Table 1 Demographic and symptoms across groups.

From: Multimodal fusion of brain signals for robust prediction of psychosis transition

Controls v. CHR

 

Controls (n = 31)

CHR (n = 43)

n Female/Male ns

11/20

9/34

Mean age (SD)*

23.23 (3.57)

21.30 (4.08)

Mean education in years (SD)*

4.20 (1.38)

3.25 (1.60)

n Minority/Caucasiana ns

17/8

25/16

CHR-Nonconverters v. CHR-Converters

 

Not converted (n = 32)

Converted (n = 11)

n Female/Male ns

5/27

4/7

Mean age (SD) ns

21.66 (5.28)

21.18 (3.67)

Mean education in years (SD) ns

3.1 (1.54)

3.70 (1.77)

n Minority/Caucasiana ns

18/13

7/3

Mean SIPS Pos (SD) ns

11.53 (4.94)

13.55 (5.34)

Mean SIPS Neg (SD) ns

14.19 (6.78)

17.36 (9.77)

Mean SIPS Disorganized (SD) ns

7.68 (4.53)

9.73 (4.47)

Mean SIPS General (SD) ns

9.45 (4.14)

11.55 (5.30)

Mean SIPS GAF (SD) ns

47.87 (8.22)

43.55 (10.23)

  1. Mean and standard deviation (SD) for demographics and symptoms are reported. Chi-square tests were used to assess gender and minority status. T-tests assessed all other comparisons.
  2. ns denotes not significantly different at p < 0.05.
  3. CHR clinical high risk, SD standard deviation, SIPS Structured Interview for Psychosis-Risk Syndrome.
  4. *Denotes significant difference at p < 0.05.
  5. aMinority status was not reported for all participants.