Publications by authors named "Stuart J Leask"

Background: Motor abnormalities are frequently described in schizophrenia, and work by Altorfer and colleagues suggests that measuring head movements during conversational speech shows differences at the level of the individual. We wished to see whether their findings, conducted using computer analysis of video obtained in motion capture suites, could be replicated using compact, portable movement sensors, in a case-control study comparing the mean amplitude of head movements during general conversation.

Methods: A referred sample of inpatients and outpatients with a diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia was identified from case note information.

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In recent years questions have arisen about whether there are any links between handedness and academic abilities as well as other factors. In this study we investigate the effects of gender, writing hand, relative hand skill, and UK region on mathematics and reading test scores by applying a multivariate linear mixed-effects model. A data sample based on 11,847 11-year-old pupils across the UK from the National Child Development Study was considered for the analysis.

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Two large British databases of handedness assessed by writing hand at 10-11 years of age were analysed by geographical region. Left-handedness was found to vary significantly across regions according to one survey but not the other. In both data sets, left-handed writing was significantly more frequent in England than in Scotland and Wales combined.

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Deficits in lateralization have been reported in handedness, language and anatomical asymmetry in schizophrenia, but the relationship between these anomalies has been unclear. Extending earlier work demonstrating that degrees of lateralization are related to verbal ability in the general population, we here investigate the relationship in children who later developed psychosis. Using data from a box-marking test and an index of receptive verbal ability in the UK National Child Development study, we constructed three-dimensional plots of verbal ability in relation to left- and right-hand skill at the age of 11 years, and compared the performance of 34 children who by age 28 had developed schizophrenia and 21 who had developed affective psychosis with 12,782 in the total population.

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Right hand preference distinguishes Homo sapiens from our closest primate relative, the chimpanzee. Are differences in degrees of handedness associated with differences in the rate of language development? To answer this question, verbal performance is examined in relation to hand skill in a UK national birth cohort dataset. Using 3-D data plots, we show that increasing dominant-hand skill is associated with increasing verbal ability, and stronger lateralization is associated with earlier acquisition of words.

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