Journal article
Cognitive neuropsychiatry, 2018
APA
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Currell, E. A., Werbeloff, N., Hayes, J., & Bell, V. (2018). Cognitive neuropsychiatric analysis of an additional large Capgras delusion case series. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry.
Chicago/Turabian
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Currell, Emily A., N. Werbeloff, J. Hayes, and V. Bell. “Cognitive Neuropsychiatric Analysis of an Additional Large Capgras Delusion Case Series.” Cognitive neuropsychiatry (2018).
MLA
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Currell, Emily A., et al. “Cognitive Neuropsychiatric Analysis of an Additional Large Capgras Delusion Case Series.” Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 2018.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{emily2018a,
title = {Cognitive neuropsychiatric analysis of an additional large Capgras delusion case series},
year = {2018},
journal = {Cognitive neuropsychiatry},
author = {Currell, Emily A. and Werbeloff, N. and Hayes, J. and Bell, V.}
}
ABSTRACT Introduction: Although important to cognitive neuropsychiatry and theories of delusions, Capgras delusion has largely been reported in single case studies. Bell et al. [2017. Uncovering Capgras delusion using a large scale medical records database. British Journal of Psychiatry Open, 3(4), 179–185] previously deployed computational and clinical case identification on a large-scale medical records database to report a case series of 84 individuals with Capgras delusion. We replicated this approach on a new database from a different mental health service provider while additionally examining instances of violence, given previous claims that Capgras is a forensic risk. Methods: We identified 34 additional cases of Capgras. Delusion phenomenology, clinical characteristics, and presence of lesions detected by neuroimaging were extracted. Results: Although most cases involved misidentification of family members or partners, a notable minority (20.6%) included the misidentification of others. Capgras typically did not present as a monothematic delusion. Few cases had identifiable lesions with no evidence of right-hemisphere bias. There was no evidence of physical violence associated with Capgras. Conclusions: Findings closely replicate Bell et al. (2017). The majority of Capgras delusion phenomenology conforms to the “dual route” model although a significant minority of cases cannot be explained by this framework.