Publications by authors named "Suzanne H W So"

Self-generated overt actions are preceded by a slow negativity as measured by electroencephalogram, which has been associated with motor preparation. Recent studies have shown that this neural activity is modulated by the predictability of action outcomes. It is unclear whether inner speech is also preceded by a motor-related negativity and influenced by the same factor.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how the COVID-19 pandemic impacted sleep patterns among children and adolescents in Hong Kong, addressing a knowledge gap left by previous studies that focused only on the early months of the pandemic.
  • Utilizing a cross-sectional design, researchers recruited a total of 1,233 primary and secondary school students and compared their sleep data before and during the pandemic, accounting for various factors such as age, sex, and household income.
  • Findings reveal that students pre-COVID experienced longer sleep latency on both school and nonschool days, with low household income linked to later bedtimes and sleep onset, highlighting the pandemic's ongoing adverse effects on youth sleep health and the role of socioeconomic factors.
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A bifactor model with a general (p) factor reflecting shared variance and specific factors reflecting additional variance in individual symptoms has been introduced to explain common co-occurrence among anxiety, depression and schizotypy. However, longitudinal evidence is lacking and the validity of bifactor modeling is debatable. The current study aimed to examine the presence of the p factor together with specific factors in accounting for relationships between anxiety, depression and schizotypy both cross-sectionally and longitudinally, and to investigate the relationship between these factors and rumination.

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Purpose Of The Research: Cortico-striatal functional connectivity has been implicated in the neuropathology of schizophrenia. However, the longitudinal relationship between the cortico-striatal connectivity and schizotypy remains unknown. We examined the resting-state fMRI connectivity in 27 individuals with a high level of schizotypy and 20 individuals with a low level of schizotypy at baseline and 18 months later.

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Background: To cope with the rising demand for psychological treatment, evidence-based low-intensity cognitive behavioural therapy (LiCBT) delivered by trained para-professionals was introduced internationally.

Aims: This pilot study aimed at examining the effectiveness of LiCBT in Hong Kong.

Method: This study was of an uncontrolled pre- and post-treatment design, testing LiCBT at a local community mental health centre in Hong Kong.

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: Mental disorders have been found to be positively associated with temperature in cool to cold climatic regions but the association in warmer regions is unclear. This study presented the short-term association between temperatures and mental disorder hospitalizations in a subtropical city with a mean annual temperature over 21 °C. : Using Poisson-generalized additive models and distributed-lagged nonlinear models, daily mental disorder hospitalizations between 2002 and 2011 in Hong Kong were regressed on daily mean temperature, relative humidity, and air pollutants, adjusted for seasonal trend, long-term trend, day-of-week, and holiday.

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Cognition dysfunction may reflect trait characteristics of bipolarity but cognitive effects of medications have confounded previous comparisons of cognitive function between bipolar II and unipolar depression, which are distinct clinical disorders with some overlaps. Therefore, we examined the executive function (WCST), attention, cognitive speed (TMT-A) and memory (CAVLT, WMS-Visual reproduction) of 20 treatment-naïve bipolar II patients (BPII), 35 treatment-naïve unipolar depressed (UD) patients, and 35 age/sex/education matched healthy controls. The subjects were young (aged 18-35), and had no history of psychosis or substance use, currently depressed and meeting either RDC criteria for Bipolar II Disorder or DSM-IV-TR criteria for Major Depressive Disorder.

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Article Synopsis
  • Schizotypy is a cluster of personality traits linked to a higher risk of developing schizophrenia, and studying it in healthy people can provide insights into schizophrenia's underlying processes.
  • The research examined changes in schizotypy over time in a group of 1541 college students, using a longitudinal design and various self-reported measures.
  • Four distinct trajectories of schizotypy were identified: a non-schizotypy group, a stable high schizotypy group with poor outcomes, a high reactive schizotypy group with a rapid decline in functioning, and a low reactive schizotypy group.
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