonism, interact with antipsychotics, and this may also affect HRV. Fifty-five patients with schizophrenia were recruited into this study. Twenty-eight subjects used antipsychotics with an HMA and 27 subjects used antipsychotics with a low muscarinic affinity (LMA). Heart rate variability values between the patients on antipsychotics with HMA and those on antipsychotics with LMA were compared. Correlation and regression analysis were then performed to clarify the relationship between HMA, LMA, and HRV. The influence of anticholinergics was also assessed by correlation analysis. The HMA group showed significantly reduced low-frequency (LF) power, high-frequency (HF) power, total power (TP), and normalized LF (LF%) than the LMA group. Regression analysis supported the hypothesis that muscarinic affinity was related to LF (&bgr; = −0.447; P < 0.001), HF (&bgr; = −0.390; P = 0.002), and TP (&bgr; = −0.399; P = 0.001). The interaction between LMA and anticholinergic use also influenced LF% (&bgr; = 0.326; P = 0.006). In the LMA group, the use of anticholinergics was positively correlated with LF% and LF/HF. In the HMA group, after exclusion of the patients using anticholinergics, the equivalent dose of antipsychotics showed a negative correlation with HF. Our results suggest that the muscarinic affinity of antipsychotics affects both sympathetic and parasympathetic modulation and that anticholinergics interact with antipsychotics to influence HRV.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Risk Factors of Internet Addiction among Internet Users: An Online Questionnaire Survey.

Chia-Yi Wu; Ming-Been Lee; Shih-Cheng Liao; Li-Ren Chang

Backgrounds Internet addiction (IA) has become a major public health issue worldwide and is closely linked to psychiatric disorders and suicide. The present study aimed to investigate the prevalence of IA and its associated psychosocial and psychopathological determinants among internet users across different age groups. Methods The study was a cross-sectional survey initiated by the Taiwan Suicide Prevention Center. The participants were recruited from the general public who responded to the online questionnaire. They completed a series of self-reported measures, including Chen Internet Addiction Scale-revised (CIAS-R), Five-item Brief Symptom Rating Scale (BSRS-5), Maudsley Personality Inventory (MPI), and questions about suicide and internet use habits. Results We enrolled 1100 respondents with a preponderance of female subjects (85.8%). Based on an optimal cutoff for CIAS-R (67/68), the prevalence rate of IA was 10.6%. People with higher scores of CIAS-R were characterized as: male, single, students, high neuroticism, life impairment due to internet use, time for internet use, online gaming, presence of psychiatric morbidity, recent suicide ideation and past suicide attempts. Multiple regression on IA showed that age, gender, neuroticism, life impairment, internet use time, and BSRS-5 score accounted for 31% of variance for CIAS-R score. Further, logistic regression showed that neuroticism, life impairment and internet use time were three main predictors for IA. Compared to those without IA, the internet addicts had higher rates of psychiatric morbidity (65.0%), suicide ideation in a week (47.0%), lifetime suicide attempts (23.1%), and suicide attempt in a year (5.1%). Conclusion Neurotic personality traits, psychopathology, time for internet use and its subsequent life impairment were important predictors for IA. Individuals with IA may have higher rates of psychiatric morbidity and suicide risks. The findings provide important information for further investigation and prevention of IA.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Proposed diagnostic criteria for smartphone addiction.

Yu-Hsuan Lin; Chih-Lin Chiang; Po-Hsien Lin; Li-Ren Chang; Chih-Hung Ko; Yang-Han Lee; Sheng-Hsuan Lin

Background Global smartphone penetration has led to unprecedented addictive behaviors. The aims of this study are to develop diagnostic criteria of smartphone addiction and to examine the discriminative ability and the validity of the diagnostic criteria. Methods We developed twelve candidate criteria for characteristic symptoms of smartphone addiction and four criteria for functional impairment caused by excessive smartphone use. The participants consisted of 281 college students. Each participant was systematically assessed for smartphone-using behaviors by psychiatrist’s structured diagnostic interview. The sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic accuracy of the candidate symptom criteria were analyzed with reference to the psychiatrists’ clinical global impression. The optimal model selection with its cutoff point of the diagnostic criteria differentiating the smartphone addicted subjects from non-addicted subjects was then determined by the best diagnostic accuracy. Results Six symptom criteria model with optimal cutoff point were determined based on the maximal diagnostic accuracy. The proposed smartphone addiction diagnostic criteria consisted of (1) six symptom criteria, (2) four functional impairment criteria and (3) exclusion criteria. Setting three symptom criteria as the cutoff point resulted in the highest diagnostic accuracy (84.3%), while the sensitivity and specificity were 79.4% and 87.5%, respectively. We suggested determining the functional impairment by two or more of the four domains considering the high accessibility and penetration of smartphone use. Conclusion The diagnostic criteria of smartphone addiction demonstrated the core symptoms “impaired control” paralleled with substance related and addictive disorders. The functional impairment involved multiple domains provide a strict standard for clinical assessment.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2013

Gender differences in personality and heart-rate variability

Wei-Lieh Huang; Li-Ren Chang; Terry B.J. Kuo; Yu-Hsuan Lin; Ying-Zai Chen; Cheryl C.H. Yang

Both personality traits and autonomic functioning show as gender differences, but their relationship is not well understood. Medically unexplained symptoms are related to personality features and can be assessed by autonomic measurement. The patterns are hypothesised to identify gender differences. We recruited 30 male and 30 female healthy volunteers. All participants completed the Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire (TPQ) and heart-rate variability (HRV) measurement. Correlation analysis was performed to identify the relationships between TPQ scores and HRV parameters. For the subjects as a whole, the subdimension harm avoidance 4 (HA4, fatigability and asthenia) was found to be negatively correlated with low-frequency (LF) power, high-frequency (HF) power and total power (TP) of HRV. Novelty seeking 1 (NS1, exploratory excitability) was found to be positively correlated with LF power and TP. Multiple linear regression analysis revealed that the interactions exploratory excitability x gender and fatigability x gender are predictors of LF and HF power, respectively. Our result supports the hypothesis that personality features such as exploratory excitability and fatigability are associated with autonomic functioning and that gender is a moderator in these relationships.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Methadone-Mediated Autonomic Functioning of Male Patients with Heroin Dependence: The Influence of Borderline Personality Pattern

Wei Lieh Huang; Yu Hsuan Lin; Terry B.J. Kuo; Li-Ren Chang; Ying Zai Chen; Cheryl C.H. Yang

Background We hypothesize that the population with borderline personality shows different autonomic response to methadone compared to individuals with other personalities. This study applies heart rate variability (HRV) measurements and the Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire (TPQ) to examine this hypothesis. Methodology/Principal Findings Forty-four male patients with heroin dependence were recruited from a methadone maintenance treatment program. Eight personality patterns were classified according to the TPQ norm used in Taiwan. The borderline pattern (BP, composed of high novelty seeking, high harm avoidance and low reward dependence) and the other personality patterns (OP) were separated into two groups. We compared the HRV profiles between the BP and OP groups. Correlation and regression analysis were performed to clarify relationship between HRV differences and the borderline index (BI, a new concept defined by us, which is calculated as novelty seeking + harm avoidance – reward dependence). The HRV targets investigated included low frequency (LF) power, high frequency (HF) power, total power (TP), normalized LF (LF%), and LF/HF. No baseline HRV parameters showed any inter-group difference. The BP group had a significantly lower ΔHF and a higher ΔLF/HF than the OP group. The personality dimension, reward dependence, showed a negative correlation with ΔLF/HF and ΔLF%. BI was negatively correlated with ΔHF and positively correlated with ΔLF/HF and ΔLF%. Conclusions/Significance Borderline personality individuals show increased sympathetic activity and decreased parasympathetic activity compared to other personalities after taking methadone. The results support the hypothesis that there is an interaction between borderline personality and autonomic modulation.


Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 2012

Cardiac autonomic modulation during methadone therapy among heroin users: A pilot study

Li-Ren Chang; Yu-Hsuan Lin; Terry B.J. Kuo; Yen-Cheng Ho; Shiuan-Horng Chen; Hung-Chieh Wu Chang; Chih-Min Liu; Cheryl C.H. Yang

BACKGROUND Methadone therapy benefits heroin users in both the medical and psychosocial dimensions. However, both heroin and methadone have cardiac toxicity. Only limited information is available describing the changes in cardiac autonomic function of heroin users and effects of methadone therapy. We conduct the current study to explore the cardiac vagal function in heroin users as well as the impact of lapse and methadone therapy. METHODS 80 heroin users from a methadone therapy clinic were distributed into 31 compliant and 49 incompliant patients according to whether they lapsed into heroin use within 10 days. 40 healthy control subjects were recruited from the community. Participants underwent electrocardiographic recordings and the heroin users were further investigated before and after methadone therapy. Spectral analysis of heart rate variability (HRV) was computed for cardiac parasympathetic modulation (high-frequency power, HF) and cardiac sympathetic modulation (normalized low-frequency power, LF%). RESULTS The baseline HRV parameters found lower HF values for heroin users and lower RR interval values for patients with a recent lapse compared with the healthy control subjects. After 1h of methadone administration, heroin users who had lapsed showed a significant increase in HF but the heroin users who had not lapsed did not. CONCLUSION Our findings suggest that heroin users show decreased cardiac vagal activity and that methadone therapy immediately facilitates vagal regulation in patients with a recent lapse. The differential patterns of autonomic alteration under methadone between those with and without lapse might offer an objective measure of lapse.


Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment | 2012

Self-reported psychopathology and health-related quality of life in heroin users treated with methadone.

Ying-Zai Chen; Wei-Lieh Huang; Jia-Chi Shan; Yu-Hsuan Lin; Hung-Chieh Wu Chang; Li-Ren Chang

Background Health-related quality of life (HRQoL) remains poor among heroin users, even after being treated with methadone. Evidence regarding self-reported psychopathology and HRQoL in heroin users is also limited. The present study aimed to investigate the association between self-reported psychopathology and HRQoL in Asian heroin users treated with methadone. Methods Thirty-nine heroin users treated with methadone and 39 healthy controls were recruited. Both groups self-reported on demographic data, the Brief Symptom Rating Scale, EuroQoL-5D, and World Health Organization Questionnaire on Quality of Life: Short Form. We compared clinical characteristics, psychopathology, and HRQoL between the two study groups. Correlation and regression analyses were conducted to explore the association between psychopathology and HRQoL in the heroin user group. Results Heroin users had more psychopathology and worse HRQoL than healthy controls. The HRQoL of heroin users had significant correlations with Brief Symptom Rating Scale scores. HRQoL could be predicted by depression, anxiety, paranoia, and additional symptoms (ie, poor appetite and sleep difficulties) independently. Conclusion Self-reported psychopathology, depression, anxiety, paranoia, poor appetite, and sleep difficulties had a negative impact on each domain of HRQoL among heroin users treated with methadone. The importance of the environmental domain of HRQoL is discussed. Clinicians should recognize comorbid psychiatric symptoms early on to improve HRQoL in heroin users.


Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology | 2012

Quetiapine- and valproate-associated neutropenia and thrombocytopenia after lamotrigine-induced Steven-Johnson syndrome.

Li-Ren Chang; Hung-Chieh Wu Chang; Yu-Hsuan Lin

the platelet count returns to normal in less than a week. In our patient, her thrombocytopenia improved sooner than leukopenia and neutropenia. A drug-drug interaction between quetiapine and VPA should be considered in this patient. A retrospective study demonstrated a significantly greater incidence of moderate to severe neutropenia when combined VPA and quetiapine therapy was given rather than VPA or quetiapine monotherapy, which implies that bone marrow suppressive tendency of quetiapine might be enhanced when quetiapine and VPA are in combination. Quetiapine is mostly metabolized in the liver via the cytochrome P450 isoenzyme CYP3A4. The concomitant VPA has been reported to increase the plasma concentration of quetiapine by approximately 77%, possibly owing to VPA’s partial inhibition on CYP3A4. Cross-reactivity is defined when a drug that has not been previously administered to a patient produces a hypersensitivity reaction owing to sensitization to a structurally related component recognized by IgE antibodies or B and T cells. The patient presented with leukocytosis during the course of AHS but subsequent olanzapine-related neutropenia and thrombocytopenia. Olanzapine and quetiapine have quite similar chemical structures. Furthermore, VPA increases the plasma concentration of quetiapine.Cross-reactivitymay be considered not only for AHS and subsequent olanzapine-related hepatitis but also for the skin rash and febrile reaction. Nevertheless, the real mechanism remains to be elucidated. We suggest that physicians should be alert to these possible adverse effects of VPA and olanzapine and be cautious of rare adverse effects when a combination of drug treatment is used.

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Wei-Lieh Huang

National Taiwan University

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Yu-Hsuan Lin

National Taiwan University

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Terry B.J. Kuo

National Yang-Ming University

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Cheryl C.H. Yang

National Yang-Ming University

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Chih-Min Liu

National Taiwan University

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Ying-Zai Chen

National Taiwan University

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Yu Hsuan Lin

National Yang-Ming University

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Shih-Cheng Liao

National Taiwan University

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Chen-Chung Liu

National Taiwan University

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