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JCPP Editorial: Volume 56, Issue 08, August 2015
“Early intervention in response to language delays – is there a danger of putting too many eggs in the wrong basket?” by Courtenay Frazier Norbury
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CAMH Editorial: Volume 20, Issue 2, May 2015
“Adolescent mental health: the role of identity, methods for measuring change, and promising intervention developments” by Leslie Leve.
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JCPP Editorial: Volume 56, Issue 04, April 2015
“The shape of the nosology to come in developmental psychopathology” by Joel T. Nigg
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JCPP Editorial: Volume 56, Issue 03, March 2015
“Capturing the dynamics of development and psychopathology: from neural circuits to global trends” by Pasco Fearon
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JCPP Editorial: Volume 56, Issue 02, February 2015
“A double-edged sword: advantages and disadvantages to the current emphasis on biogenetic causes of child psychopathology” by S. Alexandra Burt
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Commentary: Self-harm: a global health priority – reflections on Brunner et al. (2014)
The accompanying cross-sectional study by Brunner et al. (2014) investigates the prevalence and correlates of self-injury in adolescents. It is one of the largest epidemiological studies of its kind published to date.
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CAMH Editorial: Volume 19, Issue 1, February 2014
“Pubertal growth spurt: the rapid progress and future directions for Child and Adolescent Mental Health” by Tamsin Ford.
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JCPP – Volume 54, Issue 4, April 2013 – Annual Research Review: Positive adjustment to adversity
Research on resilience in the aftermath of potentially traumatic life events (PTE), particularly minimal-impact resilience and emergent resilience.
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Brain structure abnormalities in adolescent girls with conduct disorder
The research team observed structural abnormalities in brain regions involved in emotion processing, reward and empathy in female adolescents with CD, which broadly overlap with those reported in previous studies of CD in male adolescents.
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Chronotype and Depression in Adolescence
We know that there is a bidirectional association between sleep duration/quality and depressive symptoms in youth. In adult populations depressive symptoms and circadian rhythms (sleep chronotype) have also been linked. In this paper, we established an association between chronotype and depressive symptoms in middle adolescence, independently of poor sleep and prior mental health difficulties.
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