1. Increased prefrontal gyrification in a large high-risk cohort characterizes those who develop schizophrenia and reflects abnormal prefrontal development. Harris JM, Moorhead TW, Miller P, McIntosh AM, Bonnici HM, Owens DG, Johnstone EC, Lawrie SM. Biol Psychiatry. 2007 Oct 1;62(7):722-9.
  2. Longitudinal volume reductions in people at high genetic risk of schizophrenia as they develop psychosis. McIntosh AM, Owens DC, Moorhead WJ, Whalley HC, Stanfield AC, Hall J, Johnstone EC, Lawrie SM. Biol Psychiatry. 2011 May 15; 69(10):953-8.
  3. The Neuro/PsyGRID calibration experiment: identifying sources of variance and bias in multicenter MRI studies. Suckling J, Barnes A, Job D, Brennan D, Lymer K, Dazzan P, Marques TR, MacKay C, McKie S, Williams SR, Williams SC, Deakin B, Lawrie S. Hum Brain Mapp. 2012 Feb; 33(2):373-86.
  4. The neural basis of familial risk and temperamental variation in individuals at high risk of bipolar disorder. Whalley HC, Sussmann JE, Chakirova G, Mukerjee P, Peel A, McKirdy J, Hall J, Johnstone EC, Lawrie SM, McIntosh AM. Biol Psychiatry. 2011 Aug 15;70(4):343-9.
  5. Similarity-based extraction of individual networks from gray matter MRI scans. Tijms BM, Seriès P, Willshaw DJ, Lawrie SM. Cereb Cortex. 2012 Jul; 22(7):1530-41.