Dr. Beth Ellen Snitz PH.D.
Psychologist
5000 Mcknight Rd Suite 207 Pittsburgh PA, 15237About
Dr. Beth Snitz is a psychologist practicing in Pittsburgh, PA. Dr. Snitz specializes in the treatment of mental health problems, and helps people to cope with their mental illnesses. As a psychologist, Dr. Snitz evaluates and treats patients through a variety of methods, most typically being psychotherapy or talk therapy. Patients usually visit Dr. Snitz because they have been experiencing depression, anxiety, stress or anger for a significant period of time and are seeking help. Psychologists may perform a variety of exams and assessments to diagnose a mental condition.
Provider Details
Expert Publications
Data provided by the National Library of Medicine- Neuropsychological and oculomotor correlates of spatial working memory performance in schizophrenia patients and controls.
- Clinical versus mechanical prediction: a meta-analysis.
- Impaired processing of affective prosody in Korsakoff's syndrome.
- Remote memory in advanced Alzheimer's disease.
- Ginkgo biloba for prevention of dementia: a randomized controlled trial.
- A novel approach to assessing memory at the population level: vulnerability to semantic interference.
- Should mild cognitive impairment be subtyped?
- Mild cognitive deficits and everyday functioning among older adults in the community: the Monongahela-Youghiogheny Healthy Aging Team study.
- Cross-validation of brain structural biomarkers and cognitive aging in a community-based study.
- Mild cognitive impairment: incidence and vascular risk factors in a population-based cohort.
- Yes, it is time to reconsider how we rate cognitive impairments in HIV disease.
- Who wants a free brain scan? Assessing and correcting for recruitment biases in a population-based sMRI pilot study.
- Association of APOE polymorphisms and stressful life events with dementia in a Pakistani population.
- Association analysis of 23 susceptibility loci with risk of dementia in a Pakistani population.
- Rates and risk factors for progression to incident dementia vary by age in a population cohort.
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