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. 2015 Mar 23;41(6):1276–1284. doi: 10.1093/schbul/sbv025

Table 1.

Studies Included in Activation Likelihood Estimation (ALE)

Source Active N Control N Treatment Control Condition Duration/ Dose Intensity Task Direction of Activity
Wykes et al30 6 6 Individualized CRT Occupational therapy 12/40 3.333 n-Back
Haut et al21 9 9 Working memory training Cognitive behavioral social skills training 4–6/25 5 n-Back
Habel et al33 10 10 Training of affect recognition TAU 6/9 1.5 Facial Emotion and Age Recognition Task
Bor et al31 8 9 Rehacom-CRT TAU 7/28 4 n-Back
Hooker et al29 11 11 Auditory training + social cognition training Computer game placebo 10/50 5 Emotion Recognition Task ↑↓
Subramaniam et al27 15 14 Auditory and visual training Computer game placebo 16/90 5.625 Reality Monitoring Task
Hooker et al22 11 11 Auditory training + social cognition training Computer game placebo 10/50 5 Facial Emotion Recognition Task ↑↓
Vianin et al32 8 8 RECOS CRT TAU 14/42 3 Verbal Fluency Task
Subramaniam et al28 16 15 Auditory training and visual training Computer game placebo 16/90 5.625 n-Back

Note: N, subject number; TAU, treatment as usual; ↑, increase; ↓, decrease; CRT, cognitive remediation training. The ALE included a total of 128 subjects (active = 68; control = 60). Participants underwent an average of 40 sessions (dose), an average of 10 weeks of training, and an average treatment intensity of 3.92 (calculated based on “dose” divided by “duration”). The 2 studies each by Hooker and colleagues and Subramaniam and colleagues were counted only once because they constituted the same patient groups. We used the higher N from Subramaniam et al.28 The study by Vianin and colleagues measured time 2 > time 1 in active treatment group only and therefore only active treatment N was included; all others studies measured a Group × Task interaction. Intensity calculated based on dose/duration.