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1  individuals with schizophrenia who were not paranoid.
2                                              Paranoid and antisocial personality disorders were assoc
3 d 4), somatoform disorder (factors 1 and 2), paranoid and dependent personality disorders (factors 2
4 atients had psychotic symptoms manifested as paranoid and grandiose delusions.
5 s in baseline levels of amygdala activity in paranoid and nonparanoid individuals with schizophrenia
6 ditionally, the reported differences between paranoid and nonparanoid patient volunteers emphasize th
7                                              Paranoid and nonparanoid patients differed in left amygd
8                 Specifically, the absence of paranoid and threatening appraisals might protect agains
9 e authors' goal was to compare subjects with paranoid and undifferentiated subtypes of schizophrenia.
10 odd, eccentric group (schizoid, schizotypal, paranoid), and the cluster C anxious, fearful group (obs
11 viduals with schizophrenia who were actively paranoid at the time of scanning, and 16 individuals wit
12                                 By contrast, paranoid cognitive personality style and narcissistic in
13  2) affect regulation, 3) narcissism, and 4) paranoid cognitive personality style.
14 ith psychosis, with a further 28% exhibiting paranoid, deluded or irrational thinking, whereas <4% of
15 ause a psychosis, typically characterized by paranoid delusions and auditory hallucinations and often
16 ation, 2 years) in the majority of patients, paranoid delusions and hallucinations were intermediate
17 for behavioral disturbance, intermediate for paranoid delusions and hallucinations, and least for dep
18                                              Paranoid delusions are a common symptom of a range of ps
19 arsimonious model of the data indicated that paranoid delusions are associated with a combination of
20  in the hippocampus and other brain regions, paranoid delusions, disorganized speech, deficits in aud
21 nd emotion-related processes are involved in paranoid delusions.
22 his view, dysphoric mania is associated with paranoid-destructive symptoms and with psychosis.
23 ain symptom clusters (euphoric-grandiose and paranoid-destructive) occur in patients with mania, alon
24 e a diagnosis of personality disorder and/or paranoid disorder, erotomanic subtype, and to have a his
25  instead, that most social psychologists are paranoid egalitarian meliorists (PEMs).
26 oadings on PDs from all 3 clusters including paranoid, histrionic, borderline, narcissistic, dependen
27 orders were quite frequent, particularly the paranoid, histrionic, obsessive-compulsive, and passive-
28 ment as usual among patients with cluster C, paranoid, histrionic, or narcissistic personality disord
29 lar symptoms, such as anger, aggression, and paranoid ideas.
30 The high prevalence of psychotic symptoms or paranoid ideation among this aging urban population, esp
31  are racial differences in the prevalence of paranoid ideation and psychotic symptoms in persons age
32 stressors may be expressed through increased paranoid ideation and psychotic symptoms.
33 ne, we asked people to complete a measure of paranoid ideation before playing a modified Dictator Gam
34 Racial differences in psychotic symptoms and paranoid ideation persist even after control for various
35 nificant difference in psychotic symptoms or paranoid ideation was found between blacks and whites (2
36  logistic regression, psychotic symptoms and paranoid ideation were associated with four variables am
37            Blacks with psychotic symptoms or paranoid ideation, especially Caribbeans, had significan
38 1 independent and three dependent variables: paranoid ideation, psychotic symptoms, and psychotic sym
39 ue suspiciousness, ideas of reference, other paranoid ideation, quasi-psychotic delusions, quasi-psyc
40 , psychotic symptoms, and psychotic symptoms/paranoid ideation.
41  activation of this region may be related to paranoid ideation.
42 ever, investigations of amygdala function in paranoid individuals with schizophrenia, compared with b
43 vidual uses to interpret experiences towards paranoid interpretations.
44                                              Paranoid, narcissistic, and passive-aggressive personali
45 er A and cluster B personality disorders and paranoid, narcissistic, and passive-aggressive personali
46 chizophrenia spectrum personality (schizoid, paranoid, or schizotypal).
47 borderline (P = .002), depressive (P = .02), paranoid (P = .002), schizoid (P = .046), and schizotypa
48 ed risk for offspring borderline (P = .001), paranoid (P = .004), passive-aggressive (P = .046), and
49                          Importantly, highly paranoid participants attributed equally strong harmful
50 y increased activity in the left amygdala in paranoid patient volunteers compared with healthy compar
51                                Treatment for paranoid patients should address both types of processes
52 ven a prior disruptive disorder, and odds of paranoid PD increased by 4 times given a prior anxiety d
53 sive episode, and cluster C, borderline, and paranoid PDs), externalizing (substance use disorders an
54 rm disorders), and antagonism (cluster B and paranoid PDs).
55 ikely than the non-clinical group to display paranoid, personalising interpretations of their psychot
56 t unique to borderline personality disorder; paranoid personality disorder subjects had an even highe
57 nging from schizotypal personality traits to paranoid personality disorder within our DM1 patients.
58  rate of comorbid PTSD than subjects without paranoid personality disorder, as well as elevated rates
59 d risk for schizophrenia and schizotypal and paranoid personality disorders.
60 orward in the 1960s notes that episodes with paranoid psychoses are more prevalent in temporal lobe e
61  woman with a history of mental retardation, paranoid psychosis and agitated depression presented wit
62 cated that avoidant, borderline, histrionic, paranoid, schizoid, and schizotypal personality disorder
63 ft and right hemispheres of 20 patients with paranoid schizophrenia and 20 controls without schizophr
64 nce imaging (MRI) images of 21 patients with paranoid schizophrenia and 24 healthy comparison subject
65                                Patients with paranoid schizophrenia had the largest left hemisphere a
66 ere resources for verbal processing and that paranoid schizophrenia is characterized by preserved lef
67                                          The paranoid schizophrenia subtype was associated with an el
68 re promoter in one individual suffering from paranoid schizophrenia that has also been diagnosed with
69              A 54-year-old woman affected by paranoid schizophrenia with a history of hypertension an
70 e perceptual asymmetries in 16 patients with paranoid schizophrenia, 28 patients with undifferentiate
71  in patients affected by undifferentiated or paranoid schizophrenia.
72  schizophrenia diagnosis (2.07 [1.87-2.29]), paranoid subtype (1.24 [1.13-1.37]), comorbid personalit
73 nd LOS patients were more likely to have the paranoid subtype or to have less severe negative symptom
74                      Direct contributions to paranoid thoughts and cognitive disorganization persiste
75 roblems, and psychotic-like experiences (eg, paranoid thoughts or cognitive disorganization).
76  DMN functional connectivity and schizotypal-paranoid traits.
77                                              Paranoid volunteers also showed significantly decreased

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