Ilan Wald
Tel Aviv University
20 Papers
12 Citations
Ilan Wald is an academic researcher from Tel Aviv University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Attentional bias. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 20 publications. Previous affiliations of Ilan Wald include Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
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Papers
Neural traces of stress: cortisol related sustained enhancement of amygdala-hippocampal functional connectivity
Sharon Vaisvaser,Tamar Lin,Roee Admon,Ilana Podlipsky,Yona Greenman,Yona Greenman,Naftali Stern,Naftali Stern,Eyal Fruchter,Ilan Wald,Daniel S. Pine,Ricardo Tarrasch,Yair Bar-Haim,Talma Hendler +13 more
TL;DR: The authors' observations provide evidence of a prolonged post-stress response profile, characterized by both the comprehensive balance of most DMN functional connections and the distinct time and cortisol dependent ascent of intra-limbic connectivity.
Attention bias variability and symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder.
Brian M. Iacoviello,Gang Wu,Rany Abend,James W. Murrough,Adriana Feder,Eyal Fruchter,Yoav Levinstein,Ilan Wald,Christopher R. Bailey,Daniel S. Pine,Alexander Neumeister,Yair Bar-Haim,Dennis S. Charney +12 more
TL;DR: Within-subject variability of attention biases in posttraumatic patients may be a useful marker for attentional control impairment and the development of posttrauma symptoms.
Attention to threats and combat-related posttraumatic stress symptoms: prospective associations and moderation by the serotonin transporter gene.
Ilan Wald,Kathryn A. Degnan,Elena Gorodetsky,Dennis S. Charney,Nathan A. Fox,Eyal Fruchter,David Goldman,Gad Lubin,Daniel S. Pine,Yair Bar-Haim +9 more
TL;DR: Investigation of the interplay among attention to threat, combat exposure, and other risk factors for PTSD symptoms in soldiers deployed to combat found threat vigilance developed during combat deployment, particularly when they were exposed to high-intensity combat.
Attention bias away from threat during life threatening danger predicts PTSD symptoms at one-year follow-up.
Ilan Wald,Tomer Shechner,Shani Bitton,Y. Holoshitz,Dennis S. Charney,David Muller,Nathan A. Fox,Daniel S. Pine,Yair Bar-Haim +8 more
TL;DR: In the exposed group, stronger attentional threat avoidance during stress exposure predicted higher levels of PTSD symptoms 1 year later, which suggests that neurocognitive measures may index risk for PTSD.
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Perturbed threat monitoring following a traumatic event predicts risk for post-traumatic stress disorder
Reut Naim,Ilan Wald,A. Lior,Daniel S. Pine,Nathan A. Fox,Gal Sheppes,Pinchas Halpern,Yair Bar-Haim +7 more
TL;DR: Threat-related attention bias can be reliably measured in the context of a hospital ED and significantly predicts risk for later PTSD.