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Is the Wisconsin card sorting test a useful neurocognitive endophenotype?
William S. Kremen
,
Seth A. Eisen
, Ming T. Tsuang
, Michael J. Lyons
Division of Rheumatology
Siteman Cancer Center
Rheumatic Diseases Research Resource-Based Center
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
42
Scopus citations
Overview
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Keyphrases
Wisconsin Card Sorting Test
100%
Neurocognitive Endophenotype
100%
Heritability
44%
Endophenotype
33%
Test Performance
11%
Middle-aged
11%
Schizophrenia
11%
Environmental Factors
11%
Genetic Influences
11%
Twin Study
11%
Genetic Factors
11%
Psychiatric Illness
11%
Executive Function
11%
Influence Factors
11%
Brain Function
11%
Working Memory
11%
Vulnerability Markers
11%
Neurocognitive
11%
Inconsistent Results
11%
Adult Sample
11%
Midlife Adults
11%
Cognitive Vulnerability
11%
Polychoric
11%
Frontal Executive Function
11%
Neuroscience
Endophenotype
100%
Wisconsin Card Sorting Test
100%
Executive Function
22%
Brain Function
11%
Working Memory
11%
Psychopathology
11%
Psychology
Heritability
100%
Executive Function
50%
Genetic Influence
25%
Schizophrenia
25%
Working Memory
25%
Psychopathology
25%