We are delighted to announce the release of the 2023 Journal of Child Psychology & Psychiatry (JCPP) Annual Research Review, edited by Sara R. Jaffee.
‘This edition of annual research reviews illuminates where there is a solid foundation on which to build in order to improve prediction and treatment and where we need to move in new directions to accommodate data that challenge old ways of thinking.’ – Sara R. Jaffee.
A common theme across the papers published in this Annual Research Review is the importance to take a second look at existing research, note what the field of child psychology and psychiatry has done right, as well as where we have got things wrong, and recognise the need for further efforts to reach a consensus.
This JCPP Annual Research Review aims to:
- Examine the intergenerational transmission of vulnerability to psychopathology.
- Explore a multitude of opinions on the topic of psychopathology.
- Engage with the need for further learning around the causes of psychopathology.
We hope that you can access our Open Access papers and accompanying resources, and do please share with colleagues to better understand
Open Access papers
Free Access Editorial ‘Unsettling ‘settled’ science – the importance of questioning received wisdom about the causes of mental health and neuro-developmental conditions’, (March 2023), Sara Jaffee
Open Access Annual Research Review ‘Stability of psychopathology: lessons learned from longitudinal population surveys’, (December 2022), Albertine J. Oldehinkel and Johan Ormel
- Open Access Commentary ‘Modeling the malleable mental health trajectory – a commentary on Oldehinkel and Ormel (2023)’, (February 2023), Henning Tiemeier
Open Access Annual Research Review ‘Perspectives on progress in ADHD science – from characterization to cause’, (October 2022), Edmund J.S. Sonuga-Barke, Stephen P. Becker, Sven Bölte, Francisco Xavier Castellanos, Barbara Franke, Jeffrey H. Newcorn, Joel T. Nigg, Luis Augusto Rohde, Emily Simonoff
- Open Access Commentary ‘Taking stock of the present and looking to the future of ADHD research: a commentary on Sonuga-Barke et al. (2023)’, (January 2023), Jessica Agnew-Blais and Giorgia Michelini
Open Access Annual Research Review ‘Developmental pathways linking early behavioral inhibition to later anxiety’, (September 2022), Nathan A. Fox, Selin Zeytinoglu, Emilio A. Valadez, George A. Buzzell, Santiago Morales, Heather A. Henderson
- Open Access Commentary ‘The developmental psychopathology of detection and dual control – a commentary on Fox et al. (2023)’, (February 2023), Elizabeth J. Kiel
Free Access Commentary ‘Expansion and commentary on a two generation approach to prenatal opioid exposure – a commentary on Conradt et al. (2023)’, (February 2023), Barbara H. Chaiyachati and Davida Schiff
- ACAMH members can read the full Annual Research Review that this commentary relates to here:
Open Access Commentary ‘Understanding emotion processing in offspring of mothers with depression – A commentary on Burkhouse and Kujawa (2023)’, (February 2023), Belinda Platt
- ACAMH members can read the full Annual Research Review that this commentary relates to here:
Open Access Annual Research Review ‘The impact of Covid-19 on psychopathology in children and young people worldwide: systematic review of studies with pre- and within-pandemic data’, (November 2022), Tamsin Newlove-Delgado, Abigail Emma Russell, Frances Mathews, Lauren Cross, Eleanor Bryant, Rebecca Gudka, Obioha C. Ukoumunne, Tamsin J. Ford
- Free Access Commentary ‘The impact of Covid-19 on psychopathology in children and young people worldwide – reflections on Newlove-Delgado et al. (2023)’, (February 2023), Samuele Cortese, Marco Solmi, Christoph U. Correll
Free Access Commentary ‘Alternative hypotheses regarding the association between early engagement in gambling and gambling-like activities and later problem gambling – a commentary on Richard and King (2023)’, (January 2023), Soo Hyun Rhee, Jarrod M. Ellingson
- ACAMH members can read the full Annual Research Review that this commentary relates to here:
Open Access Annual Research Review ‘Towards a deeper understanding of nature and nurture: combining family-based quasi-experimental methods with genomic data’, (November 2022), Tom A. McAdams, Rosa Cheesman, Yasmin I. Ahmadzadeh
- Open Access Commentary ‘Something old, something new – can adding genomic data to family studies advance our understanding of the impact of nature and nurture on mental health? Commentary on McAdams et al. (2023)’, (February 2023), Jasmin Wertz, Stephanie J. Lewis