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Dive into the research topics where Robert A. Bornstein is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert A. Bornstein.


Archive | 1990

The Wechsler Memory Scale—Revised

Gordon J. Chelune; Robert A. Bornstein; Aurelio Prifitera

In 1945 David Wechsler published the Wechsler Memory Scale (WMS) as “a rapid, simple, and practical memory examination” (p. 87). His explicit purpose was to develop a quantitative scale that would assist clinicians in evaluating patients’ memory functions in relation to their other cognitive abilities. While the WMS was never intended to be a comprehensive measure of memory function, it was widely accepted and quickly became the clinical standard for memory assessment. Despite a long list of conceptual and psychometric issues that arose over the years concerning the content and structure of the WMS (Erickson & Scott, 1977; Prigatano, 1978), it has remained the most frequently used standardized measure of memory function (Chelune, Ferguson, & Moehle, 1986; Seretny, Dean, Gray, & Hartlage, 1986).


Biological Psychiatry | 1990

Cognitive impairment and cerebral structure by MRI in bipolar disorder

Jeffrey A. Coffman; Robert A. Bornstein; Stephen C. Olson; Steven B. Schwarzkopf; Henry A. Nasrallah

The distinction between bipolar disorder and schizophrenia customarily follows examination of the clinical symptomatology and course of illness. The presence of cognitive impairment has been held to be uncommon in bipolar disorder and more likely in schizophrenia. This study explored neuropsychological function in 30 ambulatory outpatients with a DSM-III-R diagnosis of bipolar affective disorder (all of whom had been psychotic during manic episodes), comparing their performance with that of controls. These bipolar patients proved to have significant levels of diffusely represented cognitive impairment when compared with controls. Further, the degree of impairment was significantly correlated with reduction in midsagittal areas of brain structures measured on magnetic resonance imaging scans. The implications of these findings in relation to bipolar disorder are discussed.


Schizophrenia Research | 1998

Neuropsychological correlates of negative, disorganized and psychotic symptoms in schizophrenia

Michael R. Basso; Henry A. Nasrallah; Stephen C. Olson; Robert A. Bornstein

Recent studies suggest that three dimensions (negative, disorganized and psychotic) categorize schizophrenic symptoms. A developing literature indicates distinct cerebral correlates of each symptom cluster, but few investigations have determined their neuropsychological correlates. In the present study, the Schedules of Negative and Positive Symptoms measured symptom severity in 62 schizophrenics, and a subsequent principal components analysis revealed three symptom dimensions. Factor scores, age and parental socio-economic status were simultaneously entered into regression equations to explain variance across a broad neuropsychological test battery. Negative symptoms were associated with deficits involving intelligence, executive function, memory, sustained-attention and sensory-motor function, whereas disorganized symptoms correlated with decreased intelligence, attention-span and sensory-motor function. Psychotic symptoms were unrelated to deficits. These data are consistent with hypotheses that these three symptom dimensions have distinct neurobehavioral correlates.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 1999

Relative memory deficits in recurrent versus first-episode major depression on a word-list learning task.

Michael R. Basso; Robert A. Bornstein

Although memory deficits are associated with major depressive disorder, few studies have identified which patient characteristics predict impairment. Because recurrent depression appears related to more severe cerebral dysfunction, the present study tested whether recurrent depressed individuals have worse memory function than first-episode depressed individuals. Two groups of young-adult, nonpsychotic, depressed inpatients (20 single episode [SE] and 46 recurrent episode [RE]) were administered the California Verbal Learning Test within a broader battery of neuropsychological tests. The groups were equivalent in age, education, estimated IQ, severity of depression, and demographic composition. The RE group demonstrated memory deficits relative to both the SE group and published norms, but no other significant difference was found across the battery. Data indicate that abnormal memory performance is associated with recurrent depression, whereas memory deficits are not prominent in first-episode depressed individuals.


Comprehensive Psychiatry | 1993

Psychopathology in human immunodeficiency virus infection : lifetime and current assessment

Rosenberger P; Robert A. Bornstein; Henry A. Nasrallah; Michael F. Para; Carolyn C. Whitaker; Robert J. Fass; Robert R. Rice

The present study determined lifetime and current psychiatric functioning in a sample of homosexual or bisexual men at various stages of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in order to address several questions regarding the relationship between psychopathology and HIV infection. HIV+ asymptomatic or symptomatic and HIV- homosexual or bisexual men completed self-report measures of psychological and health functioning and participated in structured diagnostic interviews. Additional information regarding HIV-related life events and their potential relationship to onset of disorder and family history of psychiatric disorder were obtained. A high lifetime prevalence of affective and substance use disorder was found, with almost one half of the sample meeting criteria for both disorders. Lifetime affective disorder diagnosis was associated with a positive family history of affective disorder. HIV-related events were most closely associated with onset or recurrence of affective disorder compared with other disorders. Low current rates of psychiatric disorder and levels of emotional distress were found, with no differences in degree of psychiatric adjustment across stage of infection. We conclude that the lifetime prevalence of certain categories of psychiatric disorder is high in both HIV+ and HIV- homosexual samples. Increased rates of psychiatric disorders do not appear to be a consequence of HIV infection. However, episodes of illness, particularly affective disorder, may develop following an HIV-related event such as confirmation of infection. Although symptomatic subjects have more somatic difficulties, there appears to be no relationship between stage of illness and level of emotional distress.


AIDS | 1993

Neuropsychological performance in symptomatic and asymptomatic HIV infection.

Robert A. Bornstein; Henry A. Nasrallah; Michael F. Para; Caroline C. Whitacre; Rosenberger P; Robert J. Fass

OBJECTIVE To examine cognitive function in patients at various stages of HIV infection, and to determine the nature and severity associated with stage of illness. DESIGN Subjects were administered an extensive battery of neuropsychological tests. SUBJECTS Two hundred and thirty-three HIV-1-infected homosexual/bisexual men and 77 HIV-negative control subjects who had been screened for previous neurological illness. All subjects were volunteers in a longitudinal study of neurobehavioral complications of HIV infection. RESULTS Patients with symptomatic infection differed from controls on a large number of measures, and asymptomatic patients had a more circumscribed pattern of deficit. On a summary measure of cognitive impairment, there was a twofold increase in the prevalence of impairment in asymptomatic patients relative to controls, and a fourfold increase in symptomatic patients. Memory and dexterity problems appear to be early features of neurobehavioral dysfunction, and frontal lobe deficits were found in patients with symptomatic infection. CONCLUSION These data indicate that there is a steady increase in the prevalence of neurobehavioral abnormalities associated with stage of infection. The pattern of abnormality also varies with disease stage.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 1992

Emotional Changes with Multiple Sclerosis and Parkinson's Disease.

Stephen M. Rao; Steven J. Huber; Robert A. Bornstein

Multiple sclerosis (MS) and Parkinsons disease (PD) are relatively common neurological disorders. Both disorders are chronic and progressive, produce varying degrees of physical disability, and result in characteristic neuropathological changes to a variety of subcortical brain structures. Patients with MS or PD also exhibit a higher prevalence of emotional disorders relative to other patient groups with comparable degrees of physical disability. The present review (a) examines specific methodological issues associated with research in this area, (b) describes the range and severity of emotional disorders in MS and PD, and (c) examines both endogenous and reactive explanations to account for the increased prevalence of emotional dysfunction in these two disorders. Suggestions for future research are offered, as well as implications for treatment.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 2002

Neuropsychological impairment among manic, depressed, and mixed-episode inpatients with bipolar disorder.

Michael R. Basso; Natasha Lowery; Jackie Neel; Rod Purdie; Robert A. Bornstein

Previous research has demonstrated broad neurobehavioral abnormalities in bipolar affective disorder (cf. G. Cassens, L. Wolfe, & M. Zola, 1990). However, there have been no comparisons of neuropsychological function across patients with manic, depressed, or mixed subtypes. In the present study, 37 manic, 24 mixed-episode, and 25 depressed bipolar I inpatients and 34 control subjects were administered a brief battery of neuropsychological tests. The multivariate and univariate effects of participant group on the neuropsychological measures were uniformly significant (p < .05). Planned contrasts revealed that the bipolar participants performed worse than the controls, and few differences existed between the 3 patient groups. Additionally, the bipolar groups were impaired on 50% of the test battery. These abnormalities were unlikely attributable to differences in psychiatric symptomatology, medical illness, comorbid psychiatric diagnoses, or medication status. Findings imply that acute mood disturbance during bipolar disorder yields significant neurobehavioral dysfunction.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 2000

Estimated premorbid intelligence mediates neurobehavioral change in individuals infected with HIV across 12 months.

Michael R. Basso; Robert A. Bornstein

This study tested whether estimated premorbid intelligence moderates worsening neurobehavioral dysfunction in HIV infection. 155 homosexual men (54 controls, 49 HIV+ asymptomatic, 24 HIV+ symptomatic, 28 AIDS) with stable disease status were tested on measures of executive function at baseline and 12-month follow-up. Premorbid intelligence was estimated on the basis of a demographically-based regression equation (Hamsher, 1984), and participants were classified as average or above-average intelligence. Regardless of disease status, participants with above-average IQ showed no declines on measures of executive function across time. In contrast, among those with average IQ, symptomatic groups showed declines, whereas the asymptomatic group did not. The findings support the hypothesis that estimated premorbid intelligence mediates declines in neuropsychological function in patients with stable HIV status. These findings are consistent with theoretical models of cognitive reserve capacity.


Clinical Neuropsychologist | 1988

Wms-r patterns among patients with unilateral brain lesions

Gordon J. Chelune; Robert A. Bornstein

Abstract The effects of unilateral brain lesions on memory functioning were examined among a sample of 115 patients with well lateralized lesions using the new Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised (WMS-R). Multivariate analysis of the WMS-R age-corrected summary indexes for the patients with right-(n = 56) and left-(n = 59) hemisphere lesions was significant (p<.008), although subsequent univariate comparisons revealed that only the Verbal Memory Index was significant (p<.009). Multivariate analysis of the 13 individual WMS-R subtest scores was also significant (p<.03), with four univariate group comparisons being significant at p<.05. Because the WMS-R offers verbal and nonverbal analogs for five memory dimensions (span of memory, immediate and delayed recall of complex material, and immediate and delayed paired associate learning), it was possible to examine the subjects modality-specific performance patterns using a repeated measures MANOVA. The results yielded a significant multivariate interaction (p<.004),...

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Henry A. Nasrallah

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

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Ewa Firląg-Burkacka

Medical University of Warsaw

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