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- Publications
- Influence
Impaired Verbal and Nonverbal Emotion Recognition in Alexithymia
- Richard D. Lane, Sechrest Lee, Robert Reidel, Victoria Weldon, A. Kaszniak, Gary E. Schwartz
- Psychology, Medicine
- Psychosomatic medicine
- 1 May 1996
Although clinical observations suggest that alexithymic individuals have a deficit in their ability to recognize emotional stimuli and that this deficit is not simply due to a problem in verbal… Expand
The expressive pattern of laughter
- W. Ruch, P. Ekman, A. Kaszniak
- Psychology
- 2001
Laughter as a vocal expressive-communicative signal is one of the least understood and most frequently overlooked human behaviors. The chapter provides an overview of what we know about laughter in… Expand
Clinical trial of indomethacin in Alzheimer's disease
In a 6-month, double-blind, placebo-controlled study, 1100 to 150 mg/d indomethacin appeared to protect mild to moderately impaired Alzheimer's disease patients from the degree of cognitive decline… Expand
Pervasive Emotion Recognition Deficit Common to Alexithymia and the Repressive Coping Style
- R. Lane, L. Sechrest, R. Riedel, D. E. Shapiro, A. Kaszniak
- Psychology, Medicine
- Psychosomatic medicine
- 1 July 2000
Objective Previous research has demonstrated a deficit in the ability to recognize emotions in alexithymic individuals. The repressive coping style is thought to preferentially impair the detection… Expand
Implicit and explicit memory in Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease.
- M. Bondi, A. Kaszniak
- Psychology, Medicine
- Journal of clinical and experimental…
- 1 March 1991
Several tasks examined implicit and explicit memory in demographically matched samples of Alzheimer's (AD) and Parkinson's disease (PD) patients, and healthy elderly subjects. A fragmented pictures… Expand
A role for right medial prefrontal cortex in accurate feeling-of-knowing judgments: evidence from patients with lesions to frontal cortex
- D. Schnyer, M. Verfaellie, M. Alexander, G. Laflèche, A. Kaszniak
- Psychology, Medicine
- Neuropsychologia
- 2004
The hypothesis that prefrontal cortex plays a critical role in accurate predictions of episodic memory performance was tested using the feeling-of-knowing (FOK) paradigm. Fourteen patients with a… Expand
Fear recognition deficits after focal brain damage
- S. Rapcsak, S. Galper, +7 authors R. Cohen
- Psychology, Medicine
- Neurology
- 8 February 2000
Objective: To test the hypothesis that fear recognition deficits in neurologic patients reflect damage to an emotion-specific neural network. Background: Previous studies have suggested that the… Expand
Autonomic and emotion regulation in bereavement and depression.
- M. O'Connor, J. J. Allen, A. Kaszniak
- Psychology, Medicine
- Journal of psychosomatic research
- 1 April 2002
OBJECTIVES
Prior research suggests important differences between depression and the depressed feelings experienced in the context of bereavement, despite some overlap. Differences include an increase… Expand
Memory Impairment and Executive Control in Individuals with Stroke-Induced Aphasia
- P. Beeson, K. Bayles, A. Rubens, A. Kaszniak
- Psychology, Medicine
- Brain and Language
- 1 August 1993
The purpose of this study was to examine memory abilities of aphasic individuals in relation to site of neurological lesion. Fourteen individuals with stroke-induced aphasia (7 with anterior lesions;… Expand
Obstructive sleep apnea-hypopnea and neurocognitive functioning in the Sleep Heart Health Study.
- S. Quan, R. Wright, +7 authors R. Bootzin
- Medicine
- Sleep medicine
- 1 September 2006
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE
Obstructive sleep apnea-hypopnea (OSAH) is associated with sleep fragmentation and nocturnal hypoxemia. In clinical samples, patients with OSAH frequently are found to have… Expand