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 | Morphometrical Brain Markers of Sex Difference. | Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991) | Brennan D, Wu T, Fan J | 2021 | |
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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)Published2021/07/05AuthorsBrennan D, Wu T, Fan JKeywordsABCD, brain morphology, machine learning, sex dimorphismDOI10.1093/cercor/bhab037 |
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| Toggle | Motor abnormalities, depression risk, and clinical course in adolescence. | Biological psychiatry global open science | Damme KSF, Park JS, Vargas T, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 sciencePublished2021/07/03AuthorsDamme KSF, Park JS, Vargas T, Walther S, Shankman SA, Mittal VAKeywordsDOI10.1016/j.bpsgos.2021.06.011 |
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| Toggle | Symptom-Based Profiling and Multimodal Neuroimaging of a Large Preteenage Population Identifies Distinct Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder-like Subtypes With Neurocognitive Differences. | Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging | Wu X, Yu G, Zhang K, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 neuroimagingPublished2021/07/02AuthorsWu X, Yu G, Zhang K, Feng J, Zhang J, Sahakian BJ, Robbins TWKeywordsABCD Study, Anxiety, Compulsivity, Heterogeneity, Pediatric OCD, SubtypesDOI10.1016/j.bpsc.2021.06.011 |
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| Toggle | Association of Multigenerational Family History of Depression With Lifetime Depressive and Other Psychiatric Disorders in Children: Results from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study. | JAMA psychiatry | van Dijk MT, Murphy E, Posner JE, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 psychiatryPublished2021/07/01Authorsvan Dijk MT, Murphy E, Posner JE, Talati A, Weissman MMKeywordsDOI10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2021.0350 |
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| Toggle | Child reward neurocircuitry and parental substance use history: Findings from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study. | Addictive behaviors | Kwarteng AE, Rahman MM, Gee DG, et al. | 2021 | |
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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. JournalAddictive behaviorsPublished2021/06/29AuthorsKwarteng AE, Rahman MM, Gee DG, Infante MA, Tapert SF, Curtis BLKeywordsABCD Study, Monetary Incentive Delay task, Reward anticipation, Substance use history, fMRIDOI10.1016/j.addbeh.2021.107034 |
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| Toggle | Concurrent and prospective associations between fitbit wearable-derived RDoC arousal and regulatory constructs and adolescent internalizing symptoms. | Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines | Nelson BW, Flannery JE, Flournoy J, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 disciplinesPublished2021/06/29AuthorsNelson BW, Flannery JE, Flournoy J, Duell N, Prinstein MJ, Telzer EKeywordsAdolescence, fitbit, heart rate, internalizing symptoms, sleep, steps, wearablesDOI10.1111/jcpp.13471 |
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| Toggle | Contemporary screen time usage among children 9-10-years-old is associated with higher body mass index percentile at 1-year follow-up: A prospective cohort study. | Pediatric obesity | Nagata JM, Iyer P, Chu J, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 obesityPublished2021/06/28AuthorsNagata JM, Iyer P, Chu J, Baker FC, Gabriel KP, Garber AK, Murray SB, Bibbins-Domingo K, Ganson KTKeywordsadolescents, body mass index, obesity, paediatrics, screen time, smart phone, social media, television, weightDOI10.1111/ijpo.12827 |
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| Toggle | QSIPrep: an integrative platform for preprocessing and reconstructing diffusion MRI data. | Nature methods | Cieslak M, Cook PA, He X, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 methodsPublished2021/06/21AuthorsCieslak M, Cook PA, He X, Yeh FC, Dhollander T, Adebimpe A, Aguirre GK, Bassett DS, Betzel RF, Bourque J, Cabral LM, Davatzikos C, Detre JA, Earl E, Elliott MA, Fadnavis S, Fair DA, Foran W, Fotiadis P, Garyfallidis E, Giesbrecht B, Gur RC, Gur RE, Kelz MB, Keshavan A, Larsen BS, Luna B, Mackey AP, Milham MP, Oathes DJ, Perrone A, Pines AR, Roalf DR, Richie-Halford A, Rokem A, Sydnor VJ, Tapera TM, Tooley UA, Vettel JM, Yeatman JD, Grafton ST, Satterthwaite TDKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41592-021-01185-5 |
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| Toggle | Common genetic variation influencing human white matter microstructure. | Science (New York, N.Y.) | Zhao B, Li T, Yang Y, et al. | 2021 | |
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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.)Published2021/06/18AuthorsZhao B, Li T, Yang Y, Wang X, Luo T, Shan Y, Zhu Z, Xiong D, Hauberg ME, Bendl J, Fullard JF, Roussos P, Li Y, Stein JL, Zhu HKeywordsDOI10.1126/science.abf3736 |
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| Toggle | Brain structure is linked to the association between family environment and behavioral problems in children in the ABCD study. | Nature communications | Gong W, Rolls ET, Du J, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 communicationsPublished2021/06/18AuthorsGong W, Rolls ET, Du J, Feng J, Cheng WKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41467-021-23994-0 |
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| Toggle | Meaningful associations in the adolescent brain cognitive development study. | NeuroImage | Dick AS, Lopez DA, Watts AL, et al. | 2021 | |
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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. JournalNeuroImagePublished2021/06/18AuthorsDick AS, Lopez DA, Watts AL, Heeringa S, Reuter C, Bartsch H, Fan CC, Kennedy DN, Palmer C, Marshall A, Haist F, Hawes S, Nichols TE, Barch DM, Jernigan TL, Garavan H, Grant S, Pariyadath V, Hoffman E, Neale M, Stuart EA, Paulus MP, Sher KJ, Thompson WKKeywordsAdolescent brain cognitive development study, Covariate Adjustments, Effect Sizes, Genetics, Hypothesis testing, Population neuroscience, ReproducibilityDOI10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118262 |
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| Toggle | Baseline brain function in the preadolescents of the ABCD Study. | Nature neuroscience | Chaarani B, Hahn S, Allgaier N, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 neurosciencePublished2021/06/07AuthorsChaarani B, Hahn S, Allgaier N, Adise S, Owens MM, Juliano AC, Yuan DK, Loso H, Ivanciu A, Albaugh MD, Dumas J, Mackey S, Laurent J, Ivanova M, Hagler DJ, Cornejo MD, Hatton S, Agrawal A, Aguinaldo L, Ahonen L, Aklin W, Anokhin AP, Arroyo J, Avenevoli S, Babcock D, Bagot K, Baker FC, Banich MT, Barch DM, Bartsch H, Baskin-Sommers A, Bjork JM, Blachman-Demner D, Bloch M, Bogdan R, Bookheimer SY, Breslin F, Brown S, Calabro FJ, Calhoun V, Casey BJ, Chang L, Clark DB, Cloak C, Constable RT, Constable K, Corley R, Cottler LB, Coxe S, Dagher RK, Dale AM, Dapretto M, Delcarmen-Wiggins R, Dick AS, Do EK, Dosenbach NUF, Dowling GJ, Edwards S, Ernst TM, Fair DA, Fan CC, Feczko E, Feldstein-Ewing SW, Florsheim P, Foxe JJ, Freedman EG, Friedman NP, Friedman-Hill S, Fuemmeler BF, Galvan A, Gee DG, Giedd J, Glantz M, Glaser P, Godino J, Gonzalez M, Gonzalez R, Grant S, Gray KM, Haist F, Harms MP, Hawes S, Heath AC, Heeringa S, Heitzeg MM, Hermosillo R, Herting MM, Hettema JM, Hewitt JK, Heyser C, Hoffman E, Howlett K, Huber RS, Huestis MA, Hyde LW, Iacono WG, Infante MA, Irfanoglu O, Isaiah A, Iyengar S, Jacobus J, James R, Jean-Francois B, Jernigan T, Karcher NR, Kaufman A, Kelley B, Kit B, Ksinan A, Kuperman J, Laird AR, Larson C, LeBlanc K, Lessov-Schlagger C, Lever N, Lewis DA, Lisdahl K, Little AR, Lopez M, Luciana M, Luna B, Madden PA, Maes HH, Makowski C, Marshall AT, Mason MJ, Matochik J, McCandliss BD, McGlade E, Montoya I, Morgan G, Morris A, Mulford C, Murray P, Nagel BJ, Neale MC, Neigh G, Nencka A, Noronha A, Nixon SJ, Palmer CE, Pariyadath V, Paulus MP, Pelham WE, Pfefferbaum D, Pierpaoli C, Prescot A, Prouty D, Puttler LI, Rajapaske N, Rapuano KM, Reeves G, Renshaw PF, Riedel MC, Rojas P, de la Rosa M, Rosenberg MD, Ross MJ, Sanchez M, Schirda C, Schloesser D, Schulenberg J, Sher KJ, Sheth C, Shilling PD, Simmons WK, Sowell ER, Speer N, Spittel M, Squeglia LM, Sripada C, Steinberg J, Striley C, Sutherland MT, Tanabe J, Tapert SF, Thompson W, Tomko RL, Uban KA, Vrieze S, Wade NE, Watts R, Weiss S, Wiens BA, Williams OD, Wilbur A, Wing D, Wolff-Hughes D, Yang R, Yurgelun-Todd DA, Zucker RA, Potter A, Garavan HPKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41593-021-00867-9 |
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| Toggle | Polygenic risk scores for alcohol involvement relate to brain structure in substance-naïve children: Results from the ABCD study. | Genes, brain, and behavior | Hatoum AS, Johnson EC, Baranger DAA, et al. | 2021 | |
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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. JournalGenes, brain, and behaviorPublished2021/06/06AuthorsHatoum AS, Johnson EC, Baranger DAA, Paul SE, Agrawal A, Bogdan RKeywordsDTI, adolescence, alcohol use, alcohol use disorder, cortical gray matter, drug naive, imaging genetics, multi-site study, polygenic risk scores, subcortical gray matterDOI10.1111/gbb.12756 |
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| Toggle | Evaluation of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Medications, Externalizing Symptoms, and Suicidality in Children. | JAMA network open | Shoval G, Visoki E, Moore TM, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 openPublished2021/06/01AuthorsShoval G, Visoki E, Moore TM, DiDomenico GE, Argabright ST, Huffnagle NJ, Alexander-Bloch AF, Waller R, Keele L, Benton TD, Gur RE, Barzilay RKeywordsDOI10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.11342 |
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| Toggle | Parents' Perceived Neighborhood Safety and Children's Cognitive Performance: Complexities by Race, Ethnicity, and Cognitive Domain. | Urban science (Basel, Switzerland) | Assari S, Boyce S, Mistry R, et al. | 2021 | |
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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. JournalUrban science (Basel, Switzerland)Published2021/06/01AuthorsAssari S, Boyce S, Mistry R, Thomas A, Nicholson HL, Cobb RJ, Cuevas AG, Lee DB, Bazargan M, Caldwell CH, Curry TJ, Zimmerman MAKeywordschildren, cognition, cognitive performance, ethnicity, population groups, raceDOI10.3390/urbansci5020046 |
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| Toggle | Responsible Use of Open-Access Developmental Data: The Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study. | Psychological science | Simmons C, Conley MI, Gee DG, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 sciencePublished2021/05/27AuthorsSimmons C, Conley MI, Gee DG, Baskin-Sommers A, Barch DM, Hoffman EA, Huber RS, Iacono WG, Nagel BJ, Palmer CE, Sheth CS, Sowell ER, Thompson WK, Casey BJKeywordsDOI10.1177/09567976211003564 |
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| Toggle | Differentiating kinds of systemic stressors with relation to psychotic-like experiences in late childhood and early adolescence: the stimulation, discrepancy, and deprivation model of psychosis. | Clinical psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science | Vargas T, Damme KSF, Osborne KJ, et al. | 2021 | |
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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. JournalClinical psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological SciencePublished2021/05/27AuthorsVargas T, Damme KSF, Osborne KJ, Mittal VAKeywordsbelonging, deprivation, neighborhood crime, neighborhood population density, psychosis, psychotic-like experiences, schizophrenia, social exclusion, stressDOI10.1177/21677026211016415 |
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| Toggle | Prediction of suicidal ideation and attempt in 9 and 10 year-old children using transdiagnostic risk features. | PloS one | Harman G, Kliamovich D, Morales AM, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 onePublished2021/05/25AuthorsHarman G, Kliamovich D, Morales AM, Gilbert S, Barch DM, Mooney MA, Feldstein Ewing SW, Fair DA, Nagel BJKeywordsDOI10.1371/journal.pone.0252114 |
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| Toggle | Sex Differences in Psychopathology in a Large Cohort of Nine and Ten-Year-Olds. | Psychiatry research | Loso HM, Dube SL, Chaarani B, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 researchPublished2021/05/24AuthorsLoso HM, Dube SL, Chaarani B, Garavan H, Albaugh M, Ivanova M, Potter AKeywordsEpidemiology, Pediatric mental health, PsychopathologyDOI10.1016/j.psychres.2021.114026 |
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| Toggle | Feasibility of Race by Sex Intersectionality Research on Suicidality in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study. | Children (Basel, Switzerland) | Assari S, Boyce S, Bazargan M | 2021 | |
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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. JournalChildren (Basel, Switzerland)Published2021/05/23AuthorsAssari S, Boyce S, Bazargan MKeywordschildren, race, sex, suicidality, suicideDOI10.3390/children8060437 |
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| Toggle | Commentary: Reply to 'Transgender and mental health' by Philip Graham. | Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines | Potter A | 2021 | |
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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 disciplinesPublished2021/05/19AuthorsPotter AKeywordsDOI10.1111/jcpp.13441 |
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| Toggle | Race, Family Conflict and Suicidal Thoughts and Behaviors among 9-10-Year-Old American Children | Int J Environ Res Public Health | Assari S, Boyce S, Bazargan M, et al. | 2021 | |
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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. JournalInt J Environ Res Public HealthPublished2021/05/18AuthorsAssari S, Boyce S, Bazargan M, Caldwell CHKeywordschildren; family relations; race; suicidal thoughts and behaviors; suicideDOIDOI: 10.3390/ijerph18105399 |
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| Toggle | Parental Educational Attainment, the Superior Temporal Cortical Surface Area, and Reading Ability among American Children: A Test of Marginalization-Related Diminished Returns. | Children (Basel, Switzerland) | Assari S, Boyce S, Bazargan M, et al. | 2021 | |
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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. JournalChildren (Basel, Switzerland)Published2021/05/18AuthorsAssari S, Boyce S, Bazargan M, Thomas A, Cobb RJ, Hudson D, Curry TJ, Nicholson HL, Cuevas AG, Mistry R, Chavous TM, Caldwell CH, Zimmerman MAKeywordsadolescents, brain development, child, cortical surface, magnetic resonance imaging, population groups, reading, school performance, socioeconomic factorsDOI10.3390/children8050412 |
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| Toggle | Association between Hippocampal Volume and Working Memory in 10,000+ 9-10-Year-Old Children: Sex Differences. | Children (Basel, Switzerland) | Assari S, Boyce S, Jovanovic T | 2021 | |
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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. JournalChildren (Basel, Switzerland)Published2021/05/18AuthorsAssari S, Boyce S, Jovanovic TKeywordschildren, list sorting working memory, right and left hippocampal volume, sex, sex differenceDOI10.3390/children8050411 |
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| Toggle | Associations of family income with cognition and brain structure in USA children: prevention implications. | Molecular psychiatry | Tomasi D, Volkow ND | 2021 | |
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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 psychiatryPublished2021/05/14AuthorsTomasi D, Volkow NDKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41380-021-01130-0 |
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| Toggle | Polygenic Risk for Insomnia in Adolescents of Diverse Ancestry. | Frontiers in genetics | Ma T, Chen H, Lu Q, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 geneticsPublished2021/05/10AuthorsMa T, Chen H, Lu Q, Tong XKeywordsadolescent, ancestry, genetic, insomnia, polygenic risk scoreDOI10.3389/fgene.2021.654717 |
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| Toggle | Single-participant structural similarity matrices lead to greater accuracy in classification of participants than function in autism in MRI. | Molecular autism | Leming MJ, Baron-Cohen S, Suckling J | 2021 | |
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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 autismPublished2021/05/10AuthorsLeming MJ, Baron-Cohen S, Suckling JKeywordsAutism, Deep learning, Functional connectivity, Structural similarityDOI10.1186/s13229-021-00439-5 |
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| Toggle | Editorial: Understanding the Link Between the Developing Brain and Behavior in Adolescents. | Frontiers in human neuroscience | Silk TJ, Herting MM, Wierenga LM, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 neurosciencePublished2021/05/07AuthorsSilk TJ, Herting MM, Wierenga LM, Vijayakumar NKeywordsadolescence, brain behavior correlation, brain development, childhood, neurodevelopment, neuroimagingDOI10.3389/fnhum.2021.663454 |
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| Toggle | Amygdalar Activation as a Neurobiological Marker of Differential Sensitivity in the Effects of Family Rearing Experiences on Socioemotional Adjustment in Youths. | Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging | Liu S, Oshri A, Kogan SM, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 neuroimagingPublished2021/05/05AuthorsLiu S, Oshri A, Kogan SM, Wickrama KAS, Sweet LKeywordsAmygdala, Differential susceptibility, Early-life stress, Family rearing environments, Internalizing and externalizing symptoms, ParentingDOI10.1016/j.bpsc.2021.04.017 |
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| Toggle | A Researcher's Guide to the Measurement and Modeling of Puberty in the ABCD Study at Baseline. | Frontiers in endocrinology | Cheng TW, Magis-Weinberg L, Guazzelli Williamson V, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 endocrinologyPublished2021/05/05AuthorsCheng TW, Magis-Weinberg L, Guazzelli Williamson V, Ladouceur CD, Whittle SL, Herting MM, Uban KA, Byrne ML, Barendse MEA, Shirtcliff EA, Pfeifer JHKeywordsDHEA, adolescent brain cognitive development study, estradiol, puberty, salivary hormones, testosteroneDOI10.3389/fendo.2021.608575 |
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| Toggle | Rates of Incidental Findings in Brain Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Children. | JAMA neurology | Li Y, Thompson WK, Reuter C, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 neurologyPublished2021/05/01AuthorsLi Y, Thompson WK, Reuter C, Nillo R, Jernigan T, Dale A, Sugrue LP, , Brown J, Dougherty RF, Rauschecker A, Rudie J, Barch DM, Calhoun V, Hagler D, Hatton S, Tanabe J, Marshall A, Sher KJ, Heeringa S, Hermosillo R, Banich MT, Squeglia L, Bjork J, Zucker R, Neale M, Herting M, Sheth C, Huber R, Reeves G, Hettema JM, Howlett KD, Cloak C, Baskin-Sommers A, Rapuano K, Gonzalez R, Karcher N, Laird A, Baker F, James R, Sowell E, Dick A, Hawes S, Sutherland M, Bagot K, Bodurka J, Breslin F, Morris A, Paulus M, Gray K, Hoffman E, Weiss S, Rajapakse N, Glantz M, Nagel B, Ewing SF, Goldstone A, Pfefferbaum A, Prouty D, Rosenberg M, Bookheimer S, Tapert S, Infante M, Jacobus J, Giedd J, Shilling P, Wade N, Uban K, Haist F, Heyser C, Palmer C, Kuperman J, Hewitt J, Cottler L, Isaiah A, Chang L, Edwards S, Ernst T, Heitzeg M, Puttler L, Sripada C, Iacono W, Luciana M, Clark D, Luna B, Schirda C, Foxe J, Freedman E, Mason M, McGlade E, Renshaw P, Yurgelun-Todd D, Albaugh M, Allgaier N, Chaarani B, Potter A, Ivanova M, Lisdahl K, Do E, Maes H, Bogdan R, Anokhin A, Dosenbach N, Glaser P, Heath A, Casey BJ, Gee D, Garavan HP, Dowling G, Brown SKeywordsDOI10.1001/jamaneurol.2021.0306 |
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| Toggle | Association of adverse prenatal exposure burden with child psychopathology in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study. | PloS one | Roffman JL, Sipahi ED, Dowling KF, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 onePublished2021/04/28AuthorsRoffman JL, Sipahi ED, Dowling KF, Hughes DE, Hopkinson CE, Lee H, Eryilmaz H, Cohen LS, Gilman J, Doyle AE, Dunn ECKeywordsDOI10.1371/journal.pone.0250235 |
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| Toggle | Extracurricular Activities, Screen Media Activity, and Sleep May Be Modifiable Factors Related to Children's Cognitive Functioning: Evidence From the ABCD Study. | Child development | Kirlic N, Colaizzi JM, Cosgrove KT, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 developmentPublished2021/04/26AuthorsKirlic N, Colaizzi JM, Cosgrove KT, Cohen ZP, Yeh HW, Breslin F, Morris AS, Aupperle RL, Singh MK, Paulus MPKeywordsDOI10.1111/cdev.13578 |
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| Toggle | Breastfeeding Duration Is Associated With Domain-Specific Improvements in Cognitive Performance in 9-10-Year-Old Children. | Frontiers in public health | Lopez DA, Foxe JJ, Mao Y, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 healthPublished2021/04/26AuthorsLopez DA, Foxe JJ, Mao Y, Thompson WK, Martin HJ, Freedman EGKeywordsbreastfeeding, child, cognitive development, neurocognition, public healthDOI10.3389/fpubh.2021.657422 |
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| Toggle | The association between latent trauma and brain structure in children. | Translational psychiatry | Jeong HJ, Durham EL, Moore TM, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 psychiatryPublished2021/04/24AuthorsJeong HJ, Durham EL, Moore TM, Dupont RM, McDowell M, Cardenas-Iniguez C, Micciche ET, Berman MG, Lahey BB, Kaczkurkin ANKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41398-021-01357-z |
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| Toggle | Ecological stress, amygdala reactivity, and internalizing symptoms in preadolescence: Is parenting a buffer? | Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior | Demidenko MI, Ip KI, Kelly DP, et al. | 2021 | |
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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. JournalCortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behaviorPublished2021/04/15AuthorsDemidenko MI, Ip KI, Kelly DP, Constante K, Goetschius LG, Keating DPKeywordsAmygdala, Environment, Internalizing, Parenting, Preadolescence, SexDOI10.1016/j.cortex.2021.02.032 |
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| Toggle | Conduct disorder symptomatology is associated with an altered functional connectome in a large national youth sample. | Development and psychopathology | Tillem S, Conley MI, Baskin-Sommers A | 2021 | |
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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 psychopathologyPublished2021/04/14AuthorsTillem S, Conley MI, Baskin-Sommers AKeywordsconduct disorder, graph analysis, neural topology, neurocognitive functioning, subcortical structuresDOI10.1017/S0954579421000237 |
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| Toggle | Associations between frontal lobe structure, parent-reported obstructive sleep disordered breathing and childhood behavior in the ABCD dataset. | Nature communications | Isaiah A, Ernst T, Cloak CC, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 communicationsPublished2021/04/13AuthorsIsaiah A, Ernst T, Cloak CC, Clark DB, Chang LKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41467-021-22534-0 |
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| Toggle | Correction to: Multimethod investigation of the neurobiological basis of ADHD symptomatology in children aged 9-10: baseline data from the ABCD study. | Translational psychiatry | Owens MM, Allgaier N, Hahn S, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 psychiatryPublished2021/04/12AuthorsOwens MM, Allgaier N, Hahn S, Yuan D, Albaugh M, Adise S, Chaarani B, Ortigara J, Juliano A, Potter A, Garavan HKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41398-021-01320-y |
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| Toggle | Gastric symptoms and low perceived maternal warmth are associated with eating disorder symptoms in young adolescent girls. | The International journal of eating disorders | Kerr KL, Ralph-Nearman C, Colaizzi JM, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 International journal of eating disordersPublished2021/04/09AuthorsKerr KL, Ralph-Nearman C, Colaizzi JM, DeVille DC, Breslin FJ, Aupperle RL, Paulus MP, Morris ASKeywordsadolescents, eating disorders, females, gastrointestinal symptoms, maternal acceptance, parenting, paternal acceptance, risk factors, sexDOI10.1002/eat.23516 |
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| Toggle | Shared heritability of human face and brain shape. | Nature genetics | Naqvi S, Sleyp Y, Hoskens H, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 geneticsPublished2021/04/05AuthorsNaqvi S, Sleyp Y, Hoskens H, Indencleef K, Spence JP, Bruffaerts R, Radwan A, Eller RJ, Richmond S, Shriver MD, Shaffer JR, Weinberg SM, Walsh S, Thompson J, Pritchard JK, Sunaert S, Peeters H, Wysocka J, Claes PKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41588-021-00827-w |
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| Toggle | "I Don't Understand": Who Is Missed When We Ask Early Adolescents, "Are You Transgender"? | Archives of sexual behavior | Dube S, Ivanova M, Potter A | 2021 | |
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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 sexual behaviorPublished2021/04/05AuthorsDube S, Ivanova M, Potter AKeywordsDOI10.1007/s10508-021-01986-x |
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| Toggle | Obesity and Eating Disorder Disparities Among Sexual and Gender Minority Youth. | JAMA pediatrics | Schvey NA, Pearlman AT, Klein DA, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 pediatricsPublished2021/04/01AuthorsSchvey NA, Pearlman AT, Klein DA, Murphy MA, Gray JCKeywordsDOI10.1001/jamapediatrics.2020.5152 |
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| Toggle | The Elusive Phenotype of Preadolescent Suicidal Thoughts and Behaviors: Can Neuroimaging Deliver on Its Promise? | The American journal of psychiatry | Auerbach RP, Chase HW, Brent DA | 2021 | |
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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 American journal of psychiatryPublished2021/04/01AuthorsAuerbach RP, Chase HW, Brent DAKeywordsNeuroimaging, Suicide and Self-HarmDOI10.1176/appi.ajp.2020.21010022 |
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| Toggle | Race, Socioeconomic Status, and Cerebellum Cortex Fractional Anisotropy in Pre-Adolescents. | Adolescents (Basel, Switzerland) | Assari S, Boyce S | 2021 | |
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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. JournalAdolescents (Basel, Switzerland)Published2021/03/31AuthorsAssari S, Boyce SKeywordsMRI, brain development, cerebellum cortex, parental education and household income, pre-adolescents, socioeconomic positionDOI10.3390/adolescents1020007 |
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| Toggle | Children with ADHD Have a Greater Lifetime History of Concussion: Results from the ABCD Study. | Journal of neurotrauma | Cook NE, Karr JE, Iverson GL | 2021 | |
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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 neurotraumaPublished2021/03/30AuthorsCook NE, Karr JE, Iverson GLKeywordsattention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, children, mild traumatic brain injuryDOI10.1089/neu.2021.0019 |
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| Toggle | Multimodal brain predictors of current weight and weight gain in children enrolled in the ABCD study ®. | Developmental cognitive neuroscience | Adise S, Allgaier N, Laurent J, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 neurosciencePublished2021/03/30AuthorsAdise S, Allgaier N, Laurent J, Hahn S, Chaarani B, Owens M, Yuan D, Nyugen P, Mackey S, Potter A, Garavan HPKeywordsChildhood obesity, Inhibitory control, Machine-learning, Reward, Weight gain, Weight stability, fMRIDOI10.1016/j.dcn.2021.100948 |
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| Toggle | Association Between Parental Educational Attainment and Children's Negative Urgency: Sex Differences. | International journal of epidemiologic research | Assari S | 2021 | |
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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 epidemiologic researchPublished2021/03/30AuthorsAssari SKeywordsChildren, Negative urgency, Parental educational attainment, Personality, Socioeconomic statusDOI10.34172/IJER.2021.04 |
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| Toggle | Polygenic risk scores for major psychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders contribute to sleep disturbance in childhood: Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study. | Translational psychiatry | Ohi K, Ochi R, Noda Y, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 psychiatryPublished2021/03/26AuthorsOhi K, Ochi R, Noda Y, Wada M, Sugiyama S, Nishi A, Shioiri T, Mimura M, Nakajima SKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41398-021-01308-8 |
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| Toggle | Associations Between Neighborhood Disadvantage, Resting-State Functional Connectivity, and Behavior in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study: The Moderating Role of Positive Family and School Environments. | Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging | Rakesh D, Seguin C, Zalesky A, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 neuroimagingPublished2021/03/23AuthorsRakesh D, Seguin C, Zalesky A, Cropley V, Whittle SKeywordsAdolescence, Neighborhood socioeconomic status, Positive parenting, Resting-state functional connectivity, School environment, fMRIDOI10.1016/j.bpsc.2021.03.008 |
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| Toggle | Parental Education and Left Lateral Orbitofrontal Cortical Activity during N-Back Task: An fMRI Study of American Adolescents. | Brain sciences | Assari S, Boyce S, Saqib M, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 sciencesPublished2021/03/22AuthorsAssari S, Boyce S, Saqib M, Bazargan M, Caldwell CHKeywordsN-Back, adolescents, brain development, cognitive, fMRI, learning, memory, orbitofrontal cortex, population groups, socioeconomic factorsDOI10.3390/brainsci11030401 |
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| Toggle | Gene-environment correlations and causal effects of childhood maltreatment on physical and mental health: a genetically informed approach. | The lancet. Psychiatry | Warrier V, Kwong ASF, Luo M, et al. | 2021 | |
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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. PsychiatryPublished2021/03/16AuthorsWarrier V, Kwong ASF, Luo M, Dalvie S, Croft J, Sallis HM, Baldwin J, Munafò MR, Nievergelt CM, Grant AJ, Burgess S, Moore TM, Barzilay R, McIntosh A, van IJzendoorn MH, Cecil CAMKeywordsDOI10.1016/S2215-0366(20)30569-1 |
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| Toggle | Deep learning based segmentation of brain tissue from diffusion MRI. | NeuroImage | Zhang F, Breger A, Cho KIK, et al. | 2021 | |
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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. JournalNeuroImagePublished2021/03/16AuthorsZhang F, Breger A, Cho KIK, Ning L, Westin CF, O'Donnell LJ, Pasternak OKeywordsDOI10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.117934 |
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| Toggle | Contributions from resting state functional connectivity and familial risk to early adolescent-onset MDD: Results from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study. | Journal of affective disorders | Cai Y, Elsayed NM, Barch DM | 2021 | |
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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 disordersPublished2021/03/16AuthorsCai Y, Elsayed NM, Barch DMKeywordsAdolescence, Depression, Familial risk, Functional ConnectivityDOI10.1016/j.jad.2021.03.031 |
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| Toggle | Identification and Validation of Distinct Latent Neurodevelopmental Profiles in the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development Study. | Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging | Lichenstein SD, Roos C, Kohler R, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 neuroimagingPublished2021/03/09AuthorsLichenstein SD, Roos C, Kohler R, Kiluk B, Carroll KM, Worhunsky PD, Witkiewitz K, Yip SWKeywordsAdolescence, Latent profile analysis, Psychopathology, Risk factors, Split-half validation, fMRIDOI10.1016/j.bpsc.2021.02.013 |
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| Toggle | Design issues and solutions for stop-signal data from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study. | eLife | Bissett PG, Hagen MP, Jones HM, et al. | 2021 | |
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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. JournaleLifePublished2021/03/04AuthorsBissett PG, Hagen MP, Jones HM, Poldrack RAKeywordsbig data, brain development, child development, human, neuroscience, race models, stop-signal paradigmDOI10.7554/eLife.60185 |
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| Toggle | Resting-State Functional Connectivity between Putamen and Salience Network and Childhood Body Mass Index. | Neurology international | Assari S, Boyce S | 2021 | |
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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. JournalNeurology internationalPublished2021/03/04AuthorsAssari S, Boyce SKeywordsbody mass index, brain development, children, fMRI, functional connectivity, obesity, population groups, putamenDOI10.3390/neurolint13010009 |
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| Toggle | Contemporary screen time modalities among children 9-10 years old and binge-eating disorder at one-year follow-up: A prospective cohort study. | The International journal of eating disorders | Nagata JM, Iyer P, Chu J, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 International journal of eating disordersPublished2021/03/01AuthorsNagata JM, Iyer P, Chu J, Baker FC, Pettee Gabriel K, Garber AK, Murray SB, Bibbins-Domingo K, Ganson KTKeywordsadolescents, binge eating, binge-eating disorder, disordered eating, eating disorder, pediatrics, screen time, smart phone, social media, televisionDOI10.1002/eat.23489 |
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| Toggle | Reported autism diagnosis is associated with psychotic-like symptoms in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development cohort. | European child & adolescent psychiatry | Jutla A, Donohue MR, Veenstra-VanderWeele J, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 psychiatryPublished2021/03/01AuthorsJutla A, Donohue MR, Veenstra-VanderWeele J, Foss-Feig JHKeywordsAutism spectrum disorder, Early diagnosis, Neurodevelopmental disorders, Psychotic-like symptoms, SchizophreniaDOI10.1007/s00787-021-01738-1 |
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| Toggle | Does maternal psychopathology bias reports of offspring symptoms? A study using moderated non-linear factor analysis. | Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines | Olino TM, Michelini G, Mennies RJ, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 disciplinesPublished2021/02/26AuthorsOlino TM, Michelini G, Mennies RJ, Kotov R, Klein DNKeywordsMaternal bias, maternal psychopathology, youth psychopathologyDOI10.1111/jcpp.13394 |
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| Toggle | Association Between Habitual Snoring and Cognitive Performance Among a Large Sample of Preadolescent Children. | JAMA otolaryngology-- head & neck surgery | Isaiah A, Ernst T, Cloak CC, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 otolaryngology-- head & neck surgeryPublished2021/02/25AuthorsIsaiah A, Ernst T, Cloak CC, Clark DB, Chang LKeywordsDOI10.1001/jamaoto.2020.5712 |
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| Toggle | Preliminary analysis of low-level alcohol use and suicidality with children in the adolescent brain and cognitive development (ABCD) baseline cohort. | Psychiatry research | Aguinaldo LD, Goldstone A, Hasler BP, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 researchPublished2021/02/23AuthorsAguinaldo LD, Goldstone A, Hasler BP, Brent DA, Coronado C, Jacobus JKeywordsChildren, Substance use, Suicide preventionDOI10.1016/j.psychres.2021.113825 |
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| Toggle | Correspondence Between Perceived Pubertal Development and Hormone Levels in 9-10 Year-Olds From the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study. | Frontiers in endocrinology | Herting MM, Uban KA, Gonzalez MR, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 endocrinologyPublished2021/02/18AuthorsHerting MM, Uban KA, Gonzalez MR, Baker FC, Kan EC, Thompson WK, Granger DA, Albaugh MD, Anokhin AP, Bagot KS, Banich MT, Barch DM, Baskin-Sommers A, Breslin FJ, Casey BJ, Chaarani B, Chang L, Clark DB, Cloak CC, Constable RT, Cottler LB, Dagher RK, Dapretto M, Dick AS, Dosenbach N, Dowling GJ, Dumas JA, Edwards S, Ernst T, Fair DA, Feldstein-Ewing SW, Freedman EG, Fuemmeler BF, Garavan H, Gee DG, Giedd JN, Glaser PEA, Goldstone A, Gray KM, Hawes SW, Heath AC, Heitzeg MM, Hewitt JK, Heyser CJ, Hoffman EA, Huber RS, Huestis MA, Hyde LW, Infante MA, Ivanova MY, Jacobus J, Jernigan TL, Karcher NR, Laird AR, LeBlanc KH, Lisdahl K, Luciana M, Luna B, Maes HH, Marshall AT, Mason MJ, McGlade EC, Morris AS, Nagel BJ, Neigh GN, Palmer CE, Paulus MP, Potter AS, Puttler LI, Rajapakse N, Rapuano K, Reeves G, Renshaw PF, Schirda C, Sher KJ, Sheth C, Shilling PD, Squeglia LM, Sutherland MT, Tapert SF, Tomko RL, Yurgelun-Todd D, Wade NE, Weiss SRB, Zucker RA, Sowell ERKeywordsadolescent brain cognitive development, dehydroepiandrosterone, estradiol, pubertal development scale, puberty, salivary hormones, testosteroneDOI10.3389/fendo.2020.549928 |
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| Toggle | The association between child alcohol sipping and alcohol expectancies in the ABCD study. | Drug and alcohol dependence | Murphy MA, Dufour SC, Gray JC | 2021 | |
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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 dependencePublished2021/02/16AuthorsMurphy MA, Dufour SC, Gray JCKeywordsABCD, Alcohol, Alcohol expectancies, Alcohol use, Child alcohol sipping, DrinkingDOI10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2021.108624 |
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| Toggle | The General Factor of Psychopathology in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study: A Comparison of Alternative Modeling Approaches. | Clinical psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological Science | Clark DA, Hicks BM, Angstadt M, et al. | 2021 | |
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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. JournalClinical psychological science : a journal of the Association for Psychological SciencePublished2021/02/16AuthorsClark DA, Hicks BM, Angstadt M, Rutherford S, Taxali A, Hyde L, Weigard A, Heitzeg MM, Sripada CKeywordsAdolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study (ABCD), Bifactor Model, Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL), General Factor of Psychopathology, p factorDOI10.1177/2167702620959317 |
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| Toggle | Quadratic relations of BMI with depression and brain volume in children: Analysis of data from the ABCD study. | Journal of psychiatric research | Bohon C, Welch H | 2021 | |
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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 psychiatric researchPublished2021/02/15AuthorsBohon C, Welch HKeywordsBMI, Brain volume, Children, Depression, Overweight, UnderweightDOI10.1016/j.jpsychires.2021.02.038 |
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| Toggle | Individual Differences in Cognitive Performance Are Better Predicted by Global Rather Than Localized BOLD Activity Patterns Across the Cortex. | Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991) | Zhao W, Palmer CE, Thompson WK, et al. | 2021 | |
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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)Published2021/02/05AuthorsZhao W, Palmer CE, Thompson WK, Chaarani B, Garavan HP, Casey BJ, Jernigan TL, Dale AM, Fan CCKeywordsbehavioral prediction, cognition, distributed effect sizes, individual differences, neuroimagingDOI10.1093/cercor/bhaa290 |
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| Toggle | Interpreting Interaction Effects in Generalized Linear Models of Nonlinear Probabilities and Counts. | Multivariate behavioral research | McCabe CJ, Halvorson MA, King KM, et al. | 2021 | |
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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. JournalMultivariate behavioral researchPublished2021/02/01AuthorsMcCabe CJ, Halvorson MA, King KM, Cao X, Kim DSKeywordsGeneralized linear modeling, Poisson, interaction, logistic regression, moderationDOI10.1080/00273171.2020.1868966 |
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| Toggle | A High Psychological and Somatic Symptom Profile and Family Health Factors Predict New or Persistent Pain During Early Adolescence. | The Clinical journal of pain | Voepel-Lewis T, Seng JS, Chen B, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 Clinical journal of painPublished2021/02/01AuthorsVoepel-Lewis T, Seng JS, Chen B, Scott ELKeywordsDOI10.1097/AJP.0000000000000896 |
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| Toggle | Nonsuicidal self-injury, suicide ideation, and suicide attempts among sexual minority children. | Journal of consulting and clinical psychology | Blashill AJ, Fox K, Feinstein BA, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 consulting and clinical psychologyPublished2021/02/01AuthorsBlashill AJ, Fox K, Feinstein BA, Albright CA, Calzo JPKeywordsDOI10.1037/ccp0000624 |
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| Toggle | Caffeine exposure in utero is associated with structural brain alterations and deleterious neurocognitive outcomes in 9-10 year old children. | Neuropharmacology | Christensen ZP, Freedman EG, Foxe JJ | 2021 | |
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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. JournalNeuropharmacologyPublished2021/01/30AuthorsChristensen ZP, Freedman EG, Foxe JJKeywordsBrain development, Caffeine, Children and adolescents, Diffusion tensor imaging, White matterDOI10.1016/j.neuropharm.2021.108479 |
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| Toggle | Decomposing complex links between the childhood environment and brain structure in school-aged youth. | Developmental cognitive neuroscience | Hong SJ, Sisk LM, Caballero C, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 neurosciencePublished2021/01/22AuthorsHong SJ, Sisk LM, Caballero C, Mekhanik A, Roy AK, Milham MP, Gee DGKeywordsAdversity, Brain development, Childhood, Environment, Neuroanatomy, SubtypingDOI10.1016/j.dcn.2021.100919 |
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| Toggle | Multimodal Neuroimaging of Suicidal Thoughts and Behaviors in a U.S. Population-Based Sample of School-Age Children. | The American journal of psychiatry | Vidal-Ribas P, Janiri D, Doucet GE, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 American journal of psychiatryPublished2021/01/21AuthorsVidal-Ribas P, Janiri D, Doucet GE, Pornpattananangkul N, Nielson DM, Frangou S, Stringaris AKeywordsChildren, Neuroimaging, Risk Factors, SuicideDOI10.1176/appi.ajp.2020.20020120 |
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| Toggle | Tuber Locations Associated with Infantile Spasms Map to a Common Brain Network. | Annals of neurology | Cohen AL, Mulder BPF, Prohl AK, et al. | 2021 | |
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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. JournalAnnals of neurologyPublished2021/01/21AuthorsCohen AL, Mulder BPF, Prohl AK, Soussand L, Davis P, Kroeck MR, McManus P, Gholipour A, Scherrer B, Bebin EM, Wu JY, Northrup H, Krueger DA, Sahin M, Warfield SK, Fox MD, Peters JMKeywordsDOI10.1002/ana.26015 |
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| Toggle | Association of gray matter volumes with general and specific dimensions of psychopathology in children. | Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology | Durham EL, Jeong HJ, Moore TM, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 NeuropsychopharmacologyPublished2021/01/21AuthorsDurham EL, Jeong HJ, Moore TM, Dupont RM, Cardenas-Iniguez C, Cui Z, Stone FE, Berman MG, Lahey BB, Kaczkurkin ANKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41386-020-00952-w |
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| Toggle | Multimethod investigation of the neurobiological basis of ADHD symptomatology in children aged 9-10: baseline data from the ABCD study. | Translational psychiatry | Owens MM, Allgaier N, Hahn S, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 psychiatryPublished2021/01/18AuthorsOwens MM, Allgaier N, Hahn S, Yuan D, Albaugh M, Adise S, Chaarani B, Ortigara J, Juliano A, Potter A, Garavan HKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41398-020-01192-8 |
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| Toggle | Retaining Adolescent and Young Adult Participants in Research During a Pandemic: Best Practices From Two Large-Scale Developmental Neuroimaging Studies (NCANDA and ABCD). | Frontiers in behavioral neuroscience | Nooner KB, Chung T, Feldstein Ewing SW, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 behavioral neurosciencePublished2021/01/18AuthorsNooner KB, Chung T, Feldstein Ewing SW, Brumback T, Arwood Z, Tapert SF, Brown SA, Cottler LKeywordsadolescent, developmental, longitudinal, neuroimaging, pandemic, retention, young adultDOI10.3389/fnbeh.2020.597902 |
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| Toggle | Typologies of Family Functioning and 24-h Movement Behaviors. | International journal of environmental research and public health | Guerrero MD, Barnes JD, Tremblay MS, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 environmental research and public healthPublished2021/01/15AuthorsGuerrero MD, Barnes JD, Tremblay MS, Pulkki-Råback LKeywordschildren, family environment, latent profile analysis, physical activity, screen time, sleepDOI10.3390/ijerph18020699 |
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| Toggle | Differentiated nomological networks of internalizing, externalizing, and the general factor of psychopathology (' factor') in emerging adolescence in the ABCD study. | Psychological medicine | Brislin SJ, Martz ME, Joshi S, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 medicinePublished2021/01/14AuthorsBrislin SJ, Martz ME, Joshi S, Duval ER, Gard A, Clark DA, Hyde LW, Hicks BM, Taxali A, Angstadt M, Rutherford S, Heitzeg MM, Sripada CKeywordsABCD study, emerging adolescence, externalizing, general factor of psychopathology, internalizing, p factorDOI10.1017/S0033291720005103 |
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| Toggle | Risk factors associated with curiosity about alcohol use in the ABCD cohort. | Alcohol (Fayetteville, N.Y.) | Wade NE, Palmer CE, Gonzalez MR, et al. | 2021 | |
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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. JournalAlcohol (Fayetteville, N.Y.)Published2021/01/09AuthorsWade NE, Palmer CE, Gonzalez MR, Wallace AL, Infante MA, Tapert SF, Jacobus J, Bagot KSKeywordsalcohol, alcohol curiosity, children, intent to use, pre-adolescentDOI10.1016/j.alcohol.2021.01.002 |
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| Toggle | Powering and Structuring Intersectionality: Beyond Main and Interactive Associations. | Research on child and adolescent psychopathology | Del Río-González AM, Holt SL, Bowleg L | 2021 | |
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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 psychopathologyPublished2021/01/06AuthorsDel Río-González AM, Holt SL, Bowleg LKeywordsInteractive effects models, Intersectionality, Multiple main effects models, Quantitative intersectionalityDOI10.1007/s10802-020-00720-w |
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| Toggle | Family Processes and Child Psychopathology: A Between- and Within-Family/Child Analysis. | Research on child and adolescent psychopathology | Lin SY, Schleider JL, Eaton NR | 2021 | |
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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 psychopathologyPublished2021/01/06AuthorsLin SY, Schleider JL, Eaton NRKeywordsExternalizing psychopathology, Family process, Internalizing, Parenting, PreadolescentDOI10.1007/s10802-020-00749-x |
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| Toggle | The Main and Interactive Associations between Demographic Factors and Psychopathology and Treatment Utilization in Youth: A Test of Intersectionality in the ABCD Study. | Research on child and adolescent psychopathology | Mennies RJ, Birk SL, Norris LA, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 psychopathologyPublished2021/01/01AuthorsMennies RJ, Birk SL, Norris LA, Olino TMKeywordsAdolescent, Epidemiology, Ethnicity, Psychopathology, Race, SESDOI10.1007/s10802-020-00687-8 |
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| Toggle | Associations Between Prenatal Cannabis Exposure and Childhood Outcomes: Results From the ABCD Study. | JAMA psychiatry | Paul SE, Hatoum AS, Fine JD, et al. | 2021 | |
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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 psychiatryPublished2021/01/01AuthorsPaul SE, Hatoum AS, Fine JD, Johnson EC, Hansen I, Karcher NR, Moreau AL, Bondy E, Qu Y, Carter EB, Rogers CE, Agrawal A, Barch DM, Bogdan RKeywordsDOI10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2020.2902 |
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| Toggle | Racial Disparities in Elementary School Disciplinary Actions: Findings From the ABCD Study. | Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | Fadus MC, Valadez EA, Bryant BE, et al. | 2020 | |
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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 PsychiatryPublished2020/12/24AuthorsFadus MC, Valadez EA, Bryant BE, Garcia AM, Neelon B, Tomko RL, Squeglia LMKeywordsBlack, discipline, education, race, racismDOI10.1016/j.jaac.2020.11.017 |
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| Toggle | Altered hippocampal microstructure and function in children who experienced Hurricane Irma. | Developmental psychobiology | Conley MI, Skalaban LJ, Rapuano KM, et al. | 2020 | |
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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 psychobiologyPublished2020/12/16AuthorsConley MI, Skalaban LJ, Rapuano KM, Gonzalez R, Laird AR, Dick AS, Sutherland MT, Watts R, Casey BJKeywordsdevelopment, hippocampus, memory, neurogenesis, restriction spectrum imaging, stressDOI10.1002/dev.22071 |
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| Toggle | The role of family conflict in mediating impulsivity to early substance exposure among preteens. | Addictive behaviors | Wang Z, Buu A, Lohrmann DK, et al. | 2020 | |
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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. JournalAddictive behaviorsPublished2020/12/14AuthorsWang Z, Buu A, Lohrmann DK, Shih PC, Lin HCKeywordsFamily conflict, Impulsivity, Mediation, Pre-adolescence, Substance useDOI10.1016/j.addbeh.2020.106779 |
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| Toggle | Disentangling vulnerability, state and trait features of neurocognitive impairments in depression. | Brain : a journal of neurology | Ang YS, Frontero N, Belleau E, et al. | 2020 | |
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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 : a journal of neurologyPublished2020/12/10AuthorsAng YS, Frontero N, Belleau E, Pizzagalli DAKeywordsaffective disorders, child psychiatry, computational psychiatry, depression, imagingDOI10.1093/brain/awaa314 |
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| Toggle | Parental Education, Household Income, and Cortical Surface Area among 9-10 Years Old Children: Minorities' Diminished Returns. | Brain sciences | Assari S | 2020 | |
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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 sciencesPublished2020/12/09AuthorsAssari SKeywordsMRI, brain development, children, cortex, population groups, socioeconomic factorsDOI10.3390/brainsci10120956 |
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| Toggle | Parental Education, Household Income, Race, and Children's Working Memory: Complexity of the Effects. | Brain sciences | Akhlaghipour G, Assari S | 2020 | |
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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 sciencesPublished2020/12/07AuthorsAkhlaghipour G, Assari SKeywordsmemory, population groups, social determinants of health, socioeconomic position, socioeconomic status, working memoryDOI10.3390/brainsci10120950 |
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| Toggle | Psychotic Like Experiences are Associated with Suicide Ideation and Behavior in 9 to 10 Year Old Children in the United States. | Research on child and adolescent psychopathology | Grattan RE, Karcher NR, Maguire AM, et al. | 2020 | |
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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 psychopathologyPublished2020/11/27AuthorsGrattan RE, Karcher NR, Maguire AM, Hatch B, Barch DM, Niendam TAKeywordsEmotion dysregulation, Impulsivity, Psychotic like experiences, Suicide behavior, Suicide ideationDOI10.1007/s10802-020-00721-9 |
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| Toggle | Screen media activity does not displace other recreational activities among 9-10 year-old youth: a cross-sectional ABCD study®. | BMC public health | Lees B, Squeglia LM, Breslin FJ, et al. | 2020 | |
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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 healthPublished2020/11/25AuthorsLees B, Squeglia LM, Breslin FJ, Thompson WK, Tapert SF, Paulus MPKeywordsChildren, Displacement hypothesis, Hobbies, Physical activity, Recreational activities, Screen media, Social media, SportDOI10.1186/s12889-020-09894-w |
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| Toggle | Direct and Indirect Associations of Widespread Individual Differences in Brain White Matter Microstructure With Executive Functioning and General and Specific Dimensions of Psychopathology in Children. | Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging | Cardenas-Iniguez C, Moore TM, Kaczkurkin AN, et al. | 2020 | |
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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 neuroimagingPublished2020/11/25AuthorsCardenas-Iniguez C, Moore TM, Kaczkurkin AN, Meyer FAC, Satterthwaite TD, Fair DA, White T, Blok E, Applegate B, Thompson LM, Rosenberg MD, Hedeker D, Berman MG, Lahey BBKeywordsAttention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, Bifactor models, Conduct problems, Executive functions, General factor of psychopathology, White matterDOI10.1016/j.bpsc.2020.11.007 |
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| Toggle | Mental Rotation in American Children: Diminished Returns of Parental Education in Black Families. | Pediatric reports | Assari S | 2020 | |
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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 reportsPublished2020/11/20AuthorsAssari SKeywordsage, children, cognitive function, mental rotation, pre-adolescentsDOI10.3390/pediatric12030028 |
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| Toggle | American Children's Screen Time: Diminished Returns of Household Income in Black Families. | Information (Basel) | Assari S | 2020 | |
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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. JournalInformation (Basel)Published2020/11/20AuthorsAssari SKeywordschildren, family income, pre-adolescents, screen timeDOI10.3390/info11110538 |
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| Toggle | Problems experienced by children from families with histories of substance misuse: An ABCD study®. | Drug and alcohol dependence | Lees B, Stapinski LA, Teesson M, et al. | 2020 | |
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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 dependencePublished2020/11/13AuthorsLees B, Stapinski LA, Teesson M, Squeglia LM, Jacobus J, Mewton LKeywordsAddiction, Alcohol use disorder, Brain structure, Family history, Mental disorder, Substance use disorderDOI10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2020.108403 |
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| Toggle | Obsessive-Compulsive Symptoms Among Children in the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development Study: Clinical, Cognitive, and Brain Connectivity Correlates. | Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging | Pagliaccio D, Durham K, Fitzgerald KD, et al. | 2020 | |
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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 neuroimagingPublished2020/11/06AuthorsPagliaccio D, Durham K, Fitzgerald KD, Marsh RKeywordsABCD, Children, DTI, Dorsal attention network, MRI, OCDDOI10.1016/j.bpsc.2020.10.019 |
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| Toggle | Behavioral and brain signatures of substance use vulnerability in childhood. | Developmental cognitive neuroscience | Rapuano KM, Rosenberg MD, Maza MT, et al. | 2020 | |
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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 neurosciencePublished2020/11/03AuthorsRapuano KM, Rosenberg MD, Maza MT, Dennis NJ, Dorji M, Greene AS, Horien C, Scheinost D, Todd Constable R, Casey BJKeywordsABCD, Connectome-based predictive modeling, Substance use, VulnerabilityDOI10.1016/j.dcn.2020.100878 |
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| Toggle | Investigation of Psychiatric and Neuropsychological Correlates of Default Mode Network and Dorsal Attention Network Anticorrelation in Children. | Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991) | Owens MM, Yuan D, Hahn S, et al. | 2020 | |
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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)Published2020/11/03AuthorsOwens MM, Yuan D, Hahn S, Albaugh M, Allgaier N, Chaarani B, Potter A, Garavan HKeywordsanticorrelation, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, default mode network, dorsal attention network, functional connectivityDOI10.1093/cercor/bhaa143 |
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| Toggle | Assessment of Neighborhood Poverty, Cognitive Function, and Prefrontal and Hippocampal Volumes in Children. | JAMA network open | Taylor RL, Cooper SR, Jackson JJ, et al. | 2020 | |
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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 openPublished2020/11/02AuthorsTaylor RL, Cooper SR, Jackson JJ, Barch DMKeywordsDOI10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.23774 |
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