ABCD Study® research publications cover a wide range of topics related to adolescent (teen) brain development, behavior, and health, including mental health and stress, physical activity, substance use, and psychosocial factors.
Our publications are authored by ABCD investigators, collaborators, and other researchers. The analysis methodologies, findings, and interpretations expressed in these publications are those of the authors and do not constitute an endorsement by the ABCD Study. The research publications listed here include empirical as well as non-empirical papers (e.g., focused review articles, editorials).
To align with widely accepted quality standards, this list includes only papers from journals that are indexed in one or more of the databases listed below. Learn about the selection process for each database:
- MEDLINE
- Web of Science
- Scopus
- Directory of Open Access Journals
- NIH Library (Journal must be marked as “peer reviewed.” NIH librarians evaluate the peer review process of each journal on a case-by-case basis.)
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Title | Journal | Authors | Year | Details |
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| Toggle | Deep Diffusion MRI Registration (DDMReg): A Deep Learning Method for Diffusion MRI Registration. | IEEE transactions on medical imaging | Zhang F, Wells WM, O'Donnell LJ | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalIEEE transactions on medical imagingPublished2022/06/01AuthorsZhang F, Wells WM, O'Donnell LJKeywordsDOI10.1109/TMI.2021.3139507 |
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| Toggle | Mediating role of the default mode network on parental acceptance/warmth and psychopathology in youth. | Brain imaging and behavior | Davis K, Hirsch E, Gee D, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalBrain imaging and behaviorPublished2022/06/01AuthorsDavis K, Hirsch E, Gee D, Andover M, Roy AKKeywordsDefault mode network, Neural development, Parenting, Parent–child relationship, PsychopathologyDOI10.1007/s11682-022-00692-z |
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| Toggle | Association of Social Determinants of Health and Vaccinations With Child Mental Health During the COVID-19 Pandemic in the US. | JAMA psychiatry | Xiao Y, Yip PS, Pathak J, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJAMA psychiatryPublished2022/06/01AuthorsXiao Y, Yip PS, Pathak J, Mann JJKeywordsDOI10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2022.0818 |
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| Toggle | Associations between organized sport participation and mental health difficulties: Data from over 11,000 US children and adolescents. | PloS one | Hoffmann MD, Barnes JD, Tremblay MS, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalPloS onePublished2022/06/01AuthorsHoffmann MD, Barnes JD, Tremblay MS, Guerrero MDKeywordsDOI10.1371/journal.pone.0268583 |
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| Toggle | Association of Cyberbullying Experiences and Perpetration With Suicidality in Early Adolescence. | JAMA network open | Arnon S, Brunstein Klomek A, Visoki E, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJAMA network openPublished2022/06/01AuthorsArnon S, Brunstein Klomek A, Visoki E, Moore TM, Argabright ST, DiDomenico GE, Benton TD, Barzilay RKeywordsDOI10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.18746 |
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| Toggle | Estimating the Association Between Exposome and Psychosis as Well as General Psychopathology: Results From the ABCD Study. | Biological psychiatry global open science | Pries LK, Moore TM, Visoki E, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalBiological psychiatry global open sciencePublished2022/06/01AuthorsPries LK, Moore TM, Visoki E, Sotelo I, Barzilay R, Guloksuz SKeywordsAdolescents, Adversity, Environment, Exposome, Psychopathology, Psychosis, p-factorDOI10.1016/j.bpsgos.2022.05.005 |
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| Toggle | Anxiety, depression, and substance experimentation in childhood. | PloS one | Klein RJ, Gyorda JA, Jacobson NC | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalPloS onePublished2022/05/24AuthorsKlein RJ, Gyorda JA, Jacobson NCKeywordsDOI10.1371/journal.pone.0265239 |
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| Toggle | The Mediating Role of Family Acceptance and Conflict on Suicidality among Sexual and Gender Minority Youth. | Archives of suicide research : official journal of the International Academy for Suicide Research | Klein DA, Ahmed AE, Murphy MA, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalArchives of suicide research : official journal of the International Academy for Suicide ResearchPublished2022/05/24AuthorsKlein DA, Ahmed AE, Murphy MA, Pearlman AT, Johnson N, Gray JC, Schvey NAKeywordsChildren, LGBT, parent, suicidal behaviors, suicide, transgenderDOI10.1080/13811118.2022.2075815 |
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| Toggle | Relationship Between Neighborhood Poverty and Externalizing Symptoms in Children: Mediation and Moderation by Environmental Factors and Brain Structure. | Child psychiatry and human development | Maxwell MY, Taylor RL, Barch DM | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalChild psychiatry and human developmentPublished2022/05/21AuthorsMaxwell MY, Taylor RL, Barch DMKeywordsBrain development, Children’s internalizing, Early life adversity, Externalizing disorders, Neighborhood poverty, Socioemotional supportDOI10.1007/s10578-022-01369-w |
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| Toggle | A practical guide for researchers and reviewers using the ABCD Study and other large longitudinal datasets. | Developmental cognitive neuroscience | Saragosa-Harris NM, Chaku N, MacSweeney N, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalDevelopmental cognitive neurosciencePublished2022/05/20AuthorsSaragosa-Harris NM, Chaku N, MacSweeney N, Guazzelli Williamson V, Scheuplein M, Feola B, Cardenas-Iniguez C, Demir-Lira E, McNeilly EA, Huffman LG, Whitmore L, Michalska KJ, Damme KS, Rakesh D, Mills KLKeywordsAdolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study, Adolescent development, Longitudinal research, Open research, Practical guideDOI10.1016/j.dcn.2022.101115 |
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| Toggle | Associations between screen time and internalizing disorder diagnoses among 9- to 10-year-olds. | Journal of affective disorders | Roberston L, Twenge JM, Joiner TE, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJournal of affective disordersPublished2022/05/18AuthorsRoberston L, Twenge JM, Joiner TE, Cummins KKeywordsAnxiety, Depression, Internalizing disorders, Mass media, Sociocultural factors, Suicide preventionDOI10.1016/j.jad.2022.05.071 |
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| Toggle | Multi-tract multi-symptom relationships in pediatric concussion. | eLife | Guberman GI, Stojanovski S, Nishat E, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournaleLifePublished2022/05/17AuthorsGuberman GI, Stojanovski S, Nishat E, Ptito A, Bzdok D, Wheeler AL, Descoteaux MKeywordsdiffusion MRI, human, medicine, multivariate statistics, neuroscience, pediatric concussionsDOI10.7554/eLife.70450 |
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| Toggle | Associations of Family Distress, Family Income, and Acculturation on Pediatric Cognitive Performance Using the NIH Toolbox: Implications for Clinical and Research Settings. | Archives of clinical neuropsychology : the official journal of the National Academy of Neuropsychologists | Thompson RC, Montena AL, Liu K, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalArchives of clinical neuropsychology : the official journal of the National Academy of NeuropsychologistsPublished2022/05/16AuthorsThompson RC, Montena AL, Liu K, Watson J, Warren SLKeywordsAssessment, Cross-cultural/minority, Executive functions, Fluency (verbal/nonverbal), Learning and Memory, Norms/normative studiesDOI10.1093/arclin/acab082 |
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| Toggle | General and Specific Factors of Environmental Stress and Their Associations With Brain Structure and Dimensions of Psychopathology. | Biological psychiatry global open science | Jeong HJ, Moore TM, Durham EL, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalBiological psychiatry global open sciencePublished2022/05/13AuthorsJeong HJ, Moore TM, Durham EL, Reimann GE, Dupont RM, Cardenas-Iniguez C, Berman MG, Lahey BB, Kaczkurkin ANKeywordsBrain development, Environmental risk factors, Hierarchical modeling, Neuroimaging, Psychopathology, StressDOI10.1016/j.bpsgos.2022.04.004 |
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| Toggle | Limits to the generalizability of resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging studies of youth: An examination of ABCD Study® baseline data. | Brain imaging and behavior | Cosgrove KT, McDermott TJ, White EJ, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalBrain imaging and behaviorPublished2022/05/12AuthorsCosgrove KT, McDermott TJ, White EJ, Mosconi MW, Thompson WK, Paulus MP, Cardenas-Iniguez C, Aupperle RLKeywordsABCD Study, Generalizability, Head motion, Resting-state fMRI, Sociodemographic factorsDOI10.1007/s11682-022-00665-2 |
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| Toggle | The impact of digital media on children's intelligence while controlling for genetic differences in cognition and socioeconomic background. | Scientific reports | Sauce B, Liebherr M, Judd N, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalScientific reportsPublished2022/05/11AuthorsSauce B, Liebherr M, Judd N, Klingberg TKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41598-022-11341-2 |
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| Toggle | Prediction of the trajectories of depressive symptoms among children in the adolescent brain cognitive development (ABCD) study using machine learning approach. | Journal of affective disorders | Xiang Q, Chen K, Peng L, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJournal of affective disordersPublished2022/05/08AuthorsXiang Q, Chen K, Peng L, Luo J, Jiang J, Chen Y, Lan L, Song H, Zhou XKeywordsAdolescents, Depressive symptoms, Machine learning, Prediction model, TrajectoriesDOI10.1016/j.jad.2022.05.020 |
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| Toggle | Parent-Child Concordance and Discordance in Family Violence Reporting: A Descriptive Analysis from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study. | Journal of interpersonal violence | Hogan JN, Garcia AM, Tomko RL, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJournal of interpersonal violencePublished2022/05/07AuthorsHogan JN, Garcia AM, Tomko RL, Squeglia LM, Flanagan JCKeywordschild abuse, concordance, discordance, family violence, interpersonal violenceDOI10.1177/08862605221081928 |
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| Toggle | T1w/T2w Ratio and Cognition in 9-to-11-Year-Old Children. | Brain sciences | Langensee L, Rumetshofer T, Behjat H, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalBrain sciencesPublished2022/05/04AuthorsLangensee L, Rumetshofer T, Behjat H, Novén M, Li P, Mårtensson JKeywordsT1w/T2w ratio, cognitive abilities, intracortical myelin, neurocognition, structural MRIDOI10.3390/brainsci12050599 |
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| Toggle | Developmental Considerations for Understanding Perceptions and Impacts of Identity-Related Differences: Focusing on Adolescence. | Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging | Uddin LQ, De Los Reyes A | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalBiological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimagingPublished2022/05/04AuthorsUddin LQ, De Los Reyes AKeywordsBias, Minority, Prejudice, Psychological distress, Racism, Social neuroscienceDOI10.1016/j.bpsc.2022.04.006 |
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| Toggle | Multivariate genome-wide association study on tissue-sensitive diffusion metrics highlights pathways that shape the human brain. | Nature communications | Fan CC, Loughnan R, Makowski C, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalNature communicationsPublished2022/05/03AuthorsFan CC, Loughnan R, Makowski C, Pecheva D, Chen CH, Hagler DJ, Thompson WK, Parker N, van der Meer D, Frei O, Andreassen OA, Dale AMKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41467-022-30110-3 |
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| Toggle | Effects of the physical and social environment on youth cognitive performance. | Developmental psychobiology | Meredith WJ, Cardenas-Iniguez C, Berman MG, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalDevelopmental psychobiologyPublished2022/05/01AuthorsMeredith WJ, Cardenas-Iniguez C, Berman MG, Rosenberg MDKeywordscognition, development, individual differences, physical environment, social environment, socioeconomic factorsDOI10.1002/dev.22258 |
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| Toggle | Longer screen time utilization is associated with the polygenic risk for Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder with mediation by brain white matter microstructure. | EBioMedicine | Yang A, Rolls ET, Dong G, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalEBioMedicinePublished2022/05/01AuthorsYang A, Rolls ET, Dong G, Du J, Li Y, Feng J, Cheng W, Zhao XMKeywordsAttention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, Brain tractography, Longitudinal analysis, Polygenic risk for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, Screen time utilizationDOI10.1016/j.ebiom.2022.104039 |
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| Toggle | The sexual brain, genes, and cognition: A machine-predicted brain sex score explains individual differences in cognitive intelligence and genetic influence in young children. | Human brain mapping | Kim K, Joo YY, Ahn G, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalHuman brain mappingPublished2022/04/26AuthorsKim K, Joo YY, Ahn G, Wang HH, Moon SY, Kim H, Ahn WY, Cha JKeywordscognitive performance, gene-brain-cognition pathway, genome-wide polygenic score, intelligence, machine learning, sex developmentDOI10.1002/hbm.25888 |
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| Toggle | Internalizing Symptoms and Adverse Childhood Experiences Associated With Functional Connectivity in a Middle Childhood Sample. | Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging | Albertina EA, Barch DM, Karcher NR | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalBiological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimagingPublished2022/04/26AuthorsAlbertina EA, Barch DM, Karcher NRKeywordsABCD, Adverse childhood experiences, Internalizing symptoms, Middle childhood, Mood disorders, Resting-state functional connectivityDOI10.1016/j.bpsc.2022.04.001 |
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| Toggle | Shared and unique brain network features predict cognitive, personality, and mental health scores in the ABCD study. | Nature communications | Chen J, Tam A, Kebets V, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalNature communicationsPublished2022/04/25AuthorsChen J, Tam A, Kebets V, Orban C, Ooi LQR, Asplund CL, Marek S, Dosenbach NUF, Eickhoff SB, Bzdok D, Holmes AJ, Yeo BTTKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41467-022-29766-8 |
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| Toggle | An open-access accelerated adult equivalent of the ABCD Study neuroimaging dataset (a-ABCD). | NeuroImage | Rapuano KM, Conley MI, Juliano AC, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalNeuroImagePublished2022/04/16AuthorsRapuano KM, Conley MI, Juliano AC, Conan GM, Maza MT, Woodman K, Martinez SA, Earl E, Perrone A, Feczko E, Fair DA, Watts R, Casey BJ, Rosenberg MDKeywordsDevelopment, Inhibitory control, Reward processing, Working memory, fMRIDOI10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.119215 |
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| Toggle | Computational Modeling of the n-Back Task in the ABCD Study: Associations of Drift Diffusion Model Parameters to Polygenic Scores of Mental Disorders and Cardiometabolic Diseases. | Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging | Pedersen ML, Alnæs D, van der Meer D, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalBiological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimagingPublished2022/04/12AuthorsPedersen ML, Alnæs D, van der Meer D, Fernandez-Cabello S, Berthet P, Dahl A, Kjelkenes R, Schwarz E, Thompson WK, Barch DM, Andreassen OA, Westlye LTKeywordsCardiometabolic disease, Childhood, Cognitive computational modeling, Decision making, Mental disorder, Polygenic risk scoresDOI10.1016/j.bpsc.2022.03.012 |
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| Toggle | Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: Restricted Phenotypes Prevalence, Comorbidity, and Polygenic Risk Sensitivity in the ABCD Baseline Cohort. | Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | Cordova MM, Antovich DM, Ryabinin P, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJournal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent PsychiatryPublished2022/04/12AuthorsCordova MM, Antovich DM, Ryabinin P, Neighbor C, Mooney MA, Dieckmann NF, Miranda-Dominguez O, Nagel BJ, Fair DA, Nigg JTKeywordsADHD, comorbidity, executive function, polygenic score, prevalenceDOI10.1016/j.jaac.2022.03.030 |
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| Toggle | Common variants contribute to intrinsic human brain functional networks. | Nature genetics | Zhao B, Li T, Smith SM, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalNature geneticsPublished2022/04/07AuthorsZhao B, Li T, Smith SM, Xiong D, Wang X, Yang Y, Luo T, Zhu Z, Shan Y, Matoba N, Sun Q, Yang Y, Hauberg ME, Bendl J, Fullard JF, Roussos P, Lin W, Li Y, Stein JL, Zhu HKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41588-022-01039-6 |
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| Toggle | Brain charts for the human lifespan. | Nature | Bethlehem RAI, Seidlitz J, White SR, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalNaturePublished2022/04/06AuthorsBethlehem RAI, Seidlitz J, White SR, Vogel JW, Anderson KM, Adamson C, Adler S, Alexopoulos GS, Anagnostou E, Areces-Gonzalez A, Astle DE, Auyeung B, Ayub M, Bae J, Ball G, Baron-Cohen S, Beare R, Bedford SA, Benegal V, Beyer F, Blangero J, Blesa Cábez M, Boardman JP, Borzage M, Bosch-Bayard JF, Bourke N, Calhoun VD, Chakravarty MM, Chen C, Chertavian C, Chetelat G, Chong YS, Cole JH, Corvin A, Costantino M, Courchesne E, Crivello F, Cropley VL, Crosbie J, Crossley N, Delarue M, Delorme R, Desrivieres S, Devenyi GA, Di Biase MA, Dolan R, Donald KA, Donohoe G, Dunlop K, Edwards AD, Elison JT, Ellis CT, Elman JA, Eyler L, Fair DA, Feczko E, Fletcher PC, Fonagy P, Franz CE, Galan-Garcia L, Gholipour A, Giedd J, Gilmore JH, Glahn DC, Goodyer IM, Grant PE, Groenewold NA, Gunning FM, Gur RE, Gur RC, Hammill CF, Hansson O, Hedden T, Heinz A, Henson RN, Heuer K, Hoare J, Holla B, Holmes AJ, Holt R, Huang H, Im K, Ipser J, Jack CR, Jackowski AP, Jia T, Johnson KA, Jones PB, Jones DT, Kahn RS, Karlsson H, Karlsson L, Kawashima R, Kelley EA, Kern S, Kim KW, Kitzbichler MG, Kremen WS, Lalonde F, Landeau B, Lee S, Lerch J, Lewis JD, Li J, Liao W, Liston C, Lombardo MV, Lv J, Lynch C, Mallard TT, Marcelis M, Markello RD, Mathias SR, Mazoyer B, McGuire P, Meaney MJ, Mechelli A, Medic N, Misic B, Morgan SE, Mothersill D, Nigg J, Ong MQW, Ortinau C, Ossenkoppele R, Ouyang M, Palaniyappan L, Paly L, Pan PM, Pantelis C, Park MM, Paus T, Pausova Z, Paz-Linares D, Pichet Binette A, Pierce K, Qian X, Qiu J, Qiu A, Raznahan A, Rittman T, Rodrigue A, Rollins CK, Romero-Garcia R, Ronan L, Rosenberg MD, Rowitch DH, Salum GA, Satterthwaite TD, Schaare HL, Schachar RJ, Schultz AP, Schumann G, Schöll M, Sharp D, Shinohara RT, Skoog I, Smyser CD, Sperling RA, Stein DJ, Stolicyn A, Suckling J, Sullivan G, Taki Y, Thyreau B, Toro R, Traut N, Tsvetanov KA, Turk-Browne NB, Tuulari JJ, Tzourio C, Vachon-Presseau É, Valdes-Sosa MJ, Valdes-Sosa PA, Valk SL, van Amelsvoort T, Vandekar SN, Vasung L, Victoria LW, Villeneuve S, Villringer A, Vértes PE, Wagstyl K, Wang YS, Warfield SK, Warrier V, Westman E, Westwater ML, Whalley HC, Witte AV, Yang N, Yeo B, Yun H, Zalesky A, Zar HJ, Zettergren A, Zhou JH, Ziauddeen H, Zugman A, Zuo XN, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , Bullmore ET, Alexander-Bloch AFKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41586-022-04554-y |
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| Toggle | Genetic variants associated with longitudinal changes in brain structure across the lifespan. | Nature neuroscience | Brouwer RM, Klein M, Grasby KL, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalNature neurosciencePublished2022/04/05AuthorsBrouwer RM, Klein M, Grasby KL, Schnack HG, Jahanshad N, Teeuw J, Thomopoulos SI, Sprooten E, Franz CE, Gogtay N, Kremen WS, Panizzon MS, Olde Loohuis LM, Whelan CD, Aghajani M, Alloza C, Alnæs D, Artiges E, Ayesa-Arriola R, Barker GJ, Bastin ME, Blok E, Bøen E, Breukelaar IA, Bright JK, Buimer EEL, Bülow R, Cannon DM, Ciufolini S, Crossley NA, Damatac CG, Dazzan P, de Mol CL, de Zwarte SMC, Desrivières S, Díaz-Caneja CM, Doan NT, Dohm K, Fröhner JH, Goltermann J, Grigis A, Grotegerd D, Han LKM, Harris MA, Hartman CA, Heany SJ, Heindel W, Heslenfeld DJ, Hohmann S, Ittermann B, Jansen PR, Janssen J, Jia T, Jiang J, Jockwitz C, Karali T, Keeser D, Koevoets MGJC, Lenroot RK, Malchow B, Mandl RCW, Medel V, Meinert S, Morgan CA, Mühleisen TW, Nabulsi L, Opel N, de la Foz VO, Overs BJ, Paillère Martinot ML, Redlich R, Marques TR, Repple J, Roberts G, Roshchupkin GV, Setiaman N, Shumskaya E, Stein F, Sudre G, Takahashi S, Thalamuthu A, Tordesillas-Gutiérrez D, van der Lugt A, van Haren NEM, Wardlaw JM, Wen W, Westeneng HJ, Wittfeld K, Zhu AH, Zugman A, Armstrong NJ, Bonfiglio G, Bralten J, Dalvie S, Davies G, Di Forti M, Ding L, Donohoe G, Forstner AJ, Gonzalez-Peñas J, Guimaraes JPOFT, Homuth G, Hottenga JJ, Knol MJ, Kwok JBJ, Le Hellard S, Mather KA, Milaneschi Y, Morris DW, Nöthen MM, Papiol S, Rietschel M, Santoro ML, Steen VM, Stein JL, Streit F, Tankard RM, Teumer A, van 't Ent D, van der Meer D, van Eijk KR, Vassos E, Vázquez-Bourgon J, Witt SH, , Adams HHH, Agartz I, Ames D, Amunts K, Andreassen OA, Arango C, Banaschewski T, Baune BT, Belangero SI, Bokde ALW, Boomsma DI, Bressan RA, Brodaty H, Buitelaar JK, Cahn W, Caspers S, Cichon S, Crespo-Facorro B, Cox SR, Dannlowski U, Elvsåshagen T, Espeseth T, Falkai PG, Fisher SE, Flor H, Fullerton JM, Garavan H, Gowland PA, Grabe HJ, Hahn T, Heinz A, Hillegers M, Hoare J, Hoekstra PJ, Ikram MA, Jackowski AP, Jansen A, Jönsson EG, Kahn RS, Kircher T, Korgaonkar MS, Krug A, Lemaitre H, Malt UF, Martinot JL, McDonald C, Mitchell PB, Muetzel RL, Murray RM, Nees F, Nenadić I, Oosterlaan J, Ophoff RA, Pan PM, Penninx BWJH, Poustka L, Sachdev PS, Salum GA, Schofield PR, Schumann G, Shaw P, Sim K, Smolka MN, Stein DJ, Trollor JN, van den Berg LH, Veldink JH, Walter H, Westlye LT, Whelan R, White T, Wright MJ, Medland SE, Franke B, Thompson PM, Hulshoff Pol HEKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41593-022-01042-4 |
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| Toggle | Classification of suicidal thoughts and behaviour in children: results from penalised logistic regression analyses in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study. | The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science | van Velzen LS, Toenders YJ, Avila-Parcet A, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalThe British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental sciencePublished2022/04/01Authorsvan Velzen LS, Toenders YJ, Avila-Parcet A, Dinga R, Rabinowitz JA, Campos AI, Jahanshad N, Rentería ME, Schmaal LKeywordsSuicide, children, machine learning, penalised logistic regression, youthDOI10.1192/bjp.2022.7 |
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| Toggle | Multivariate, Transgenerational Associations of the COVID-19 Pandemic Across Minoritized and Marginalized Communities. | JAMA psychiatry | Yip SW, Jordan A, Kohler RJ, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJAMA psychiatryPublished2022/04/01AuthorsYip SW, Jordan A, Kohler RJ, Holmes A, Bzdok DKeywordsDOI10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2021.4331 |
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| Toggle | Understanding Associations Between Race/Ethnicity, Experiences of Discrimination, and Psychotic-like Experiences in Middle Childhood. | Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | Karcher NR, Klaunig MJ, Elsayed NM, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJournal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent PsychiatryPublished2022/04/01AuthorsKarcher NR, Klaunig MJ, Elsayed NM, Taylor RL, Jay SY, Schiffman JKeywordsABCD Study, ethnicity, experiences of discrimination, psychotic-like experiences, raceDOI10.1016/j.jaac.2022.03.025 |
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| Toggle | Evaluation of Brain Alterations and Behavior in Children With Low Levels of Prenatal Alcohol Exposure. | JAMA network open | Long X, Lebel C | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJAMA network openPublished2022/04/01AuthorsLong X, Lebel CKeywordsDOI10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.5972 |
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| Toggle | Neurodevelopmental Profiles in Adolescence: Leveraging Data From the Landmark Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study. | Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging | Mewton L, Squeglia L | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalBiological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimagingPublished2022/04/01AuthorsMewton L, Squeglia LKeywordsDOI10.1016/j.bpsc.2022.01.005 |
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| Toggle | Neurobiological antecedents of multisite pain in children. | Pain | Kaplan CM, Schrepf A, Mawla I, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalPainPublished2022/04/01AuthorsKaplan CM, Schrepf A, Mawla I, Ichesco E, Boehnke KF, Beltz A, Foxen-Craft E, Puglia MP, Tsodikov A, Williams DA, Hassett AL, Clauw DJ, Harte SE, Harris REKeywordsDOI10.1097/j.pain.0000000000002431 |
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| Toggle | Neurobiological, familial and genetic risk factors for dimensional psychopathology in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study. | Molecular psychiatry | Wainberg M, Jacobs GR, Voineskos AN, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalMolecular psychiatryPublished2022/03/31AuthorsWainberg M, Jacobs GR, Voineskos AN, Tripathy SJKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41380-022-01522-w |
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| Toggle | Automated Multiclass Artifact Detection in Diffusion MRI Volumes 3D Residual Squeeze-and-Excitation Convolutional Neural Networks. | Frontiers in human neuroscience | Ettehadi N, Kashyap P, Zhang X, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalFrontiers in human neurosciencePublished2022/03/30AuthorsEttehadi N, Kashyap P, Zhang X, Wang Y, Semanek D, Desai K, Guo J, Posner J, Laine AFKeywordsartifacts, convolutional neural networks, deep learning, diffusion MRI, medical imaging, quality controlDOI10.3389/fnhum.2022.877326 |
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| Toggle | Executive Functions and Impulsivity as Transdiagnostic Correlates of Psychopathology in Childhood: A Behavioral Genetic Analysis. | Frontiers in human neuroscience | Freis SM, Morrison CL, Smolker HR, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalFrontiers in human neurosciencePublished2022/03/25AuthorsFreis SM, Morrison CL, Smolker HR, Banich MT, Kaiser RH, Hewitt JK, Friedman NPKeywordsbehavior problems, cognitive control, executive control, heritability, self-regulationDOI10.3389/fnhum.2022.863235 |
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| Toggle | Substance use onset in high-risk 9-13 year-olds in the ABCD study. | Neurotoxicology and teratology | Wade NE, Tapert SF, Lisdahl KM, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalNeurotoxicology and teratologyPublished2022/03/24AuthorsWade NE, Tapert SF, Lisdahl KM, Huestis MA, Haist FKeywordsAdolescents, Children, Hair samples, Hair toxicology, Self-report, Substance use, Substance use onsetDOI10.1016/j.ntt.2022.107090 |
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| Toggle | Multi-level predictors of depression symptoms in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study. | Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines | Ho TC, Shah R, Mishra J, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJournal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplinesPublished2022/03/21AuthorsHo TC, Shah R, Mishra J, May AC, Tapert SFKeywordsABCD Study, Adolescence, depression, functional MRI (fMRI), sleepDOI10.1111/jcpp.13608 |
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| Toggle | Bayesian interaction selection model for multimodal neuroimaging data analysis. | Biometrics | Zhao Y, Wu B, Kang J | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalBiometricsPublished2022/03/20AuthorsZhao Y, Wu B, Kang JKeywordsBayesian variable selection, brain imaging, cognitive development, data integration, interaction effects, multimodalityDOI10.1111/biom.13648 |
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| Toggle | Aberrant functional connectivity between reward and inhibitory control networks in pre-adolescent binge eating disorder. | Psychological medicine | Murray SB, Alba C, Duval CJ, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalPsychological medicinePublished2022/03/18AuthorsMurray SB, Alba C, Duval CJ, Nagata JM, Cabeen RP, Lee DJ, Toga AW, Siegel SJ, Jann KKeywordsBinge eating disorder, eating disorders, functional connectivity, inhibitory control, pre-adolescent eating disorders, reward sensitivityDOI10.1017/S0033291722000514 |
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| Toggle | Prenatal cannabis exposure predicts attention problems, without changes on fMRI in adolescents. | Neurotoxicology and teratology | Cioffredi LA, Anderson H, Loso H, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalNeurotoxicology and teratologyPublished2022/03/18AuthorsCioffredi LA, Anderson H, Loso H, East J, Nguyen P, Garavan H, Potter AKeywordsAttention, Brain development, Child behavior, Prenatal cannabis, fMRIDOI10.1016/j.ntt.2022.107089 |
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| Toggle | Negative Impacts of Pandemic Induced At-Home Remote Learning Can Be Mitigated by Parental Involvement | Frontiers in Education | Guillaume M, Toomarian EY, Van Rinsveld A, et al. | 2022 | |
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Link to Publication
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalFrontiers in EducationPublished2022/03/17AuthorsGuillaume M, Toomarian EY, Van Rinsveld A, Baskin-Sommers A, Dick AS, Dowling GJ, Gonzalez MR, Hasak L, Lisdahl KM, Marshall AT, Nguyen QTH, Pelhamm WE, Pillai CC, Sheth C, Wang AM, Tapert SF, McCandliess BDKeywordsDOIhttps://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2022.804191 |
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| Toggle | Sleep disorders predict the 1-year onset, persistence, but not remission of psychotic experiences in preadolescence: a longitudinal analysis of the ABCD cohort data. | European child & adolescent psychiatry | Reeve S, Bell V | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalEuropean child & adolescent psychiatryPublished2022/03/16AuthorsReeve S, Bell VKeywordsLongitudinal, Preadolescence, Psychotic experiences, Sleep, Stimulant medicationDOI10.1007/s00787-022-01966-z |
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| Toggle | Reproducible brain-wide association studies require thousands of individuals. | Nature | Marek S, Tervo-Clemmens B, Calabro FJ, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalNaturePublished2022/03/16AuthorsMarek S, Tervo-Clemmens B, Calabro FJ, Montez DF, Kay BP, Hatoum AS, Donohue MR, Foran W, Miller RL, Hendrickson TJ, Malone SM, Kandala S, Feczko E, Miranda-Dominguez O, Graham AM, Earl EA, Perrone AJ, Cordova M, Doyle O, Moore LA, Conan GM, Uriarte J, Snider K, Lynch BJ, Wilgenbusch JC, Pengo T, Tam A, Chen J, Newbold DJ, Zheng A, Seider NA, Van AN, Metoki A, Chauvin RJ, Laumann TO, Greene DJ, Petersen SE, Garavan H, Thompson WK, Nichols TE, Yeo BTT, Barch DM, Luna B, Fair DA, Dosenbach NUFKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41586-022-04492-9 |
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| Toggle | Cross-ethnicity/race generalization failure of behavioral prediction from resting-state functional connectivity. | Science advances | Li J, Bzdok D, Chen J, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalScience advancesPublished2022/03/16AuthorsLi J, Bzdok D, Chen J, Tam A, Ooi LQR, Holmes AJ, Ge T, Patil KR, Jabbi M, Eickhoff SB, Yeo BTT, Genon SKeywordsDOI10.1126/sciadv.abj1812 |
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| Toggle | Association between racial/ethnic discrimination and pubertal development in early adolescence. | Psychoneuroendocrinology | Argabright ST, Moore TM, Visoki E, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalPsychoneuroendocrinologyPublished2022/03/15AuthorsArgabright ST, Moore TM, Visoki E, DiDomenico GE, Taylor JH, Barzilay RKeywordsAdolescence, Discrimination, Health disparities, Puberty, StressDOI10.1016/j.psyneuen.2022.105727 |
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| Toggle | Neural signatures of the development of antisocial behaviours and callous-unemotional traits among youth: The moderating role of parental support. | International journal of developmental neuroscience : the official journal of the International Society for Developmental Neuroscience | Huffman LG, Oshri A | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalInternational journal of developmental neuroscience : the official journal of the International Society for Developmental NeurosciencePublished2022/03/14AuthorsHuffman LG, Oshri AKeywordsantisocial behaviour, callous-unemotional traits, parentingDOI10.1002/jdn.10173 |
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| Toggle | Understanding patterns of heterogeneity in executive functioning during adolescence: Evidence from population-level data. | Developmental science | Chaku N, Barry K, Fowle J, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalDevelopmental sciencePublished2022/03/11AuthorsChaku N, Barry K, Fowle J, Hoyt LTKeywordsadolescent brain cognitive development study, child behavior checklist, confirmatory factor analysis, executive functioning, latent profile analysis, person-centered researchDOI10.1111/desc.13256 |
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| Toggle | Explaining the Association Between Urbanicity and Psychotic-Like Experiences in Pre-Adolescence: The Indirect Effect of Urban Exposures. | Frontiers in psychiatry | Saxena A, Dodell-Feder D | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalFrontiers in psychiatryPublished2022/03/11AuthorsSaxena A, Dodell-Feder DKeywordsdeprivation, pollution, poverty, pre-adolescence, psychosis, psychotic-like experiences, urbanicityDOI10.3389/fpsyt.2022.831089 |
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| Toggle | Cognitive performance in children and adolescents with psychopathology traits: A cross-sectional multicohort study in the general population. | Development and psychopathology | Blok E, Schuurmans IK, Tijburg AJ, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalDevelopment and psychopathologyPublished2022/03/07AuthorsBlok E, Schuurmans IK, Tijburg AJ, Hillegers M, Koopman-Verhoeff ME, Muetzel RL, Tiemeier H, White TKeywordsChild Behavior Checklist, adolescence, childhood, cognition, psychopathologyDOI10.1017/S0954579422000165 |
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| Toggle | Characterizing the Neural Correlates of Response Inhibition and Error Processing in Children With Symptoms of Irritability and/or Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder in the ABCD Study®. | Frontiers in psychiatry | Lee KS, Xiao J, Luo J, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalFrontiers in psychiatryPublished2022/03/04AuthorsLee KS, Xiao J, Luo J, Leibenluft E, Liew Z, Tseng WLKeywordsattention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, error processing, functional magnetic resonance imaging, irritability, latent class analysis, latent variable modeling, response inhibitionDOI10.3389/fpsyt.2022.803891 |
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| Toggle | Virtual Ontogeny of Cortical Growth Preceding Mental Illness. | Biological psychiatry | Patel Y, Shin J, Abé C, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalBiological psychiatryPublished2022/03/04AuthorsPatel Y, Shin J, Abé C, Agartz I, Alloza C, Alnæs D, Ambrogi S, Antonucci LA, Arango C, Arolt V, Auzias G, Ayesa-Arriola R, Banaj N, Banaschewski T, Bandeira C, Başgöze Z, Cupertino RB, Bau CHD, Bauer J, Baumeister S, Bernardoni F, Bertolino A, Bonnin CDM, Brandeis D, Brem S, Bruggemann J, Bülow R, Bustillo JR, Calderoni S, Calvo R, Canales-Rodríguez EJ, Cannon DM, Carmona S, Carr VJ, Catts SV, Chenji S, Chew QH, Coghill D, Connolly CG, Conzelmann A, Craven AR, Crespo-Facorro B, Cullen K, Dahl A, Dannlowski U, Davey CG, Deruelle C, Díaz-Caneja CM, Dohm K, Ehrlich S, Epstein J, Erwin-Grabner T, Eyler LT, Fedor J, Fitzgerald J, Foran W, Ford JM, Fortea L, Fuentes-Claramonte P, Fullerton J, Furlong L, Gallagher L, Gao B, Gao S, Goikolea JM, Gotlib I, Goya-Maldonado R, Grabe HJ, Green M, Grevet EH, Groenewold NA, Grotegerd D, Gruber O, Haavik J, Hahn T, Harrison BJ, Heindel W, Henskens F, Heslenfeld DJ, Hilland E, Hoekstra PJ, Hohmann S, Holz N, Howells FM, Ipser JC, Jahanshad N, Jakobi B, Jansen A, Janssen J, Jonassen R, Kaiser A, Kaleda V, Karantonis J, King JA, Kircher T, Kochunov P, Koopowitz SM, Landén M, Landrø NI, Lawrie S, Lebedeva I, Luna B, Lundervold AJ, MacMaster FP, Maglanoc LA, Mathalon DH, McDonald C, McIntosh A, Meinert S, Michie PT, Mitchell P, Moreno-Alcázar A, Mowry B, Muratori F, Nabulsi L, Nenadić I, O'Gorman Tuura R, Oosterlaan J, Overs B, Pantelis C, Parellada M, Pariente JC, Pauli P, Pergola G, Piarulli FM, Picon F, Piras F, Pomarol-Clotet E, Pretus C, Quidé Y, Radua J, Ramos-Quiroga JA, Rasser PE, Reif A, Retico A, Roberts G, Rossell S, Rovaris DL, Rubia K, Sacchet M, Salavert J, Salvador R, Sarró S, Sawa A, Schall U, Scott R, Selvaggi P, Silk T, Sim K, Skoch A, Spalletta G, Spaniel F, Stein DJ, Steinsträter O, Stolicyn A, Takayanagi Y, Tamm L, Tavares M, Teumer A, Thiel K, Thomopoulos SI, Tomecek D, Tomyshev AS, Tordesillas-Gutiérrez D, Tosetti M, Uhlmann A, Van Rheenen T, Vazquez-Bourgón J, Vernooij MW, Vieta E, Vilarroya O, Weickert C, Weickert T, Westlye LT, Whalley H, Willinger D, Winter A, Wittfeld K, Yang TT, Yoncheva Y, Zijlmans JL, Hoogman M, Franke B, van Rooij D, Buitelaar J, Ching CRK, Andreassen OA, Pozzi E, Veltman D, Schmaal L, van Erp TGM, Turner J, Castellanos FX, Pausova Z, Thompson P, Paus TKeywordsCortical growth, Cortical surface area, Mental illness, Neurodevelopment, Neurogenesis, Psychiatric disordersDOI10.1016/j.biopsych.2022.02.959 |
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| Toggle | A Midsagittal-View Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study of the Growth and Involution of the Adenoid Mass and Related Changes in Selected Velopharyngeal Structures. | Journal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR | Perry JL, Haenssler AE, Kotlarek KJ, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJournal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHRPublished2022/03/03AuthorsPerry JL, Haenssler AE, Kotlarek KJ, Fang X, Middleton S, Mason R, Kuehn DPKeywordsDOI10.1044/2021_JSLHR-21-00514 |
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| Toggle | Sociodemographic differences in youth alcohol sipping's nomological network. | Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research | Watts AL, Megahan JF, Conlin WE, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalAlcoholism, clinical and experimental researchPublished2022/03/03AuthorsWatts AL, Megahan JF, Conlin WE, Doss MI, Sher KJKeywordsalcohol sipping, precocious alcohol use, psychopathology, sociodemographic differencesDOI10.1111/acer.14790 |
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| Toggle | Individual-, peer-, and parent-level substance use-related factors among 9- and 10-year-olds from the ABCD Study: Prevalence rates and sociodemographic differences. | Drug and alcohol dependence reports | Martz ME, Heitzeg MM, Lisdahl KM, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalDrug and alcohol dependence reportsPublished2022/03/03AuthorsMartz ME, Heitzeg MM, Lisdahl KM, Cloak CC, Ewing SWF, Gonzalez R, Haist F, LeBlanc KH, Madden PA, Ross JM, Sher KJ, Tapert SF, Thompson WK, Wade NEKeywordsABCD Study, Alcohol, Marijuana, Nicotine, Parents, PeersDOI10.1016/j.dadr.2022.100037 |
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| Toggle | The role of perceived threats on mental health, social, and neurocognitive youth outcomes: A multicontextual, person-centered approach. | Development and psychopathology | Conley MI, Hernandez J, Salvati JM, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalDevelopment and psychopathologyPublished2022/03/02AuthorsConley MI, Hernandez J, Salvati JM, Gee DG, Baskin-Sommers AKeywordsmental health, neurocognition, perceived threat, social functioning, youth environmentsDOI10.1017/S095457942100184X |
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| Toggle | Longitudinal Evidence of a Vicious Cycle Between Nucleus Accumbens Microstructure and Childhood Weight Gain. | The Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine | Rapuano KM, Berrian N, Baskin-Sommers A, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalThe Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent MedicinePublished2022/03/02AuthorsRapuano KM, Berrian N, Baskin-Sommers A, Décarie-Spain L, Sharma S, Fulton S, Casey BJ, Watts RKeywordsAdolescent health, Diet, Neuroinflammation, Nucleus accumbens, Pediatric obesity, Restriction spectrum imagingDOI10.1016/j.jadohealth.2022.01.002 |
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| Toggle | Hyperbolic discounting rates and risk for problematic alcohol use in youth enrolled in the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development study. | Addiction biology | Kohler RJ, Lichenstein SD, Yip SW | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalAddiction biologyPublished2022/03/01AuthorsKohler RJ, Lichenstein SD, Yip SWKeywordsaddiction, computational modelling, decision-making, development, initiation, rewardDOI10.1111/adb.13160 |
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| Toggle | Reliability and stability challenges in ABCD task fMRI data. | NeuroImage | Kennedy JT, Harms MP, Korucuoglu O, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalNeuroImagePublished2022/03/01AuthorsKennedy JT, Harms MP, Korucuoglu O, Astafiev SV, Barch DM, Thompson WK, Bjork JM, Anokhin APKeywordsDOI10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.119046 |
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| Toggle | Prenatal Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor Exposure, Depression, and Brain Morphology in Middle Childhood: Results From the ABCD Study. | Biological psychiatry global open science | Moreau AL, Voss M, Hansen I, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalBiological psychiatry global open sciencePublished2022/02/26AuthorsMoreau AL, Voss M, Hansen I, Paul SE, Barch DM, Rogers CE, Bogdan RKeywordsChild, Depression, MRI, Pregnancy, Prenatal, SSRIDOI10.1016/j.bpsgos.2022.02.005 |
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| Toggle | Gray matter volumetric correlates of dimensional impulsivity traits in children: Sex differences and heritability. | Human brain mapping | Chen Y, Ide JS, Li CS, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalHuman brain mappingPublished2022/02/25AuthorsChen Y, Ide JS, Li CS, Chaudhary S, Le TM, Wang W, Zhornitsky S, Zhang S, Li CRKeywordsABCD, UPPS-P, VBM, heritability, impulsivenessDOI10.1002/hbm.25810 |
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| Toggle | Altered resting fMRI spectral power in data-driven brain networks during development: A longitudinal study. | Journal of neuroscience methods | Agcaoglu O, Wilson TW, Wang YP, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJournal of neuroscience methodsPublished2022/02/23AuthorsAgcaoglu O, Wilson TW, Wang YP, Stephen JM, Fu Z, Calhoun VDKeywordsAmplitude of low frequency fluctuations, Frequency spectrum analysis, Independent component analysis, Longitudinal analysis - brain development, Resting state - eyes open - eyes closedDOI10.1016/j.jneumeth.2022.109537 |
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| Toggle | Classifying Conduct Disorder Using a Biopsychosocial Model and Machine Learning Method. | Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging | Chan L, Simmons C, Tillem S, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalBiological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimagingPublished2022/02/22AuthorsChan L, Simmons C, Tillem S, Conley M, Brazil IA, Baskin-Sommers AKeywordsBiopsychosocial, Conduct disorder, Family, Graph analysis, Machine learningDOI10.1016/j.bpsc.2022.02.004 |
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| Toggle | Clouding Up Cognition? Secondhand Cannabis and Tobacco Exposure Related to Cognitive Functioning in Youth. | Biological psychiatry global open science | Wade NE, McCabe CJ, Wallace AL, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalBiological psychiatry global open sciencePublished2022/02/22AuthorsWade NE, McCabe CJ, Wallace AL, Gonzalez MR, Hoh E, Infante MA, Mejia MH, Haist FKeywordsAdolescents, Cognition, Environmental smoke, Preadolescents, Secondhand cannabis, Secondhand smokeDOI10.1016/j.bpsgos.2022.01.010 |
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| Toggle | Regional gray matter abnormalities in pre-adolescent binge eating disorder: A voxel-based morphometry study. | Psychiatry research | Murray SB, Duval CJ, Balkchyan AA, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalPsychiatry researchPublished2022/02/22AuthorsMurray SB, Duval CJ, Balkchyan AA, Cabeen RP, Nagata JM, Toga AW, Siegel SJ, Jann KKeywordsBinge eating disorder, Eating disorders, Gray matter, Gray matter morphology, Voxel-based morphometryDOI10.1016/j.psychres.2022.114473 |
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| Toggle | Exploring neural correlates of behavioral and academic resilience among children in poverty. | Developmental cognitive neuroscience | Ellwood-Lowe ME, Irving CN, Bunge SA | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalDevelopmental cognitive neurosciencePublished2022/02/22AuthorsEllwood-Lowe ME, Irving CN, Bunge SAKeywordsAdaptation, Brain development, Brain networks, Cognitive, Environment, Functional connectivity, Poverty, Socioeconomic statusDOI10.1016/j.dcn.2022.101090 |
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| Toggle | Parent-adolescent agreement in reported moderate-to-vigorous intensity physical activity during the COVID-19 pandemic. | BMC public health | Nagata JM, Cortez CA, Iyer P, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalBMC public healthPublished2022/02/16AuthorsNagata JM, Cortez CA, Iyer P, Dooley EE, Ganson KT, Conroy AA, Pettee Gabriel KKeywordsAdolescents, COVID-19, Moderate-to-vigorous intensity physical activity, Parents, Physical activity, Physical activity measurementDOI10.1186/s12889-022-12530-4 |
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| Toggle | Companion Animals and Adolescent Stress and Adaptive Coping During the COVID-19 Pandemic. | Anthrozoos | Mueller MK, King EK, Halbreich ED, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalAnthrozoosPublished2022/02/11AuthorsMueller MK, King EK, Halbreich ED, Callina KSKeywordsCOVID-19, adaptive coping, adolescence, human–animal interaction, petsDOI10.1080/08927936.2022.2027093 |
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| Toggle | Causal effects of psychostimulants on neural connectivity: a mechanistic, randomized clinical trial. | Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines | Wang Y, Kessel E, Lee S, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJournal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplinesPublished2022/02/09AuthorsWang Y, Kessel E, Lee S, Hong S, Raffanello E, Hulvershorn LA, Margolis A, Peterson BS, Posner JKeywordsADHD, Dynamic Functional MRI (fMRI), Lisdexamfetamine, Striatum, Structural Equation Modeling, ThalamusDOI10.1111/jcpp.13585 |
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| Toggle | Resilience to COVID-19: Socioeconomic Disadvantage Associated With Positive Caregiver-Youth Communication and Youth Preventative Actions. | Frontiers in public health | Marshall AT, Hackman DA, Baker FC, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalFrontiers in public healthPublished2022/02/09AuthorsMarshall AT, Hackman DA, Baker FC, Breslin FJ, Brown SA, Dick AS, Gonzalez MR, Guillaume M, Kiss O, Lisdahl KM, McCabe CJ, Pelham WE, Sheth C, Tapert SF, Rinsveld AV, Wade NE, Sowell ERKeywordsCOVID-19, adolescence, caregivers, pandemic, socioeconomic factorsDOI10.3389/fpubh.2022.734308 |
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| Toggle | Associations between potentially traumatic events and psychopathology among preadolescents in the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development Study. | Journal of traumatic stress | Thompson EL, Lever NA, Connors KM, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJournal of traumatic stressPublished2022/02/08AuthorsThompson EL, Lever NA, Connors KM, Cloak CC, Reeves G, Chang LKeywordsDOI10.1002/jts.22793 |
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| Toggle | Associations between social behaviors and experiences with neural correlates of implicit emotion regulation in middle childhood. | Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology | Geckeler KC, Barch DM, Karcher NR | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalNeuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of NeuropsychopharmacologyPublished2022/02/08AuthorsGeckeler KC, Barch DM, Karcher NRKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41386-022-01286-5 |
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| Toggle | Education and Income Show Heterogeneous Relationships to Lifespan Brain and Cognitive Differences Across European and US Cohorts. | Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991) | Walhovd KB, Fjell AM, Wang Y, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalCerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991)Published2022/02/08AuthorsWalhovd KB, Fjell AM, Wang Y, Amlien IK, Mowinckel AM, Lindenberger U, Düzel S, Bartrés-Faz D, Ebmeier KP, Drevon CA, Baaré WFC, Ghisletta P, Johansen LB, Kievit RA, Henson RN, Madsen KS, Nyberg L, R Harris J, Solé-Padullés C, Pudas S, Sørensen Ø, Westerhausen R, Zsoldos E, Nawijn L, Lyngstad TH, Suri S, Penninx B, Rogeberg OJ, Brandmaier AMKeywordsbrain, cognitive function, lifespan, socioeconomic statusDOI10.1093/cercor/bhab248 |
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| Toggle | Shared Genetic Etiology between Cortical Brain Morphology and Tobacco, Alcohol, and Cannabis Use. | Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991) | Rabinowitz JA, Campos AI, Ong JS, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalCerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991)Published2022/02/08AuthorsRabinowitz JA, Campos AI, Ong JS, García-Marín LM, Alcauter S, Mitchell BL, Grasby KL, Cuéllar-Partida G, Gillespie NA, Huhn AS, Martin NG, Thompson PM, Medland SE, Maher BS, Rentería MEKeywordsalcohol use, cannabis use, genetics, neuroimaging, smoking behaviorDOI10.1093/cercor/bhab243 |
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| Toggle | Structural brain measures among children with and without ADHD in the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development Study cohort: a cross-sectional US population-based study. | The lancet. Psychiatry | Bernanke J, Luna A, Chang L, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalThe lancet. PsychiatryPublished2022/02/07AuthorsBernanke J, Luna A, Chang L, Bruno E, Dworkin J, Posner JKeywordsDOI10.1016/S2215-0366(21)00505-8 |
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| Toggle | Parental Arrest and Child Behavior: Differential Role of Executive Functioning among Racial Subgroups. | Journal of child and family studies | Johnson EI, Planalp EM, Poehlmann-Tynan J | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJournal of child and family studiesPublished2022/02/07AuthorsJohnson EI, Planalp EM, Poehlmann-Tynan JKeywordsExecutive functioning, Externalizing problems, Internalizing problems, Parental arrest, Racial stratificationDOI10.1007/s10826-022-02251-y |
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| Toggle | Measuring retention within the adolescent brain cognitive development (ABCD) study. | Developmental cognitive neuroscience | Feldstein Ewing SW, Dash GF, Thompson WK, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalDevelopmental cognitive neurosciencePublished2022/02/04AuthorsFeldstein Ewing SW, Dash GF, Thompson WK, Reuter C, Diaz VG, Anokhin A, Chang L, Cottler LB, Dowling GJ, LeBlanc K, Zucker RA, Tapert SF, Brown SA, Garavan HKeywordsABCD study®, Adolescents, Longitudinal studies, Metrics, RetentionDOI10.1016/j.dcn.2022.101081 |
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| Toggle | Discovery of genomic loci of the human cerebral cortex using genetically informed brain atlases. | Science (New York, N.Y.) | Makowski C, van der Meer D, Dong W, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalScience (New York, N.Y.)Published2022/02/03AuthorsMakowski C, van der Meer D, Dong W, Wang H, Wu Y, Zou J, Liu C, Rosenthal SB, Hagler DJ, Fan CC, Kremen WS, Andreassen OA, Jernigan TL, Dale AM, Zhang K, Visscher PM, Yang J, Chen CHKeywordsDOI10.1126/science.abe8457 |
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| Toggle | The Role of School Environment in Brain Structure, Connectivity, and Mental Health in Children: A Multimodal Investigation. | Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging | Rakesh D, Zalesky A, Whittle S | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalBiological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimagingPublished2022/02/02AuthorsRakesh D, Zalesky A, Whittle SKeywordsAdolescence, Brain gray and white matter, Magnetic resonance imaging, Neuroimaging, Resting-state functional connectivity, School environmentDOI10.1016/j.bpsc.2022.01.006 |
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| Toggle | The positive-negative mode link between brain connectivity, demographics and behaviour: a pre-registered replication of Smith . (2015). | Royal Society open science | Goyal N, Moraczewski D, Bandettini PA, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalRoyal Society open sciencePublished2022/02/02AuthorsGoyal N, Moraczewski D, Bandettini PA, Finn ES, Thomas AGKeywordsHuman Connectome Project, adolescent brain cognitive development, connectomics, functional connectivity, network neuroscience, replicationDOI10.1098/rsos.201090 |
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| Toggle | Charting brain growth and aging at high spatial precision. | eLife | Rutherford S, Fraza C, Dinga R, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournaleLifePublished2022/02/01AuthorsRutherford S, Fraza C, Dinga R, Kia SM, Wolfers T, Zabihi M, Berthet P, Worker A, Verdi S, Andrews D, Han LK, Bayer JM, Dazzan P, McGuire P, Mocking RT, Schene A, Sripada C, Tso IF, Duval ER, Chang SE, Penninx BW, Heitzeg MM, Burt SA, Hyde LW, Amaral D, Wu Nordahl C, Andreasssen OA, Westlye LT, Zahn R, Ruhe HG, Beckmann C, Marquand AFKeywordsbig data, brain chart, growth chart, human, individual prediction, lifespan, neuroscience, normative modelDOI10.7554/eLife.72904 |
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| Toggle | Association of Genome-Wide Polygenic Scores for Multiple Psychiatric and Common Traits in Preadolescent Youths at Risk of Suicide. | JAMA network open | Joo YY, Moon SY, Wang HH, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJAMA network openPublished2022/02/01AuthorsJoo YY, Moon SY, Wang HH, Kim H, Lee EJ, Kim JH, Posner J, Ahn WY, Choi I, Kim JW, Cha JKeywordsDOI10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.48585 |
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| Toggle | Parental psychological problems were associated with higher screen time and the use of mature-rated media in children. | Acta paediatrica (Oslo, Norway : 1992) | Pulkki-Råback L, Barnes JD, Elovainio M, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalActa paediatrica (Oslo, Norway : 1992)Published2022/01/31AuthorsPulkki-Råback L, Barnes JD, Elovainio M, Hakulinen C, Sourander A, Tremblay MS, Guerrero MDKeywordschildren, mental health, parents, screen time, social mediaDOI10.1111/apa.16253 |
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| Toggle | Spatio-temporal directed acyclic graph learning with attention mechanisms on brain functional time series and connectivity. | Medical image analysis | Huang SG, Xia J, Xu L, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalMedical image analysisPublished2022/01/30AuthorsHuang SG, Xia J, Xu L, Qiu AKeywordsAttention mechanism, Brain functional network, Directed acyclic graph, Graph neural network, Graph pooling, Multi-scale analysisDOI10.1016/j.media.2022.102370 |
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| Toggle | Age-related changes and longitudinal stability of individual differences in ABCD Neurocognition measures. | Developmental cognitive neuroscience | Anokhin AP, Luciana M, Banich M, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalDevelopmental cognitive neurosciencePublished2022/01/28AuthorsAnokhin AP, Luciana M, Banich M, Barch D, Bjork JM, Gonzalez MR, Gonzalez R, Haist F, Jacobus J, Lisdahl K, McGlade E, McCandliss B, Nagel B, Nixon SJ, Tapert S, Kennedy JT, Thompson WKeywordsDevelopment, Longitudinal, Neurocognition, Test-retest reliabilityDOI10.1016/j.dcn.2022.101078 |
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| Toggle | The Pandemic's Toll on Young Adolescents: Prevention and Intervention Targets to Preserve Their Mental Health. | The Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine | Kiss O, Alzueta E, Yuksel D, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalThe Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent MedicinePublished2022/01/26AuthorsKiss O, Alzueta E, Yuksel D, Pohl KM, de Zambotti M, Műller-Oehring EM, Prouty D, Durley I, Pelham WE, McCabe CJ, Gonzalez MR, Brown SA, Wade NE, Marshall AT, Sowell ER, Breslin FJ, Lisdahl KM, Dick AS, Sheth CS, McCandliss BD, Guillaume M, Van Rinsveld AM, Dowling GJ, Tapert SF, Baker FCKeywordsAdolescents, COVID-19, Children, Mental-health, Pandemic, Sex differences, SleepDOI10.1016/j.jadohealth.2021.11.023 |
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| Toggle | Socioeconomic status, BMI, and brain development in children. | Translational psychiatry | Dennis E, Manza P, Volkow ND | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalTranslational psychiatryPublished2022/01/24AuthorsDennis E, Manza P, Volkow NDKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41398-022-01779-3 |
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| Toggle | Birth Weight and Childhood Psychopathology in the ABCD Cohort: Association is Strongest for Attention Problems and is Moderated by Sex. | Research on child and adolescent psychopathology | Dooley N, Clarke M, Cotter D, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalResearch on child and adolescent psychopathologyPublished2022/01/24AuthorsDooley N, Clarke M, Cotter D, Cannon MKeywordsADHD, Attention, Birth weight, Child mental health, Foetal growth, GestationDOI10.1007/s10802-021-00859-0 |
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| Toggle | Neural signatures of data-driven psychopathology dimensions at the transition to adolescence. | European psychiatry : the journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists | Modabbernia A, Michelini G, Reichenberg A, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalEuropean psychiatry : the journal of the Association of European PsychiatristsPublished2022/01/24AuthorsModabbernia A, Michelini G, Reichenberg A, Kotov R, Barch D, Frangou SKeywordsAdolescence, development, neuroimaging, population neuroscience, psychopathologyDOI10.1192/j.eurpsy.2021.2262 |
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| Toggle | Differentiating distinct and converging neural correlates of types of systemic environmental exposures. | Human brain mapping | Vargas TG, Damme KSF, Mittal VA | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalHuman brain mappingPublished2022/01/22AuthorsVargas TG, Damme KSF, Mittal VAKeywordschronic stress, development, environment, neural, systemic factorsDOI10.1002/hbm.25783 |
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| Toggle | The Prevalence of Preadolescent Eating Disorders in the United States. | The Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine | Murray SB, Ganson KT, Chu J, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalThe Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent MedicinePublished2022/01/22AuthorsMurray SB, Ganson KT, Chu J, Jann K, Nagata JMKeywordsAnorexia nervosa, Binge, Bulimia nervosa, Child eating disorders, Eating disorder, Eating disordersDOI10.1016/j.jadohealth.2021.11.031 |
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| Toggle | Stability of polygenic scores across discovery genome-wide association studies. | HGG advances | Schultz LM, Merikangas AK, Ruparel K, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalHGG advancesPublished2022/01/21AuthorsSchultz LM, Merikangas AK, Ruparel K, Jacquemont S, Glahn DC, Gur RE, Barzilay R, Almasy LKeywordsAdolescent Brain Cognitive Development study, African American, PRS-CS, PTSD, Philadelphia Neurodevelopmental Cohort, UK Biobank, ancestry, height, methods development, type 2 diabetesDOI10.1016/j.xhgg.2022.100091 |
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| Toggle | Parental Knowledge/Monitoring and Depressive Symptoms During Adolescence: Protective Factor or Spurious Association? | Research on child and adolescent psychopathology | Pelham WE, Tapert SF, Gonzalez MR, et al. | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalResearch on child and adolescent psychopathologyPublished2022/01/21AuthorsPelham WE, Tapert SF, Gonzalez MR, Guillaume M, Dick AS, Sheth CS, Baker FC, Baskin-Sommers A, Marshall AT, Lisdahl KM, Breslin FJ, Van Rinsveld A, Brown SAKeywordsAdolescence, Depression, Parental monitoringDOI10.1007/s10802-021-00896-9 |
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| Toggle | Profiles of family pet ownership during the COVID-19 pandemic. | Current psychology (New Brunswick, N.J.) | Halbreich ED, Mueller MK | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalCurrent psychology (New Brunswick, N.J.)Published2022/01/20AuthorsHalbreich ED, Mueller MKKeywordsDOI10.1007/s12144-021-02574-x |
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| Toggle | Psychiatric comorbidity associated with weight status in 9 to 10 year old children. | Pediatric obesity | Smith KE, Mason TB | 2022 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalPediatric obesityPublished2022/01/19AuthorsSmith KE, Mason TBKeywordschildren, comorbidity, mental health, obesity, overweight, weightDOI10.1111/ijpo.12883 |
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