Abstract

Cognition and Neuroimaging in Schizophrenia

Highlights

  • In 2010 we edited a Frontiers Special Topic on “An update on neurocognitive impairment in schizophrenia and depression” (Hugdahl and Calhoun, 2010)

  • The first four articles focus on ways to characterize schizophrenia and analyze data using a proposed framework, the search for a relationship between imaging and symptomatology, and the use of multimodal imaging and genetics data

  • This has become an important topic in research on schizophrenia and could cast new light on commonalities in symptom-like behavior as well as hallucinating individuals, that in turn could say something about a continuum of symptoms

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Summary

Introduction

In 2010 we edited a Frontiers Special Topic on “An update on neurocognitive impairment in schizophrenia and depression” (Hugdahl and Calhoun, 2010). The first four articles focus on ways to characterize schizophrenia and analyze data using a proposed framework, the search for a relationship between imaging and symptomatology, and the use of multimodal imaging and genetics data. Examples include a study of the up and down regulation of task-related networks, a study of connectivity in the context of working memory in schizophrenia, and the use of intrinsic networks at rest or during a task to classify patients and controls.

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