Daniel P. Dickstein mostly deals with Bipolar disorder, Psychiatry, Neuroscience, Prefrontal cortex and Clinical psychology. Daniel P. Dickstein combines subjects such as Irritability, Neuropsychology, El Niño, Mood disorders and Comorbidity with his study of Bipolar disorder. His Psychiatry study frequently draws parallels with other fields, such as Audiology.
His Prefrontal cortex research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives in Voxel, Impulsivity, Anatomy and Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. His Clinical psychology research includes elements of Developmental psychology, Neuropsychological test and Cognition. His Globus pallidus study combines topics in areas such as Frontal lobe, Cerebrum and Corpus callosum.
His primary scientific interests are in Bipolar disorder, Clinical psychology, Psychiatry, Mood and Irritability. Daniel P. Dickstein works in the field of Bipolar disorder, focusing on Mania in particular. His research integrates issues of Developmental psychology, Neurocognitive, Typically developing and Cognitive flexibility in his study of Clinical psychology.
His work focuses on many connections between Mood and other disciplines, such as Not Otherwise Specified, that overlap with his field of interest in Substance abuse. His Irritability research is multidisciplinary, relying on both Internal medicine and Nosology. His work deals with themes such as El Niño, Resting state fMRI, Functional magnetic resonance imaging, Neuroimaging and Prefrontal cortex, which intersect with Audiology.
His primary areas of study are Clinical psychology, Bipolar disorder, Mood, Young adult and Not Otherwise Specified. His work carried out in the field of Clinical psychology brings together such families of science as Psychological intervention, Cognitive skill, Typically developing and Cognitive flexibility. The various areas that Daniel P. Dickstein examines in his Bipolar disorder study include Neuroimaging and Comorbidity.
The Mood study combines topics in areas such as Sadness, Irritability, Psychosocial, Demography and Mania. He studied Young adult and Audiology that intersect with Resting state fMRI, Adhd symptoms, Vulnerability, Sleep deprivation and Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. His study in Not Otherwise Specified is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from both Bipolar I disorder, Anxiety, Substance abuse, Bipolar II disorder and Confounding.
Daniel P. Dickstein focuses on Bipolar disorder, Not Otherwise Specified, Clinical psychology, Functional magnetic resonance imaging and Comorbidity. As part of his studies on Bipolar disorder, Daniel P. Dickstein often connects relevant areas like Audiology. His biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Young adult, Resting state fMRI, Neuroimaging and Functional connectivity.
When carried out as part of a general Clinical psychology research project, his work on Mood is frequently linked to work in Association, therefore connecting diverse disciplines of study. Functional magnetic resonance imaging is the subject of his research, which falls under Neuroscience. His research in Comorbidity intersects with topics in Odds ratio and Abdominal obesity, Metabolic syndrome.
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Quantitative Brain Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
F X Castellanos;J N Giedd;W L Marsh;S D Hamburger.
Archives of General Psychiatry (1996)
Implication of right frontostriatal circuitry in response inhibition and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
B.J. Casey;F. Xavier Castellanos;Jay N. Giedd;Wendy L. Marsh.
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (1997)
Prevalence, Clinical Correlates, and Longitudinal Course of Severe Mood Dysregulation in Children
Melissa A. Brotman;Mariana Schmajuk;Brendan A. Rich;Daniel P. Dickstein.
Biological Psychiatry (2006)
Distinct neural signatures detected for ADHD subtypes after controlling for micro-movements in resting state functional connectivity MRI data
Damien A. Fair;Joel T. Nigg;Swathi Iyer;Deepti Bathula;Deepti Bathula.
Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience (2013)
Common and distinct patterns of grey-matter volume alteration in major depression and bipolar disorder: evidence from voxel-based meta-analysis
T Wise;J Radua;J Radua;E Via;N Cardoner.
Molecular Psychiatry (2017)
Frontotemporal alterations in pediatric bipolar disorder: results of a voxel-based morphometry study.
Daniel P. Dickstein;Michael P. Milham;Allison C. Nugent;Wayne C. Drevets.
Archives of General Psychiatry (2005)
Neuropsychological performance in pediatric bipolar disorder.
Daniel P Dickstein;Julia E Treland;Joseph Snow;Erin B McClure.
Biological Psychiatry (2004)
Deficits in Social Cognition and Response Flexibility in Pediatric Bipolar Disorder
Erin B. McClure;Julia E. Treland;Joseph Snow;Mariana Schmajuk.
American Journal of Psychiatry (2005)
Grey matter differences in bipolar disorder: a meta-analysis of voxel-based morphometry studies
Sudhakar Selvaraj;Danilo Arnone;Dominic Job;Andrew Stanfield.
Bipolar Disorders (2012)
Sydenham's chorea Magnetic resonance imaging of the basal ganglia
J.N. Giedd;J.L. Rapoport;M.J.P. Kruesi;C. Parker.
Neurology (1995)
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