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Psychology

D-Index
72
Citations
15076
World Ranking
2094
National Ranking
1213

Overview

Martin Harrow is affiliated with the University of Illinois at Chicago in the United States. Their research primarily focuses on Medicine and Psychology, with a particular emphasis on Psychiatry and Mental Health as well as related subfields such as Philosophy, Clinical Psychology, Social Psychology, and Structural Biology.

The scientist has contributed extensively to topics including schizophrenia research and treatment, mental health and psychiatry, psychosomatic disorders and their treatments, mental health treatment and access, advanced electron microscopy techniques and applications, mental health research topics, and functional brain connectivity studies.

Frequent publication venues for their work include:

  • Schizophrenia Research
  • Psychological Medicine
  • Journal of Visualized Experiments
  • Frontiers in Psychiatry
  • bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)

Martin Harrow has collaborated regularly with several co-authors, including:

  • Cherise Rosen
  • Thomas H. Jobe
  • Liping Tong
  • Helen Harrow
  • Rajiv P. Sharma

Among notable recent publications by Martin Harrow are:

  • "Twenty-year effects of antipsychotics in schizophrenia and affective psychotic disorders," 2021, Psychological Medicine
  • "Clarifying the direction of impact of negative symptoms and neurocognition on prospective work functioning in psychosis: A 20-year longitudinal study," 2020, Schizophrenia Research
  • "Behind the opaque curtain: A 20-year longitudinal study of dissociative and first-rank symptoms in schizophrenia-spectrum psychoses, other psychoses and non-psychotic disorders," 2020, Schizophrenia Research
  • "'An experience of meaning': A 20-year prospective analysis of delusional realities in schizophrenia and affective psychoses," 2022, Frontiers in Psychiatry
  • "'Are these my thoughts?': A 20-year prospective study of thought insertion, thought withdrawal, thought broadcasting, and their relationship to auditory verbal hallucinations," 2022, Schizophrenia Research

Best Publications

  • Course and outcome in bipolar affective disorder: a longitudinal follow-up study.

    Joseph F. Goldberg;Martin Harrow;Linda S. Grossman

  • Outcome in Manic Disorders: A Naturalistic Follow-up Study

    Martin Harrow;Joseph F. Goldberg;Joseph F. Goldberg;Linda S. Grossman;Herbert Y. Meltzer

  • Negative Symptoms in Schizophrenia: Their Longitudinal Course and Prognostic Importance

    Michael F. Pogue-Geile;Martin Harrow

  • Suicide risk in schizophrenia: learning from the past to change the future

    Maurizio Pompili;Maurizio Pompili;Xavier F Amador;Paolo Girardi;Jill Harkavy-Friedman

  • Risk for bipolar illness in patients initially hospitalized for unipolar depression

    Joseph F. Goldberg;Martin Harrow;Joyce E. Whiteside

  • A checklist for the diagnosis of schizophrenia.

    B. M. Astrachan;Martin Harrow;D. Adler;L. Brauer

  • Negative and positive symptoms in schizophrenia and depression: a followup.

    Michael F. Pogue-Geile;Martin Harrow

  • Do Patients with Schizophrenia Ever Show Periods of Recovery? A 15-Year Multi-Follow-up Study

    Martin Harrow;Linda S Grossman;Thomas H Jobe;Ellen S Herbener

  • Factors involved in outcome and recovery in schizophrenia patients not on antipsychotic medications: a 15-year multifollow-up study.

    Martin Harrow;Thomas H. Jobe

  • Long-term outcome of patients with schizophrenia: a review.

    Thomas H Jobe;Martin Harrow

  • Ten-year outcome: patients with schizoaffective disorders, schizophrenia, affective disorders and mood-incongruent psychotic symptoms.

    Martin Harrow;Linda S. Grossman;Ellen S. Herbener;Elizabeth W. Davies

  • Do all schizophrenia patients need antipsychotic treatment continuously throughout their lifetime? A 20-year longitudinal study.

    M. Harrow;T. H. Jobe;R. N. Faull

  • Periods of Recovery in Deficit Syndrome Schizophrenia: A 20-Year Multi–follow-up Longitudinal Study

    Gregory P. Strauss;Martin Harrow;Linda S. Grossman;Cherise Rosen

  • Depression During the Longitudinal Course of Schizophrenia

    James R. Sands;Martin Harrow

  • Neurocognitive dysfunction and psychosocial outcome in patients with bipolar I disorder at 15-year follow-up.

    K. E. Burdick;J. F. Goldberg;M. Harrow

  • Sex differences in schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders: a 20-year longitudinal study of psychosis and recovery.

    Linda S. Grossman;Martin Harrow;Cherise Rosen;Robert Faull

  • Consistency of remission and outcome in bipolar and unipolar mood disorders: a 10-year prospective follow-up.

    Joseph F Goldberg;Martin Harrow

  • Risk for suicide in schizophrenia and other psychotic and nonpsychotic disorders.

    Jerry F. Westermeyer;Martin Harrow;Joanne T. Marengo

  • Is disordered thinking unique to schizophrenia

    Martin Harrow;Donald Quinlan

  • Neuropsychological Impairments in Functional Psychiatric Diseases

    Joseph M. Rochford;Thomas Detre;Gary J. Tucker;Martin Harrow

Frequent Co-Authors

Donald M. Quinlan
Donald M. Quinlan Yale University
Eileen M. Martin
Eileen M. Martin Rush University Medical Center
Evelyn J. Bromet
Evelyn J. Bromet Stony Brook University
Philip S. Holzman
Philip S. Holzman Harvard University
Stewart A. Shankman
Stewart A. Shankman Northwestern University
Joan G. Miller
Joan G. Miller New School
Gregory P. Strauss
Gregory P. Strauss University of Georgia
Katherine E. Burdick
Katherine E. Burdick Brigham and Women's Hospital
David L. Penn
David L. Penn University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Michael F. Pogue-Geile
Michael F. Pogue-Geile University of Pittsburgh

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