Matthew Kurtz, assistant professor of psychology, was interviewed and quoted in a Feb. 10 issue of Medscape Medical News. The article is titled "Mixed Results for Computer-Assisted Cognitive Remediation in Schizophrenia." Although computer-assisted cognitive remediation can help patients with schizophrenia improve their performance on training tests, these improvements do not generalize to broader neuropsychological or functional outcome measures, according to new research. The remediation program study is published in the February issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry. "I thought this was a very well-conducted study with a strong sample size and paradoxical findings," Kurtz says in the article. "It's…