collection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24342843/adolescent-brain-development-in-normality-and-psychopathology
#21
REVIEW
Monica Luciana
Since this journal's inception, the field of adolescent brain development has flourished, as researchers have investigated the underpinnings of adolescent risk-taking behaviors. Explanations based on translational models initially attributed such behaviors to executive control deficiencies and poor frontal lobe function. This conclusion was bolstered by evidence that the prefrontal cortex and its interconnections are among the last brain regions to structurally and functionally mature. As substantial heterogeneity of prefrontal function was revealed, applications of neuroeconomic theory to adolescent development led to dual systems models of behavior...
November 2013: Development and Psychopathology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23265631/psychosocial-treatment-efficacy-for-disruptive-behavior-problems-in-very-young-children-a-meta-analytic-examination
#22
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Jonathan S Comer, Candice Chow, Priscilla T Chan, Christine Cooper-Vince, Lianna A S Wilson
OBJECTIVE: Service use trends showing increased off-label prescribing in very young children and reduced psychotherapy use raise concerns about quality of care for early disruptive behavior problems. Meta-analysis can empirically clarify best practices and guide clinical decision making by providing a quantitative synthesis of a body of literature, identifying the magnitude of overall effects across studies, and determining systematic factors associated with effect variations. METHOD: We used random-effects meta-analytic procedures to empirically evaluate the overall effect of psychosocial treatments on early disruptive behavior problems, as well as potential moderators of treatment response...
January 2013: Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22275846/a-review-of-obsessive-compulsive-disorder-in-children-and-adolescents
#23
REVIEW
Bernard Boileau
This article is a review of recent literature on obsessive-compulsive disorder in the pediatric population. Areas covered include: a brief historical perspective, clinical presentation in relation to symptoms found in different age groups, epidemiology, psychiatric comorbidity, etiology (with regards to genetics, neuroimaging, and familial factors), clinical course and prognosis, and treatment, with special emphasis on individual and family-based cognitive-behavioral therapy and psychopharmacology.
2011: Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience
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