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Dive into the research topics where Lyn Harper Mozley is active.

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Featured researches published by Lyn Harper Mozley.


Science | 1995

Sex differences in regional cerebral glucose metabolism during a resting state

Ruben C. Gur; Lyn Harper Mozley; Pd Mozley; Sm Resnick; Joel S. Karp; Abass Alavi; Steven E. Arnold; Raquel E. Gur

Positron emission tomography was used to evaluate the regional distribution of cerebral glucose metabolism in 61 healthy adults at rest. Although the profile of metabolic activity was similar for men and women, some sex differences and hemispheric asymmetries were detectable. Men had relatively higher metabolism than women in temporal-limbic regions and cerebellum and relatively lower metabolism in cingulate regions. In both sexes, metabolism was relatively higher in left association cortices and the cingulate region and in right ventro-temporal limbic regions and their projections. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that differences in cognitive and emotional processing have biological substrates.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1995

Mood effects on limbic blood flow correlate with emotional self-rating: A PET study with oxygen-15 labeled water

Frank Schneider; Raquel E. Gur; Lyn Harper Mozley; Robin A. J. Smith; P. David Mozley; David M. Censits; Abass Alavi; Ruben C. Gur

Positron emission tomography was used to study the effects of experimentally controlled mood states on cerebral blood flow (CBF), measured with the quantitative equilibrium infusion method and 15O-labeled water. Twenty-seven brain regions in each hemisphere were assessed in 16 normal subjects. CBF and heart rate were measured during happy and sad mood induction, and during two nonemotional control conditions: sex differentiation and resting baseline. Valence-specific effects of mood on CBF were obtained for subcortical, but not for frontal-temporal or control regions. CBF increased in left amygdala and decreased in right amygdala during sad mood relative to the averaged control conditions. These changes correlated with shifts toward negative affect. Correlations were opposite for subcortical (negative affect associated with lower left hemispheric CBF) compared with frontal-temporal cortical regions. Results support limbic involvement in regulating emotional states and suggest some reciprocity between subcortical and frontal-temporal regulation of emotional experience.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 2002

Memory-Delineated Subtypes of Schizophrenia: Relationship to Clinical, Neuroanatomical, and Neurophysiological Measures

Bruce I. Turetsky; Paul J. Moberg; Lyn Harper Mozley; Stephen T. Moelter; Rachel N. Agrin; Ruben C. Gur; Raquel E. Gur

Memory performance was examined in patients with schizophrenia to determine whether subgroups conforming to cortical and subcortical dementias could be identified and, if so, whether subgroups differed on clinical, neuroanatomical, and neurophysiological measures. A cluster analysis of California Verbal Learning Test performance classified patients into 3 subgroups. Two groups exhibited memory deficits consistent with the cortical-subcortical distinction, whereas 1 group was unimpaired. Cortical patients tended to be male, and they had earlier illness onset, reduced temporal lobe gray matter, and hypometabolism. Subcortical patients had ventricular enlargement and more negative symptoms. Unimpaired patients had fewer negative symptoms and dorsal medial prefrontal hypermetabolism. The authors conclude that categorizing patients on the basis of memory deficits may yield neurobiologically meaningful disease subtypes.


Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair | 2001

Effectiveness of an Attention- and Memory-Training Program on Neuropsychological Deficits in Schizophrenia

Matthew M. Kurtz; Paul J. Moberg; Lyn Harper Mozley; Charlie L. Swanson; Ruben C. Our; Raquel E. Our

The effect of two cognitive remediation procedures developed for closed head injury, Attention Process Training (APT) and Prospective Memory Training (PROMT), on neuropsychological deficits in schizophrenia was investigated. Six pa tients with schizophrenia, varying in baseline intellectual function and symptoms, were studied; three in a remediation condition and three in a nonremediated control con dition. Results were evaluated individually for each of the three treated patients. Two of three remediation-treated subjects showed marked improvement on tests of sus tained and divided attention. Untreated patients showed little evidence of change in neuropsychological test performance across a similar time interval, when tested on a subset of the measures administered to remediation-treated patients. The results of this study are discussed with a view toward future studies using larger sample sizes with homogeneous subject populations. Key Words: Schizophrenia—Cognitive—Reha bilitation—Symptoms—Outcome.


Schizophrenia Research | 2002

Neuropsychological functioning in elderly patients with schizophrenia and Alzheimer's disease

Thomas McBride; Paul J. Moberg; Steven E. Arnold; Lyn Harper Mozley; Richard N. Mahr; Maureen Gibney; Anand Kumar; Raquel E. Gur

Cognitive functioning was compared in elderly patients with schizophrenia, elderly patients with probable Alzheimers disease (AD), and matched healthy controls using a brief neuropsychological battery. Both schizophrenia and AD patients demonstrated marked impairment as compared to controls, with the profile of neuropsychological deficits in both disorders appearing remarkably similar. Only visual confrontation naming, verbal delayed recall, and rate of forgetting (i.e. savings score) significantly differentiated between the two patient groups, with AD patients showing poorer overall recall and more rapid forgetting of verbal information over delay. In addition, schizophrenia subjects showed a significantly greater deficit in visual confrontation naming than the AD group. The relationship of neuropsychological function and clinical symptoms of schizophrenia subjects was also examined. Results showed that word list learning, delayed recall, and rate of forgetting correlated most strongly with positive and negative symptoms. Recent neuropathological studies have indicated abnormalities in specific subfields of the hippocampal formation in schizophrenia that are also severely affected in AD. Though the specific histopathology of the two disorders differs, abnormalities in the common sites may underlie the common neuropsychological profile.


Biological Psychiatry | 1996

Relationships between verbal memory performance and the cerebral distribution of fluorodeoxyglucose in patients with schizophrenia

Lyn Harper Mozley; Ruben C. Gur; Raquel E. Gur; P. David Mozley; Abass Alavi

Quantitative resting fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography scans were performed on 42 patients with schizophrenia. Magnetic resonance imaging-based regions of interest were transposed onto the corresponding positron emission tomography images. Region to whole brain ratios were calculated from the mean regional activity per pixel across both hemispheres (left plus right). Laterality scores were calculated from the difference between the mean activity in homotopic regions of the two hemispheres (left minus right). Subjects were tested contemporaneously with the Logical Memory subtest of the Wechsler Memory Scale. The subtest was scored with modified criteria to provide information about verbal recall, perseverations, and other components of verbal memory. Deficits in recall were associated with increased metabolism in selected regions of the left hemisphere that are known to mediate aspects of verbal memory. The findings support hypotheses suggesting that the left hemisphere is functionally overactive in schizophrenia.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 1996

Vulnerability to Tardive Dyskinesia Development in Schizophrenia: An FDG-PET Study of Cerebral Metabolism

Sally Szymanski; Ruben C. Gur; Fiona Gallacher; Lyn Harper Mozley; Raquel E. Gur

An understanding of the development of tardive dyskinesia (TD) may require prospective studies assessing the relationship of brain function measures to behavior. This study was undertaken to determine whether predisposition to the development of TD is related to abnormalities of cerebral 18F-labeled 2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) measures in schizophrenia. A group of 42 patients without TD underwent FDG PET scanning for measuring cerebral metabolism as well as neuropsychological evaluation and magnetic resonance imaging. Patients were assessed longitudinally for TD development. Eight patients developed TD within 3 years. They were matched to eight patients without TD. Glucose metabolic rates and region/whole brain ratios were examined in 38 regions of interest per hemisphere. Whole brain metabolism did not differ between the two groups. However, relative hypermetabolism in temporolimbic, brainstem, and cerebellar regions and hypoactivity in parietal and cingulate gyrus were found in the patients who later developed TD in contrast to those who did not. The groups were matched on clinical measures and had similar neuropsychological and neuroanatomic testing results. Thus, differences in the metabolic activity of specific brain regions are associated with vulnerability to TD development.


Archives of General Psychiatry | 1991

Neuropsychological Function in Schizophrenia: Selective Impairment in Memory and Learning

Andrew J. Saykin; Ruben C. Gur; Raquel E. Gur; P. David Mozley; Lyn Harper Mozley; Susan M. Resnick; D. Brian Kester; Paul Stafiniak


Archives of General Psychiatry | 1994

Neuropsychological Deficits in Neuroleptic Naive Patients with First-Episode Schizophrenia

Andrew J. Saykin; Derri L. Shtasel; Raquel E. Gur; D. Brian Kester; Lyn Harper Mozley; Paul Stafiniak; Ruben C. Gur


American Journal of Psychiatry | 2001

Striatal Dopamine Transporters and Cognitive Functioning in Healthy Men and Women

Lyn Harper Mozley; Ruben C. Gur; P. David Mozley; Raquel E. Gur

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Raquel E. Gur

University of Pennsylvania

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Ruben C. Gur

University of Pennsylvania

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P. David Mozley

University of Pennsylvania

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Abass Alavi

Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania

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Paul J. Moberg

University of Pennsylvania

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Warren B. Bilker

University of Pennsylvania

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R.E. Gur

University of California

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