Elizabeth Ramjas
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
6 Papers
28 Citations
Elizabeth Ramjas is an academic researcher from Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neurocognitive & Bipolar disorder. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
The association between childhood trauma and facial emotion recognition in adults with bipolar disorder.
Manuela Russo,Katie Mahon,Megan Shanahan,Carly Solon,Elizabeth Ramjas,Justin Turpin,Katherine E. Burdick,Katherine E. Burdick +7 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that the presence of childhood trauma in participants with BD is associated with a more severe clinical presentation (earlier onset, longer duration of illness, and higher depressive symptom ratings) and that BD patients with a positive childhood history of emotional neglect perform worse than those without such a history in recognizing anger.
Affective temperaments and neurocognitive functioning in bipolar disorder.
Manuela Russo,Katie Mahon,Megan Shanahan,Elizabeth Ramjas,Carly Solon,Raphael J. Braga,Katherine E. Burdick +6 more
TL;DR: Cyclothymic and irritable temperaments are correlated with specific aspects of neurocognition in BD, and provides preliminary evidence for future studies investigating the neural and genetic mechanisms underlying the association between these variables.
31
Neurocognition and the Suicidal Process.
Sarah B Rutter,N Cipriani,E C Smith,Elizabeth Ramjas,D H Vaccaro,M Martin Lopez,William Calabrese,D Torres,P Campos-Abraham,M Llaguno,E Soto,Mona Ghavami,M. Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez +12 more
TL;DR: There seems to be a role both for cognitive distortions and neurocognitive deficits in the suicidal process, which warrant further exploration both separately and together.
11
The relationship between sleep quality and neurocognition in bipolar disorder.
Manuela Russo,Katie Mahon,Megan Shanahan,Elizabeth Ramjas,Carly Solon,Shaun Purcell,Katherine E. Burdick,Katherine E. Burdick +7 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that in patients with bipolar disorder, sleep disruptions have a detrimental effect on general level of psychopathology and contribute directly to impaired cognitive functioning in the domains of social cognition and working memory.
Computer vision-based assessment of motor functioning in schizophrenia: Use of smartphones for remote measurement of schizophrenia symptomatology
Anzar Abbas,Vijay Kumar Yadav,Emma Smith,Elizabeth Ramjas,Sarah B Rutter,Caridad Benavides,Vidya Koesmahargyo,Li Zhang,Lei Guan,Paul J. Rosenfield,M. Mercedes Perez-Rodriguez,Isaac R. Galatzer-Levy +11 more
TL;DR: Remote, smartphone-based assessments were able to capture meaningful visual behavior for computer vision-based objective measurement of head movement that was able to accurately classify schizophrenia diagnosis and quantify symptom severity in patients with schizophrenia.