Publication | Open Access
Default Mode Network Connectivity as a Function of Familial and Environmental Risk for Psychotic Disorder
41
Citations
77
References
2015
Year
Research suggests that altered interregional connectivity in specific networks, such as the default mode network (DMN), is associated with cognitive and psychotic symptoms in schizophrenia. In addition, frontal and limbic connectivity alterations have been associated with trauma, drug use and urban upbringing, though these environmental exposures have never been examined in relation to DMN functional connectivity in psychotic disorder.
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