Rare chromosomal deletions and duplications increase risk of schizophrenia
Broad Institute · Harvard University Press · +29 more institutions
Indexed incrossrefpubmed
Abstract
No abstract available for this paper.
Citation impact
1,503
total citations
- FWCI
- 108.30
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 32
Citations per year
Authors
119- SPShaun PurcellCorresponding
Broad Institute, Harvard University Press, Massachusetts General Hospital, Center for Systems Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- JSJennifer Stone
Broad Institute, Massachusetts General Hospital, Center for Systems Biology, Cardiff University
- DMDouglas M. Ruderfer
Broad Institute, Massachusetts General Hospital, Center for Systems Biology, University College London
- PSPamela Sklar
Broad Institute, Massachusetts General Hospital, Center for Systems Biology, Cardiff University
- DMDouglas M. Ruderfer
Broad Institute, Massachusetts General Hospital, Center for Systems Biology, University of Edinburgh
Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Copy-number variation
- Schizophrenia (object-oriented programming)
- Genetics
- Genome-wide association study
- Psychosis
- Chromosome
- Pedigree chart
- Biology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Good health and well-being
No related works found for this paper.
Funding
- UDU.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
- MGMassachusetts General Hospital
- UOUniversity of Southern California
- WTWellcome Trust
- HRHealth Research Board
- BIBroad Institute
- UOUniversity of Aberdeen
- SFScience Foundation Ireland
- TCTrinity College Dublin
- FFForskningsrådet för Arbetsliv och SocialvetenskapAward: 2001-2368
- UOUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- MRMedical Research Council
- NHNational Health and Medical Research Council
- NINational Institute of Mental HealthAwards: MH074027, MH077139