Salomon Israel
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
74 Papers
186 Citations
Salomon Israel is an academic researcher from Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The author has contributed to research in topics: Prosocial behavior & Trier social stress test. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 67 publications. Previous affiliations of Salomon Israel include Herzog Hospital & National University of Singapore.
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Papers
The p Factor: One General Psychopathology Factor in the Structure of Psychiatric Disorders?
Avshalom Caspi,Renate Houts,Daniel W. Belsky,Sidra Goldman-Mellor,HonaLee Harrington,Salomon Israel,Madeline H. Meier,Sandhya Ramrakha,Idan Shalev,Richie Poulton,Terrie E. Moffitt +10 more
TL;DR: The structure of psychopathology is examined, taking into account dimensionality, persistence, co-occurrence, and sequential comorbidity of mental disorders across 20 years, from adolescence to midlife, to explain why it is challenging to find causes, consequences, biomarkers, and treatments with specificity to individual mental disorders.
Quantification of biological aging in young adults.
Daniel W. Belsky,Avshalom Caspi,Renate Houts,Harvey J. Cohen,David L. Corcoran,Andrea Danese,HonaLee Harrington,Salomon Israel,Morgan E. Levine,Jonathan D. Schaefer,Karen Sugden,Ben Williams,Anatoli I. Yashin,Richie Poulton,Terrie E. Moffitt +14 more
TL;DR: It is indicated that aging processes can be quantified in people still young enough for prevention of age-related disease, opening a new door for antiaging therapies.
906
Genetics of Human Social Behavior
Richard P. Ebstein,Richard P. Ebstein,Richard P. Ebstein,Salomon Israel,Soo Hong Chew,Soo Hong Chew,Songfa Zhong,Songfa Zhong,Ariel Knafo +8 more
TL;DR: The leap from twin studies to identifying specific genes engaging the social brain has occurred in the past decade, aided by deep insights accumulated about social behavior in lower mammals as mentioned in this paper, finding that genes such as the arginine vasopressin receptor and the oxytocin receptor contribute to social behavior.
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Arginine vasopressin and oxytocin modulate human social behavior.
Richard P. Ebstein,Richard P. Ebstein,Salomon Israel,Elad Lerer,Florina Uzefovsky,Idan Shalev,Inga Gritsenko,Mathias Riebold,Mathias Riebold,Shahaf Salomon,Nurit Yirmiya +10 more
TL;DR: Accumulating studies employing a broad array of cutting‐edge tools in psychology, neuroeconomics, molecular genetics, pharmacology, electrophysiology, and brain imaging are beginning to elaborate the intriguing role of oxytocin and arginine vasopressin in human social behavior.
196
BDNF Val66Met polymorphism is associated with HPA axis reactivity to psychological stress characterized by genotype and gender interactions.
Idan Shalev,Elad Lerer,Salomon Israel,Florina Uzefovsky,Inga Gritsenko,David Mankuta,Richard P. Ebstein,Richard P. Ebstein,Marsha Kaitz +8 more
TL;DR: Examination of individual responses by Genotype and Sex to a standardized social stress paradigm indicates that a common, functionally significant polymorphism in the BDNF gene modulates HPA axis reactivity and regulation during the TSST differently in men and women.
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