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Dive into the research topics where Simone Cavallotti is active.

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Featured researches published by Simone Cavallotti.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2014

Stability of cognition across wakefulness and dreams in psychotic major depression

Simone Cavallotti; Anna Castelnovo; Rebecca Ranieri; Armando D’Agostino

Cognitive bizarreness has been shown to be equally elevated in the dream and waking mentation of acutely symptomatic inpatients diagnosed with affective and non-affective psychoses. Although some studies have reported on dream content in non-psychotic depression, no study has previously measured this formal aspect of cognition in patients hospitalized for Psychotic Major Depression (PMD). Sixty-five dreams and 154 waking fantasy reports were collected from 11 PMD inpatients and 11 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. All narrative reports were scored by judges blind to diagnosis in terms of formal aspects of cognition (Bizarreness). Dream content was also scored (Hall/Van de Castle scoring system). Unlike controls, PMD patients had similar levels of cognitive bizarreness in their dream and waking mentation. Dreams of PMD patients also differed from those of controls in terms of content variables. In particular, Happiness, Apprehension and Dynamism were found to differ between the two groups. Whereas dream content reflects a sharp discontinuity with the depressive state, cognitive bizarreness adequately measures the stability of cognition across dreams and wakefulness in PMD inpatients.


Journal of Sleep Research | 2015

Right hemisphere neural activations in the recall of waking fantasies and of dreams

Francesco Benedetti; Sara Poletti; Daniele Radaelli; Rebecca Ranieri; Valeria Genduso; Simone Cavallotti; Anna Castelnovo; Enrico Smeraldi; Silvio Scarone; Armando D'Agostino

The story‐like organization of dreams is characterized by a pervasive bizarreness of events and actions that resembles psychotic thought, and largely exceeds that observed in normal waking fantasies. Little is known about the neural correlates of the confabulatory narrative construction of dreams. In this study, dreams, fantasies elicited by ambiguous pictorial stimuli, and non‐imaginative first‐ and third‐person narratives from healthy participants were recorded, and were then studied for brain blood oxygen level‐dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging on a 3.0‐Tesla scanner while listening to their own narrative reports and attempting a retrieval of the corresponding experience. In respect to non‐bizarre reports of daytime activities, the script‐driven recall of dreams and fantasies differentially activated a right hemisphere network including areas in the inferior frontal gyrus, and superior and middle temporal gyrus. Neural responses were significantly greater for fantasies than for dreams in all regions, and inversely proportional to the degree of bizarreness observed in narrative reports. The inferior frontal gyrus, superior and middle temporal gyrus have been implicated in the semantic activation, integration and selection needed to build a coherent story representation and to resolve semantic ambiguities; in deductive and inferential reasoning; in self‐ and other‐perspective taking, theory of mind, moral and autobiographical reasoning. Their degree of activation could parallel the level of logical robustness or inconsistency experienced when integrating information and mental representations in the process of building fantasy and dream narratives.


npj Schizophrenia | 2018

Sleep endophenotypes of schizophrenia: slow waves and sleep spindles in unaffected first-degree relatives

Armando D’Agostino; Anna Castelnovo; Simone Cavallotti; Cecilia Casetta; Matteo Marcatili; Orsola Gambini; Mariapaola Canevini; Giulio Tononi; Brady A. Riedner; Fabio Ferrarelli; Simone Sarasso

Sleep spindles and slow waves are the main brain oscillations occurring in non-REM sleep. Several lines of evidence suggest that spindles are initiated within the thalamus, whereas slow waves are generated and modulated in the cortex. A decrease in sleep spindle activity has been described in Schizophrenia (SCZ), including chronic, early course, and early onset patients. In contrast, slow waves have been inconsistently found to be reduced in SCZ, possibly due to confounds like duration of illness and antipsychotic medication exposure. Nontheless, the implication of sleep spindles and slow waves in the neurobiology of SCZ and related disorders, including their heritability, remains largely unknown. Unaffected first-degree relatives (FDRs) share a similar genetic background and several neurophysiological and cognitive deficits with SCZ patients, and allow testing whether some of these measures are candidate endophenotypes. In this study, we performed sleep high-density EEG recordings to characterise the spatiotemporal features of sleep spindles and slow waves in FDRs of SCZ probands and healthy subjects (HS) with no family history of SCZ. We found a significant reduction of integrated spindle activity (ISAs) in FDRs relative to HS, whereas spindle density and spindle duration were not different between groups. FDRs also had decreased slow wave amplitude and slopes. Altogether, our results suggest that ISAs deficits might represent a candidate endophenotype for SCZ. Furthermore, given the slow wave deficits observed in FDRs, we propose that disrupted cortical synchronisation increases the risk for SCZ, but thalamic dysfunction is necessary for the disorder to fully develop.Diagnostics: Can sleep forewarn schizophrenia susceptibility?Sleep EEG recordings of schizophrenia patients’ relatives differ from healthy norms, suggesting a new hereditary biomarker of disease. Leading a collaboration of Italian and US scientists, the University of Milan’s Armando D’Agostino, Anna Castelnovo and Simone Sarasso compared the electrical activity of healthy subjects’ brains during sleep to that of first-degree relatives of schizophrenia patients. The team found a significant reduction in a parameter related to the amplitude of “sleep spindles,” one of the two major types of brainwaves in non-REM sleep, in the relatives’ brains. However, the density of sleep spindles—a schizophrenia-associated trait—was unaffected in relatives. The authors suggest that reduced sleep spindle amplitude may help to indicate an individual’s risk of developing schizophrenia. Other EEG features from relatives suggest a communication impairment between neuron groups, which may also predispose the illness.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2016

Dream content and intrusive thoughts in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

Simone Cavallotti; Cecilia Casetta; Valentina Fanti; Orsola Gambini; Edoardo Giuseppe Ostinelli; Rebecca Ranieri; Irene Vanelli; Armando D'Agostino

Although central to any exhaustive theory of human subjectivity, the relationship between dream and waking consciousness remains uncertain. Some findings suggest that dream consciousness can be influenced by severe disorders of thought content. The suppression of unwanted thoughts has been shown to influence dream content in healthy individuals. In order to better define this phenomenon, we evaluated the persistence of obsessive/compulsive themes across the dream and waking cognition of OCD patients and in a control group of healthy subjects. Participants were administered a shortened version of the Thematic Apperception Test to produce a waking fantasy narration, and were trained to keep a dream diary. Dream and waking narrative contents were analyzed in order to recognize obsessive/compulsive themes, and to calculate Mean Dream Obsession/Compulsion (MDO, MDC) and Mean TAT Obsession/Compulsion (MTO, MTC) parameters. No differences were found between the two populations in terms of MDO, MDC, MTO, nor MTC. Density of obsessive and compulsive themes were significantly higher in dream reports than in waking narratives for both groups. No correlation was observed between MDO/MDC scores and Y-BOCS obsession/compulsion scores in the OCD group. These findings strengthen the discontinuity hypothesis, suggesting that ruminative aspects of cognition are somehow interrupted during dream activity.


Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology | 2015

Asenapine in the Treatment of Acute Mania: A Real-World Observational Study With 6 Months Follow-Up.

Edoardo Giuseppe Ostinelli; Simone Cavallotti; Anna Castelnovo; Ester Guanella; Orsola Gambini; Armando D'Agostino

Abstract Asenapine is a second-generation antipsychotic with a unique pharmacological profile that was recently approved for the treatment of moderate/severe manic episodes. Real-world data on rapidity of action in inpatient settings are lacking. The aims of the current real-world observational study were to evaluate: (i) short-term efficacy of asenapine after 7 days (T0-T1) in patients hospitalized for a manic episode in the course of bipolar I disorder or schizoaffective disorder (group A), (ii) differences in length of stay (LoS), and (iii) rehospitalization compared to a control population (group B) with a 6-month follow-up. Twenty patients were included in each group. The mean total Young Mania Rating Scale score decreased by 12.6 (SD ±10.3; t(17) = 5.2, P < 0.005), implying a mean 37.8% improvement. A statistically significant reduction was observed for all Young Mania Rating Scale items, except for “sexual interest.” The mean total BPRS score decreased by 17.2 (SD ±14.9; t(17) = 4.9, P < 0.005). A statistically significant reduction was observed for several items, including “conceptual disorganization,” “grandiosity,” “unusual thought content,” and “excitement”. Length of stay was 17.9 (SD ±9.0) days for group A and 14.7 (SD ±12.7) days for group B; the result of the Kruskal-Wallis test showed no significant differences (&khgr;2 = 2.199, P = 0.138). Despite a high discontinuation rate, only 17.7% of patients in group A were rehospitalized in the following 6 months compared to 41.2% of those in group B (relative risk = 0.43, 95% confidence interval, 0.13–1.39). Findings from this small, preliminary study at least partially support the results of previous trials, confirming effectiveness and tolerability in the context of comorbidity and polypsychopharmacology.


Sleep Medicine | 2012

Challenging the myth of REM sleep behavior disorder: No evidence of heightened aggressiveness in dreams

Armando D’Agostino; Raffaele Manni; Ivan Limosani; Michele Terzaghi; Simone Cavallotti; Silvio Scarone


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2015

Post-bereavement hallucinatory experiences: A critical overview of population and clinical studies

Anna Castelnovo; Simone Cavallotti; Orsola Gambini; Armando D’Agostino


Consciousness and Cognition | 2013

Are delusional contents replayed during dreams

Armando D’Agostino; Giacomo Aletti; Martina E.G. Carboni; Simone Cavallotti; Ivan Limosani; Marialaura Manzone; Silvio Scarone


Journal of Sleep Research | 2016

Sleep spindle deficit in Schizophrenia : a high-density EEG study in First-Degree Relatives

Armando D'Agostino; Anna Castelnovo; Simone Cavallotti; M. Canevini; M. Marcatili; F. Ferrarelli; Brady A. Riedner; Giulio Tononi; S. Sarasso


Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology | 2015

Occipital seizures and visual pseudohallucinations associated with the addition of bupropion to clozapine: a case report.

Anna Castelnovo; Zambrelli E; Canevini Mp; Simone Cavallotti; Scarone S; Armando D'Agostino

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