Publicacións en colaboración con investigadores/as de University Medical Center Utrecht (40)

2022

  1. A replication study of JTC bias, genetic liability for psychosis and delusional ideation

    Psychological Medicine, Vol. 52, Núm. 9, pp. 1777-1783

  2. Childhood Maltreatment, Educational Attainment, and IQ: Findings from a Multicentric Case-control Study of First-episode Psychosis (EU-GEI)

    Schizophrenia Bulletin, Vol. 48, Núm. 3, pp. 575-589

  3. Evidence, and replication thereof, that molecular-genetic and environmental risks for psychosis impact through an affective pathway

    Psychological Medicine, Vol. 52, Núm. 10, pp. 1910-1922

  4. Examining facial emotion recognition as an intermediate phenotype for psychosis: Findings from the EUGEI study

    Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry, Vol. 113

  5. Facial Emotion Recognition in Psychosis and Associations With Polygenic Risk for Schizophrenia: Findings From the Multi-Center EU-GEI Case-Control Study

    Schizophrenia bulletin, Vol. 48, Núm. 5, pp. 1104-1114

  6. Genetic and psychosocial stressors have independent effects on the level of subclinical psychosis: findings from the multinational EU-GEI study

    Epidemiology and psychiatric sciences, Vol. 31, pp. e68

  7. Mapping genomic loci implicates genes and synaptic biology in schizophrenia

    Nature, Vol. 604, Núm. 7906, pp. 502-508

  8. Migration history and risk of psychosis: Results from the multinational EU-GEI study

    Psychological Medicine, Vol. 52, Núm. 14, pp. 2972-2984

  9. The association between cannabis use and facial emotion recognition in schizophrenia, siblings, and healthy controls: Results from the EUGEI study

    European Neuropsychopharmacology, Vol. 63, pp. 47-59

  10. The incidence of psychotic disorders among migrants and minority ethnic groups in Europe: findings from the multinational EU-GEI study

    Psychological Medicine, Vol. 52, Núm. 7, pp. 1376-1385