Helen J. Crawford

Affiliations: 
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA, United States 
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"Helen Crawford"
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Publications

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Wan L, Friedman BH, Boutros NN, et al. (2008) P50 sensory gating and attentional performance. International Journal of Psychophysiology : Official Journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology. 67: 91-100
Wan L, Friedman BH, Boutros NN, et al. (2008) Smoking status affects men and women differently on schizotypal traits and cognitive failures Personality and Individual Differences. 44: 425-435
Wan L, Crawford HJ, Boutros N. (2007) Early and late auditory sensory gating: moderating influences from schizotypal personality, tobacco smoking status, and acute smoking. Psychiatry Research. 151: 11-20
Wan L, Crawford HJ, Boutros N. (2006) P50 sensory gating: impact of high vs. low schizotypal personality and smoking status. International Journal of Psychophysiology : Official Journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology. 60: 1-9
Horton JE, Crawford HJ, Harrington G, et al. (2004) Increased anterior corpus callosum size associated positively with hypnotizability and the ability to control pain Brain. 127: 1741-1747
Chen AC, Niddam DM, Crawford HJ, et al. (2002) Spatial summation of pain processing in the human brain as assessed by cerebral event related potentials. Neuroscience Letters. 328: 190-4
Crawford HJ, McClain-Furmanski D, Castagnoli N, et al. (2002) Enhancement of auditory sensory gating and stimulus-bound gamma band (40 Hz) oscillations in heavy tobacco smokers. Neuroscience Letters. 317: 151-5
McClain-Furmanski D, Castagnoli N, Castagnoli K, et al. (2000) Tobacco affects P50 sensory gating: Auditory event-related potential differences in heavy tobacco smokers and nonsmokers Neuroimage. 11: S48
Crawford HJ, Horton JE, Harrington GS, et al. (2000) Attention and disattention (hypnotic analgesia) to noxious somatosensory TENS stimuli: fMRI differences in low and highly hypnotizable individuals Neuroimage. 11
Crawford HJ, Knebel T, Kaplan L, et al. (1998) Hypnotic analgesia: 1. Somatosensory event-related potential changes to noxious stimuli and 2. Transfer learning to reduce chronic low back pain. The International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis. 46: 92-132
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