Results 181 to 190 of about 11,443 (224)
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Electrodermal Activity as a Predictor of Schizophrenic Relapse
Psychopathology, 2010Electrodermal activity and self-report of affect were recorded from schizophrenic patients with their relative absent and present, at index admission and on two subsequent occasions after discharge. It was hypothesised that it would be possible to discriminate at index admission patients who relapsed in the subsequent 2-year period from those who ...
Tarrier, N., Barrowclough, C.
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An Automated System for Processing Electrodermal Activity
2009A new approach is presented in this paper for the display and processing of electrodermal activity. It offers a fully automated interface for the pre-processing and scoring individual skin conductance responses (SCRs). The application supports parallel processing by means of multiple threads. Batch processing is also available.
Christos A. Frantzidis +3 more
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Effects of Stimulus Intensity on Electrodermal Activity
Psychophysiology, 1979ABSTRACTThe present experiment employed a between‐subjects design (N=75) to investigate the effects of auditory stimulus intensity on a number of aspects of the skin conductance response (SCR) and the skin potential response (SPR). The primary predictions were that the electrodermal orienting response (OR) would be characterized by SCRs with relatively
G, Turpin, D A, Siddle
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Diurnal variations of tonic electrodermal activity
International Journal of Psychophysiology, 1999Diurnal variability of skin conductance level (SCL) was examined in two complementary experiments, simultaneously with variability of skin temperature (ST) and that of simple reaction time (RT) which was recorded as a behavioural index of arousal. In Experiment I, 6 subjects spent 6 days in the laboratory in homogeneous conditions.
P, Hot +3 more
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Cortical initiation of phasic electrodermal activity
International Journal of Psychophysiology, 1990In order to investigate the role of the cerebral cortex in elicitation of spontaneous electrodermal responses (EDRs), electrocortical activity (EEG) preceding peripheral fluctuations was investigated. During one 30-min session, subjects imagined arousing situations. EEG and EDR average waveforms were computed with respect to the EDR maxima.
R, Weitkunat, M, Bührer, B, Sparrer
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2000
Abstract Electrodermal activity (EDA) has been recorded in thousands of psychophysiological studies. Many who record EDA today share the basic belief expressed by Carl Jung in 1907 and also by present-day lie detector operators that verbal responses do not tell all, but that EDA does reveal the secrets of “mental life”.
Robert M. Stern +2 more
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Abstract Electrodermal activity (EDA) has been recorded in thousands of psychophysiological studies. Many who record EDA today share the basic belief expressed by Carl Jung in 1907 and also by present-day lie detector operators that verbal responses do not tell all, but that EDA does reveal the secrets of “mental life”.
Robert M. Stern +2 more
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Electrodermal activity in the affective disorders and schizophrenia
Psychological Medicine, 1981SYNOPSISElectrodermal activity was measured bilaterally at rest and during stimulation in 22 schizophrenic, 11 depressed and 12 anxiety state patients, and in 32 normal volunteers. No group showed a distinctive pattern of lateral asymmetry. The frequency of spontaneous fluctuations in electrodermal activity was greater in the anxiety state and ...
B K, Toone, E, Cooke, M H, Lader
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Reliability of bilateral differences in electrodermal activity
Biological Psychology, 1990To evaluate the reliability of electrodermal lateralization, skin conductance response (SCR) and skin potential response (SPR) amplitudes were recorded bilaterally in 11 right-handed male students during 4 identical experimental sessions each a week apart.
J, Naveteur, H, Sequeira-Martinho
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Electrodermal activity as a prodromal sign in schizophrenia
Biological Psychiatry, 1997Michael E Dawson +2 more
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Stability of spontaneous electrodermal activity in the kitten
Biological Psychology, 1981Recordings of spontaneous electrodermal activity (EDA) were made in eight kittens, between 1 and 29 days of age, in order to obtain an estimation of reliability. Both frequency (number of SSPRs/min) and amplitude (in mV) of spontaneous electrodermal responses were computed during several waking-sleeping sessions.
B, Delerm +2 more
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