Searched for: school:SOM
Department/Unit:Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Correction to Aarons et al. (2010) [Correction]
Aarons, Gregory A; Glisson, Charles; Hoagwood, Kimberly; Kelleher, Kelly; Landsverk, John; Cafri, Guy
Reports an error in "Psychometric properties and U.S. National norms of the Evidence-Based Practice Attitude Scale (EBPAS)" by Gregory A. Aarons, Charles Glisson, Kimberly Hoagwood, Kelly Kelleher, John Landsverk and Guy Cafri (Psychological Assessment, 2010[Jun], Vol 22[2], 356-365). There were three errors in Table 1 on p. 360. In the last row, the row label should be "Overall EBPAS mean," M = 2.73, and SD = 0.49. The revised Table 1 appears in the erratum. (The following abstract of the original article appeared in record 2010-10892-016.) The Evidence-Based Practice Attitude Scale (EBPAS) assesses mental health and social service provider attitudes toward adopting evidence-based practices. Scores on the EBPAS derive from 4 subscales (i.e., Appeal, Requirements, Openness, and Divergence) as well as the total scale, and preliminary studies have linked EBPAS scores to clinic structure and policies, organizational culture and climate, and first-level leadership. EBPAS scores are also related to service provider characteristics, including age, education level, and level of professional development. The present study examined the factor structure, reliability, and norms of EBPAS scores in a sample of 1,089 mental health service providers from a nationwide sample drawn from 100 service institutions in 26 states in the United States. The study also examined associations of provider demographic characteristics with EBPAS subscale and total scores. Confirmatory factor analysis supported a second-order factor model, and reliability coefficients for the subscales ranged from .91 to .67 (total scale = .74). The study establishes national norms for the EBPAS so that comparisons can be drawn for U.S. local as well as international studies of attitudes toward evidence-based practices. The results suggest that the factor structure and reliability are likely generalizable to a variety of service provider contexts and different service settings and that the EBPAS subscales are associated with provider characteristics. Directions for future research are discussed.
PSYCH:2010-18043-022
ISSN: 1939-134X
CID: 169199
Ethical issues in child and adolescent psychosocial treatment research
Chapter by: Hoagwood, Kimberly Eaton; Cavaleri, Mary A
in: Evidence-based psychotherapies for children and adolescents by Weisz, John R; Kazdin, Alan E [Eds]
New York : Guilford Press, c2010
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 1593859740
CID: 169177
Children's Mental Health Research : the Power of Partnerships
Hoagwood, Kimberly Eaton; Jensen, Peter S; McKay, Mary; Olin, Serene
[S.l.] : Oxford Scholarship Online, 2010
Extent: 224 p.
ISBN: 9781282366060
CID: 1910762
Impact of childhood mental health problems
Chapter by: Hulvershorn, Leslie A; Erickson, Craig A; Chambers, R. Andrew
in: Young adult mental health by Grant, Jon E [Eds]
New York, NY : Oxford University Press, 2010
pp. 64-79
ISBN: 978-0-19-533271-1
CID: 5237
Developmental trajectories of restricted and repetitive behaviors and interests in children with autism spectrum disorders
Richler, Jennifer; Huerta, Marisela; Bishop, Somer L; Lord, Catherine
This study examined how restricted and repetitive behaviors and interests (RRBs) developed over time in a sample of children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). One hundred ninety-two children referred for a diagnosis of autism at age 2, and 22 children with nonspectrum development disorders were evaluated with a battery of cognitive and diagnostic measures at age 2 and subsequently at ages 3, 5, and 9. Factor analysis of the RRB items on the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised revealed two RRB factors at each wave of data collection, one comprising 'repetitive sensorimotor' (RSM) behaviors and the other 'insistence on sameness' (IS) behaviors. For children with ASD, RSM scores remained relatively high over time, indicating consistent severity, whereas IS scores started low and increased over time, indicating worsening. Having a higher nonverbal intelligence (NVIQ) at age 2 was associated with milder concurrent RSM behaviors and with improvement in these behaviors over time. There was no relationship between NVIQ at age 2 and IS behaviors. However, milder social/communicative impairment, at age 2 was associated with more severe concurrent IS behaviors. Trajectory analysis revealed considerable heterogeneity in patterns of change over time for both kinds of behaviors. These findings are discussed in terms of their implications for our understanding of RRBs in ASD and other disorders, making prognoses about how RRBs will develop in children with ASD as they get older, and using RRBs to identify ASD phenotypes in genetic studies
PMCID:2893549
PMID: 20102647
ISSN: 1469-2198
CID: 143007
Development of visual expertise for reading: rapid emergence of visual familiarity for an artificial script
Maurer, Urs; Blau, Vera C; Yoncheva, Yuliya N; McCandliss, Bruce D
Adults produce left-lateralized N170 responses to visual words relative to control stimuli, even within tasks that do not require active reading. This specialization begins in preschoolers as a right-lateralized N170 effect. We investigated whether this developmental shift reflects an early learning phenomenon, such as attaining visual familiarity with a script, by training adults in an artificial script and measuring N170 responses before and afterward. Training enhanced the N170 response, especially over the right hemisphere. This suggests N170 sensitivity to visual familiarity with a script emerges before reading becomes sufficiently automatic to drive left-lateralized effects in a shallow encoding task.
PMCID:3008655
PMID: 20614357
ISSN: 1532-6942
CID: 4141482
Neurocognition and neuroimaging in anxiety disorders: Implications for treatment and functional outcome
Chapter by: Pine, Daniel S; Leibenluft, Ellen
in: Mental capital and wellbeing by Cooper, Cary L; Field, John; Goswami, Usha; Jenkins, Rachel; Sahakian, Barbara J [Eds]
[S.l.] : Wiley-Blackwell, 2010
pp. 157-165
ISBN: 978-1-4051-8591-2
CID: 162067
North Carolina Family Assessment Scale: Measurement Properties for Youth Mental Health Services
Lee, Bethany R; Lindsey, Michael A
Objective: The purpose of this study is to assess the reliability and validity of the North Carolina Family Assessment Scale (NCFAS) among families involved with youth mental health services. Methods: Using NCFAS data collected by child mental health intake workers with 158 families, factor analysis was conducted to assess factor structure, and thematic analysis of intake notes was used to test content validity. Results: This study found only three NCFAS subscales. The case notes included themes specific to youth with mental health needs that were not captured by current NCFAS items. Conclusions: This study suggests variation in the fit for the NCFAS in child mental health services compared to the measurement properties established in child welfare samples.
ISI:000275185800006
ISSN: 1049-7315
CID: 1853872
Ultrastructural characterization of noradrenergic axons and Beta-adrenergic receptors in the lateral nucleus of the amygdala
Farb, Claudia R; Chang, William; Ledoux, J E
Norepinephrine (NE) is thought to play a key role in fear and anxiety, but its role in amygdala-dependent Pavlovian fear conditioning, a major model for understanding the neural basis of fear, is poorly understood. The lateral nucleus of the amygdala (LA) is a critical brain region for fear learning and regulating the effects of stress on memory. To understand better the cellular mechanisms of NE and its adrenergic receptors in the LA, we used antibodies directed against dopamine beta-hydroxylase (DbetaH), the synthetic enzyme for NE, or against two different isoforms of the beta-adrenergic receptors (betaARs), one that predominately recognizes neurons (betaAR 248) and the other astrocytes (betaAR 404), to characterize the microenvironments of DbetaH and betaAR. By electron microscopy, most DbetaH terminals did not make synapses, but when they did, they formed both asymmetric and symmetric synapses. By light microscopy, betaARs were present in both neurons and astrocytes. Confocal microscopy revealed that both excitatory and inhibitory neurons express betaAR248. By electron microscopy, betaAR 248 was present in neuronal cell bodies, dendritic shafts and spines, and some axon terminals and astrocytes. When in dendrites and spines, betaAR 248 was frequently concentrated along plasma membranes and at post-synaptic densities of asymmetric (excitatory) synapses. betaAR 404 was expressed predominately in astrocytic cell bodies and processes. These astrocytic processes were frequently interposed between unlabeled terminals or ensheathed asymmetric synapses. Our findings provide a morphological basis for understanding ways in which NE may modulate transmission by acting via synaptic or non-synaptic mechanisms in the LA
PMCID:2967335
PMID: 21048893
ISSN: 1662-5153
CID: 135004
Beta-adrenergic receptors in the lateral nucleus of the amygdala contribute to the acquisition but not the consolidation of auditory fear conditioning
Bush, David E A; Caparosa, Ellen M; Gekker, Anna; Ledoux, Joseph
Beta-adrenergic receptors (betaARs) have long been associated with fear disorders and with learning and memory. However, the contribution of these receptors to Pavlovian fear conditioning, a leading behavioral model for studying fear learning and memory, is still poorly understood. The aim of this study was to investigate the involvement of betaAR activation in the acquisition, consolidation and expression of fear conditioning. We focused on manipulations of betaARs in the lateral nucleus of the amygdala (LA) because of the well-established contribution of this area to fear conditioning. Specifically, we tested the effects of intra-LA microinfusions of the betaAR antagonist, propranolol, on learning and memory for auditory Pavlovian fear conditioning in rats. Pre-training propranolol infusions disrupted the initial acquisition, short-term memory (STM), and long-term memory (LTM) for fear conditioning, but infusions immediately after training had no effect. Further, infusion of propranolol prior to testing fear responses did not affect fear memory expression. These findings indicate that amygdala betaARs are important for the acquisition but not the consolidation of fear conditioning.
PMCID:2998038
PMID: 21152344
ISSN: 1662-5153
CID: 816712