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 | Probing Puberty as a Source of Developmental Change in Neural Response to Emotional Faces in Early Adolescence. | Developmental psychobiology | Morningstar M, Burns JA | 2025 | |
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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 psychobiologyPublished2025/03/01AuthorsMorningstar M, Burns JAKeywordsABCD, adolescence, development, emotion, face, pubertyDOI10.1002/dev.70037 |
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| Toggle | Air Pollution Exposure, Prefrontal Connectivity, and Emotional Behavior in Early Adolescence. | Research report (Health Effects Institute) | Herting MM, Burnor E, Ahmadi H, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 report (Health Effects Institute)Published2025/03/01AuthorsHerting MM, Burnor E, Ahmadi H, Eckel SP, Gauderman W, Schwartz J, Berhane K, McConnell R, Chen JCKeywordsDOI |
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| Toggle | A Calibrated Sensitivity Analysis for Weighted Causal Decompositions. | Statistics in medicine | Shen AA, Visoki E, Barzilay R, et al. | 2025 | |
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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. JournalStatistics in medicinePublished2025/02/28AuthorsShen AA, Visoki E, Barzilay R, Pimentel SDKeywordscausal decompositions, causal inference, disparities, sensitivity analysis, weightingDOI10.1002/sim.70010 |
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| Toggle | Air pollution and cortical myelin T1w/T2w ratio estimates in school-age children from the ABCD and NeuroSmog studies. | Developmental cognitive neuroscience | Szwed M, de Jesus AV, Kossowski B, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 neurosciencePublished2025/02/28AuthorsSzwed M, de Jesus AV, Kossowski B, Ahmadi H, Rutkowska E, Mysak Y, Baumbach C, Kaczmarek-Majer K, Degórska A, Skotak K, Sitnik-Warchulska K, Lipowska M, Grellier J, Markevych I, Herting MMKeywordsAdolescence, Air pollution, Childhood, Environmental neuroscience, Myelin, Neurodevelopment, T1w/T2w ratioDOI10.1016/j.dcn.2025.101538 |
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| Toggle | Mental rotational skills from pre to mid-adolescence: What a novel test tells us about skill development. | Neuropsychology | Moore A, Lewis B, Nixon SJ | 2025 | |
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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. JournalNeuropsychologyPublished2025/02/27AuthorsMoore A, Lewis B, Nixon SJKeywordsDOI10.1037/neu0001004 |
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| Toggle | Hippocampal subregion volumes and preadolescent depression risk in the ABCD sample. | Journal of affective disorders | Parker AJ, Sorcher LK, Cutshaw OP, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 disordersPublished2025/02/27AuthorsParker AJ, Sorcher LK, Cutshaw OP, Botdorf M, Dunstan J, Riggins T, Dougherty LRKeywordsChild depression, Hippocampus, Hippocampus subregions, Maternal depressionDOI10.1016/j.jad.2025.02.083 |
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| Toggle | Sleep and binge eating in early adolescents: a prospective cohort study. | Eating and weight disorders : EWD | Nagata JM, Huynh R, Balasubramanian P, et al. | 2025 | |
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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. JournalEating and weight disorders : EWDPublished2025/02/26AuthorsNagata JM, Huynh R, Balasubramanian P, Lee CM, Helmer CK, Ganson KT, Testa A, He J, Lavender JM, Kiss O, Baker FCKeywordsBinge-eating disorder, Eating disorder, Insomnia, Sleep, Sleep disturbance, YouthDOI10.1007/s40519-025-01729-0 |
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| Toggle | Associations between socioeconomic status and mental health trajectories during early adolescence: Findings from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study | JCPP Advances | Rakesh D, Flournoy JC, & McLaughlin KA | 2025 | |
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Link to publication
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalJCPP AdvancesPublished2025/02/25AuthorsRakesh D, Flournoy JC, & McLaughlin KAKeywordsDOIhttps://doi.org/10.1002/jcv2.70001 |
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| Toggle | Delay discounting data in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study: Modeling and analysis considerations. | Experimental and clinical psychopharmacology | Gelino BW, Rabinowitz JA, Maher BS, et al. | 2025 | |
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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. JournalExperimental and clinical psychopharmacologyPublished2025/02/24AuthorsGelino BW, Rabinowitz JA, Maher BS, Felton JW, Yi R, Novak MD, Sanchez-Roige S, Palmer AA, Strickland JCKeywordsDOI10.1037/pha0000766 |
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| Toggle | Independent and joint effects of genomic and exposomic loads for schizophrenia on psychotic experiences in adolescents of European ancestry. | Schizophrenia (Heidelberg, Germany) | Di Vincenzo M, Prachason T, Sampogna G, et al. | 2025 | |
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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. JournalSchizophrenia (Heidelberg, Germany)Published2025/02/22AuthorsDi Vincenzo M, Prachason T, Sampogna G, Arias-Magnasco A, Lin BD, Pries LK, van Os J, Rutten BPF, Barzilay R, Fiorillo A, Guloksuz SKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41537-025-00569-2 |
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| Toggle | Resting State Cortical Network and Subcortical Hyperconnectivity in Youth With Generalized Anxiety Disorder in the ABCD Study. | Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging | Sievertsen SA, Zhu J, Fang A, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 neuroimagingPublished2025/02/21AuthorsSievertsen SA, Zhu J, Fang A, Forsyth JKKeywordsgeneralized anxiety disorder, network neuroscience, resting state functional connectivity, subcortical, ventral attention network, youth anxietyDOI10.1016/j.bpsc.2025.02.005 |
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| Toggle | Neurocognitive and brain structure correlates of reading and television habits in early adolescence. | Scientific reports | Rauschecker AM, Nedelec P, Pan S, et al. | 2025 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalScientific reportsPublished2025/02/20AuthorsRauschecker AM, Nedelec P, Pan S, Olaru M, Nillo RM, Palmer CE, Pecheva D, Dale AM, Jernigan TL, Sugrue LPKeywordsBehavior, Brain MRI, Brain development, Imaging, NeurocognitionDOI10.1038/s41598-025-88398-2 |
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| Toggle | Multimodal Brain Growth Patterns: Insights from Canonical Correlation Analysis and Deep Canonical Correlation Analysis with Auto-Encoder. | Information (Basel) | Sapkota R, Thapaliya B, Ray B, et al. | 2025 | |
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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)Published2025/02/20AuthorsSapkota R, Thapaliya B, Ray B, Suresh P, Liu JKeywordsCCA, DCCAE, brain development, multimodalDOI10.3390/info16030160 |
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| Toggle | Distinct brain network features predict internalizing and externalizing traits in children, adolescents and adults | Nature Mental Health | Qu YL, Chen J, Tam A, et al. | 2025 | |
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Link to publication
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalNature Mental HealthPublished2025/02/19AuthorsQu YL, Chen J, Tam A, Ooi LQR, Dhamala E, Cocuzza CV, Zhang S, Zeng T, Lawhead C, Yeo BTT, & Holmes AJKeywordsDOIhttps://doi.org/10.1038/s44220-025-00388-5 |
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| Toggle | Screen time and manic symptoms in early adolescents: prospective findings from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study. | Social psychiatry and psychiatric epidemiology | Nagata JM, Zamora G, Al-Shoaibi AAA, et al. | 2025 | |
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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. JournalSocial psychiatry and psychiatric epidemiologyPublished2025/02/19AuthorsNagata JM, Zamora G, Al-Shoaibi AAA, Lavender JM, Ganson KT, Testa A, He J, Baker FCKeywordsABCD, Adolescents, Mania, Media, Screen timeDOI10.1007/s00127-025-02814-6 |
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| Toggle | Multiple forms of discrimination and obsessive-compulsive disorder: a prospective cohort study. | Child and adolescent psychiatry and mental health | Nagata JM, Talebloo J, Diep T, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 and adolescent psychiatry and mental healthPublished2025/02/18AuthorsNagata JM, Talebloo J, Diep T, Shim J, Al-Shoaibi AAA, Ganson KT, Testa A, He J, Lavender JM, Baker FCKeywordsAdolescence, Adolescent, Discrimination, Obsessive-compulsive disorder, Prejudice, Racism, StigmaDOI10.1186/s13034-025-00864-x |
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| Toggle | Genome-wide interaction association analysis identifies interactive effects of childhood maltreatment and kynurenine pathway on depression. | Nature communications | Sun Y, Liao Y, Zhang Y, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 communicationsPublished2025/02/18AuthorsSun Y, Liao Y, Zhang Y, Lu Z, Ma Y, Kang Z, Feng X, Zhao G, Sun J, Zhu Y, Yuan R, Yang Y, Guo L, Zhang X, Zhang D, Chen R, Bi W, Yue WKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41467-025-57066-4 |
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| Toggle | The association between neighborhood environment, prenatal exposure to alcohol and tobacco, and structural brain development. | Frontiers in human neuroscience | Xia Y, Vieira VM | 2025 | |
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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 neurosciencePublished2025/02/18AuthorsXia Y, Vieira VMKeywordschild brain development, neighborhood environment, neuroimaging, prenatal alcohol exposure, prenatal tobacco exposureDOI10.3389/fnhum.2025.1531803 |
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| Toggle | Exposure profiles of social-environmental neighborhood factors and persistent distressing psychotic-like experiences across four years among young adolescents in the US. | Psychological medicine | Ku BS, Yuan QE, Christensen G, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 medicinePublished2025/02/17AuthorsKu BS, Yuan QE, Christensen G, Dimitrov LV, Risk B, Huels AKeywordsneighborhood characteristics, physical activities, psychotic-like experiences, social determinants of health, team sportsDOI10.1017/S0033291725000224 |
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| Toggle | Altered neural signalling during reward anticipation in children and early adolescents with high psychotic-like experiences. | NeuroImage. Clinical | Sen P, Knolle F | 2025 | |
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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. JournalNeuroImage. ClinicalPublished2025/02/16AuthorsSen P, Knolle FKeywordsABCD, Left Anterior Insula, Left dlPFC, Monetary Incentive Delay, Reward Anticipation, Schizophrenia, fMRIDOI10.1016/j.nicl.2025.103756 |
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| Toggle | Sleep as a Protective Factor: Multiple Forms of Discrimination and Substance Use Intention Among Racially and Ethnically Minoritized United States Youth. | The Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine | Wang Y, Zhao Z, Zhang MR, et al. | 2025 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalThe Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent MedicinePublished2025/02/13AuthorsWang Y, Zhao Z, Zhang MR, Zhang Y, Yan J, Jelsma E, Cham H, Alegría M, Yip TKeywordsActigraphy, Early adolescence, Multiple forms of discrimination, Racially and ethnically minoritized youth, Self-reports, Sleep duration, Substance use intentionDOI10.1016/j.jadohealth.2024.12.004 |
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| Toggle | Cannabinoids in hair and their prospective association with mental and physical health outcomes in adolescents. | Neurotoxicology and teratology | Aks IR, Patel H, Pelham WE, et al. | 2025 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalNeurotoxicology and teratologyPublished2025/02/08AuthorsAks IR, Patel H, Pelham WE, Huestis MA, Wade NEKeywordsAdolescents, Cannabis, Exercise, Externalizing, Hair toxicology, Internalizing, SleepDOI10.1016/j.ntt.2025.107433 |
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| Toggle | Longitudinal analysis of the ABCD® study. | Developmental cognitive neuroscience | Hawes SW, Littlefield AK, Lopez DA, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 neurosciencePublished2025/02/08AuthorsHawes SW, Littlefield AK, Lopez DA, Sher KJ, Thompson EL, Gonzalez R, Aguinaldo L, Adams AR, Bayat M, Byrd AL, Castro-de-Araujo LF, Dick A, Heeringa SF, Kaiver CM, Lehman SM, Li L, Linkersdörfer J, Maullin-Sapey TJ, Neale MC, Nichols TE, Perlstein S, Tapert SF, Vize CE, Wagner M, Waller R, Thompson WKKeywordsABCD (tudy, Development, Longitudinal (nalysisDOI10.1016/j.dcn.2025.101518 |
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| Toggle | Positive Childhood Experiences Support Cognition and Counteract Behavior and Emotion Problems During Early Adolescence. | Academic pediatrics | Logan NE, Lewis-de Los Angeles WW | 2025 | |
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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. JournalAcademic pediatricsPublished2025/02/07AuthorsLogan NE, Lewis-de Los Angeles WWKeywordsadverse childhood experiences, cognitive function, early adolescents, mental healthDOI10.1016/j.acap.2025.102792 |
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| Toggle | The Childhood Opportunity Index 2.0: Factor Structure in 9-10 Year Olds in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study. | International journal of environmental research and public health | Harris JC, Wilson IG, Cardenas-Iniguez C, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 healthPublished2025/02/06AuthorsHarris JC, Wilson IG, Cardenas-Iniguez C, Watts AL, Lisdahl KMKeywordsadolescence, child opportunity index, neighborhood, psychopathologyDOI10.3390/ijerph22020228 |
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| Toggle | Representing brain-behavior associations by retaining high-motion minoritized youth. | Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging | Ramduny J, Uddin LQ, Vanderwal T, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 neuroimagingPublished2025/02/05AuthorsRamduny J, Uddin LQ, Vanderwal T, Feczko E, Fair DA, Kelly C, Baskin-Sommers AKeywordsbrain-behavior, head motion, inclusivity, minoritized youth, reproducibility, scrubbingDOI10.1016/j.bpsc.2025.01.014 |
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| Toggle | Associations between media parenting practices and early adolescent consumption of R-rated movies and mature-rated video games. | BMC pediatrics | Nagata JM, Li K, Sui SS, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 pediatricsPublished2025/02/04AuthorsNagata JM, Li K, Sui SS, Talebloo J, Otmar CD, Shao IY, Kiss O, Ganson KT, Testa A, He J, Baker FCKeywordsAdolescent, Epidemiology, Mature content, Media, Parenting, Screens, Social mediaDOI10.1186/s12887-024-05367-w |
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| Toggle | Sleep as a Contributing Factor to Brain Development and Mental Health. | The Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine | Cooper RE | 2025 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalThe Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent MedicinePublished2025/02/01AuthorsCooper REKeywordsDOI10.1016/j.jadohealth.2024.10.031 |
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| Toggle | Cognitive predictors of mental health trajectories are mediated by inferior frontal and occipital development during adolescence. | Molecular psychiatry | Li Q, Cao M, Stein DJ, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 psychiatryPublished2025/02/01AuthorsLi Q, Cao M, Stein DJ, Sahakian BJ, Jia T, Langley C, Gu Z, Hou W, Lu H, Cao L, Lin J, Shi R, Banaschewski T, Bokde ALW, Desrivières S, Flor H, Grigis A, Garavan H, Gowland P, Heinz A, Brühl R, Martinot JL, Artiges E, Nees F, Papadopoulos Orfanos D, Paus T, Poustka L, Hohmann S, Baeuchl C, Smolka MN, Vaidya N, Walter H, Whelan R, Schumann G, Feng J, Luo QKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41380-025-02912-6 |
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| Toggle | Understanding time to vaping onset in childhood and adolescence: A dual systems model approach. | Drug and alcohol dependence | Wojciechowski T | 2025 | |
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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 dependencePublished2025/01/31AuthorsWojciechowski TKeywordsAdolescence, Childhood, Development, Dual systems model, Hazard modeling, Life-course, Survival analysis, VapingDOI10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2025.112575 |
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| Toggle | Cognitive Benefits of Open-Skill Sports in Childhood: Evidence from the ABCD Study. | Medicine and science in sports and exercise | Shih CH, Broadnax M, Eckner J, et al. | 2025 | |
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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. JournalMedicine and science in sports and exercisePublished2025/01/29AuthorsShih CH, Broadnax M, Eckner J, Veliz P, Varangis EKeywordsDOI10.1249/MSS.0000000000003655 |
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| Toggle | DSAM: A deep learning framework for analyzing temporal and spatial dynamics in brain networks. | Medical image analysis | Thapaliya B, Miller R, Chen J, et al. | 2025 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalMedical image analysisPublished2025/01/29AuthorsThapaliya B, Miller R, Chen J, Wang YP, Akbas E, Sapkota R, Ray B, Suresh P, Ghimire S, Calhoun VD, Liu JKeywordsAttention, Graph neural networks, Resting-state fMRI (rs-fMRI) data, Temporal convolutional networksDOI10.1016/j.media.2025.103462 |
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| Toggle | Validation of CBCL depression scores of adolescents in three independent datasets. | JCPP advances | Zelenina M, Pine DS, Stringaris A, et al. | 2025 | |
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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. JournalJCPP advancesPublished2025/01/29AuthorsZelenina M, Pine DS, Stringaris A, Nielson DMKeywordsCBCL, adolescent brain cognitive development, depression, informant discrepancy, measure validationDOI10.1002/jcv2.12298 |
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| Toggle | Social epidemiology of early adolescent nutrition. | Pediatric research | Nagata JM, Helmer CK, Wong J, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 researchPublished2025/01/27AuthorsNagata JM, Helmer CK, Wong J, Diep T, Domingue SK, Do R, Ervin R, Mehta AS, Al-Shoaibi AAA, Gooding HC, Ganson KT, Testa A, Baker FC, Garber AKKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41390-025-03838-z |
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| Toggle | Establishing measurement equivalence of a youth-reported parental monitoring measure across sex, race/ethnicity, and intersectional identity. | Journal of family psychology : JFP : journal of the Division of Family Psychology of the American Psychological Association (Division 43) | Sartor CE, Kennelly N, Chung T, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 family psychology : JFP : journal of the Division of Family Psychology of the American Psychological Association (Division 43)Published2025/01/27AuthorsSartor CE, Kennelly N, Chung T, Latendresse SJKeywordsDOI10.1037/fam0001308 |
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| Toggle | Dimensions of perinatal and childhood adversities both merge and remain distinct. | Child abuse & neglect | Larson ER, Moussa-Tooks AB | 2025 | |
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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 abuse & neglectPublished2025/01/25AuthorsLarson ER, Moussa-Tooks ABKeywordsChildhood, Dimensional approaches, Early life adversity, Network analysis, PerinatalDOI10.1016/j.chiabu.2025.107274 |
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| Toggle | The Full Range of Weight Status by Race and Ethnicity in Children with and without Autism: A Cross-sectional Study of US Children. | The Journal of pediatrics | Must A, Eliasziw M, Bandini LG, et al. | 2025 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalThe Journal of pediatricsPublished2025/01/24AuthorsMust A, Eliasziw M, Bandini LG, Curtin C, Magaña S, Rancaño KMKeywordsDOI10.1016/j.jpeds.2025.114482 |
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| Toggle | Longitudinal sex-at-birth and age analyses of cortical structure in the ABCD Study®. | The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience | Marshall AT, Adise S, Kan EC, et al. | 2025 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalThe Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for NeurosciencePublished2025/01/22AuthorsMarshall AT, Adise S, Kan EC, Sowell ERKeywordsDOI10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1091-24.2025 |
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| Toggle | Neuroimaging stratification reveals the striatal vulnerability to stress as a risk for schizophrenia. | Translational psychiatry | Ma X, Feng N, Palaniyappan L, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 psychiatryPublished2025/01/22AuthorsMa X, Feng N, Palaniyappan L, Cao L, Gu Z, Kang J, Yuan L, Ouyang L, Wang Y, Li C, Jin K, Chen X, Feng J, He Y, Luo QKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41398-025-03237-2 |
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| Toggle | Sexual Minority Stress: Preliminary Evidence of Accelerated Pubertal Development in Early Adolescence. | Journal of adolescence | Papke V, Wiglesworth A, Carosella KA, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 adolescencePublished2025/01/21AuthorsPapke V, Wiglesworth A, Carosella KA, Başgöze Z, Green AE, Fiecas M, Cullen KR, Klimes-Dougan BKeywordsadolescents, biological development, discrimination, minority stress, sexual minorityDOI10.1002/jad.12469 |
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| Toggle | Depression in High-Risk Offspring: The Mediating Role of Sleep Problems. | Research on child and adolescent psychopathology | Roberts HA, Mattoni M, McMakin DL, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 psychopathologyPublished2025/01/20AuthorsRoberts HA, Mattoni M, McMakin DL, Olino TMKeywordsDepression, High-risk offspring, Hypersomnia, Insomnia, Sleep problemsDOI10.1007/s10802-024-01285-8 |
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| Toggle | Which comes first, puberty or identity? The longitudinal interrelations between pubertal timing and sexual minority self-identification among early adolescents. | The American psychologist | Del Toro J, Papke V, Wiglesworth A, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 psychologistPublished2025/01/20AuthorsDel Toro J, Papke V, Wiglesworth A, Klimes-Dougan BKeywordsDOI10.1037/amp0001481 |
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| Toggle | Everyday ethnic discrimination and early substance use based on hair samples in high-risk racial/ethnic minority early adolescents. | Cultural diversity & ethnic minority psychology | Jelsma E, Wang Y, Cham H, et al. | 2025 | |
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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. JournalCultural diversity & ethnic minority psychologyPublished2025/01/20AuthorsJelsma E, Wang Y, Cham H, Zhang Y, Yan J, Zhao Z, Alegria M, Yip TKeywordsDOI10.1037/cdp0000732 |
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| Toggle | School Ethnic Density and Mental Health Problems in Black, Latine, and White Preadolescent Children. | Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | Urbina-Johanson S, Slopen N, Davis S, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 PsychiatryPublished2025/01/20AuthorsUrbina-Johanson S, Slopen N, Davis S, Delaney S, Tiemeier HKeywordsethnic density, immigrants, mental health, schoolsDOI10.1016/j.jaac.2024.10.019 |
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| Toggle | Genetic Etiology Link to Brain Function Underlying ADHD Symptoms and its Interaction with Sleep Disturbance: An ABCD Study. | Neuroscience bulletin | Feng A, Zhi D, Fu Z, et al. | 2025 | |
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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. JournalNeuroscience bulletinPublished2025/01/19AuthorsFeng A, Zhi D, Fu Z, Yu S, Luo N, Calhoun V, Sui JKeywordsAttention deficit hyperactivity disorder, Functional connectivity, Magnetic resonance imaging, Polygenic risk score, Sleep disturbanceDOI10.1007/s12264-025-01349-9 |
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| Toggle | The Predictive Value of Preadolescent Suicidal Ideation Reporter Discrepancies in the ABCD Study. | Child psychiatry and human development | Parker AJ, Brock P, Hughes M, et al. | 2025 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalChild psychiatry and human developmentPublished2025/01/17AuthorsParker AJ, Brock P, Hughes M, Cutshaw OP, Messina G, Wiggins JL, Dougherty LRKeywordsPreadolescence, Reporter discrepancies, Suicidal ideation, Suicide assessmentDOI10.1007/s10578-024-01806-y |
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| Toggle | Structural Determinants of School Discipline: Examining State-Level Racial Bias and Neighborhood Opportunity. | Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | Thompson EL, Gonzalez MR, Scardamalia KM, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 PsychiatryPublished2025/01/17AuthorsThompson EL, Gonzalez MR, Scardamalia KM, Pham AV, Adams AR, Gonzalez A, Rizzo GV, Lehman SM, Kaiver CM, Hawes SW, Gonzalez RKeywordsneighborhood effects, racial bias, school discipline, structural determinants of healthDOI10.1016/j.jaac.2024.10.017 |
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| Toggle | Predicting task-related brain activity from resting-state brain dynamics with fMRI Transformer. | Imaging neuroscience (Cambridge, Mass.) | Kwon J, Seo J, Wang H, et al. | 2025 | |
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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. JournalImaging neuroscience (Cambridge, Mass.)Published2025/01/17AuthorsKwon J, Seo J, Wang H, Moon T, Yoo S, Cha JKeywordsdeep learning, individual differences, resting-state fMRI, task activation predictionDOI10.1162/imag_a_00440 |
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| Toggle | Adolescent health and the intersectionality of ethnicity/race, sex, and sexual orientation: A national probability sample from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development study. | Developmental psychology | Zhao Z, Wang Y, Yan J, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 psychologyPublished2025/01/16AuthorsZhao Z, Wang Y, Yan J, Wang L, Liu CH, Cham H, Yip TKeywordsDOI10.1037/dev0001912 |
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| Toggle | Risk and Protective Factors for the Evolution of Subthreshold Depression During Early Adolescence. | The Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine | Chen K, Li Q, Zhu Z, et al. | 2025 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalThe Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent MedicinePublished2025/01/16AuthorsChen K, Li Q, Zhu Z, Zhang J, Niu L, Dai H, Peng L, Wang X, Ma Q, Zhang RKeywordsAdolescent Brain and Cognitive Development study, Major depressive disorder, Prevention, Prognosis, Remission, Subthreshold depressionDOI10.1016/j.jadohealth.2024.10.024 |
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| Toggle | Early life stress and pubertal predictors of subsequent substance use in a national diverse sample of adolescents: Sex and substance type matter. | Drug and alcohol dependence | Alexandra D, Shervin A, Christine G, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 dependencePublished2025/01/13AuthorsAlexandra D, Shervin A, Christine G, Magda S, Linda R, Theodore C FKeywordsAdolescence, Adversity, Sex, Stress, Substance useDOI10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2025.112551 |
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| Toggle | Prevalence and Patterns of Social Media Use in Early Adolescents. | Academic pediatrics | Nagata JM, Memon Z, Talebloo J, et al. | 2025 | |
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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. JournalAcademic pediatricsPublished2025/01/10AuthorsNagata JM, Memon Z, Talebloo J, Karen Li MPH, Low P, Shao IY, Ganson KT, Testa A, He J, Brindis CD, Baker FCKeywordsSocial media, adolescent, digital media, media, social networking, technology, youthDOI10.1016/j.acap.2025.102784 |
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| Toggle | Heterogeneity in Developmental Trajectories of Internalizing and Externalizing Symptomatology: Associations with Risk and Protective Factors. | Child psychiatry and human development | Brieant A, Cai T, Ip KI, et al. | 2025 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalChild psychiatry and human developmentPublished2025/01/09AuthorsBrieant A, Cai T, Ip KI, Holt-Gosselin B, Gee DGKeywordsDevelopment, Latent growth modeling, Psychopathology, Risk and resilienceDOI10.1007/s10578-024-01804-0 |
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| Toggle | Early Pubertal Timing, Suicidality, and Self-Injurious Behaviors in Preadolescents: Evidence for Concurrent and Emergent Risk Prediction. | Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | Luking KR, Hennefield L, Peralta AO, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 PsychiatryPublished2025/01/09AuthorsLuking KR, Hennefield L, Peralta AO, Wright AJ, Whalen DJKeywordsadolescence, preadolescence, puberty, self-injurious behavior, suicideDOI10.1016/j.jaac.2024.10.016 |
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| Toggle | Functional brain network dynamics mediate the relationship between female reproductive aging and interpersonal adversity | Nature Mental Health | Petrican R, Chopra S, Segal A, et al. | 2025 | |
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Link to publication
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalNature Mental HealthPublished2025/01/07AuthorsPetrican R, Chopra S, Segal A, Fallon N, & Fornito AKeywordsDOIhttps://doi.org/10.1038/s44220-024-00352-9 |
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| Toggle | Evaluating hypothetical prevention strategies for internalizing symptoms in the general population and at-risk children. | Journal of consulting and clinical psychology | Dall'Aglio L, Labrecque JA, Schuurmans I, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 psychologyPublished2025/01/06AuthorsDall'Aglio L, Labrecque JA, Schuurmans I, Zhang Y, Creasey N, Wilson M, Kennedy CJ, Muetzel RL, Smoller JW, Tiemeier H, Choi KWKeywordsDOI10.1037/ccp0000912 |
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| Toggle | The trajectory of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder symptoms and its dynamic relationship with inhibitory control. | Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines | Pang T, Yang L, Liu Y, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 disciplinesPublished2025/01/06AuthorsPang T, Yang L, Liu Y, Chang SKeywordsAttention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, bivariate latent change score model, inhibitory control, latent growth curve model, longitudinal studyDOI10.1111/jcpp.14112 |
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| Toggle | Intersectional marginalized identities as predictors of time until first reported suicide attempt among preadolescent youth using survival analysis. | Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines | Mournet AM, Kellerman JK, Hamilton JL, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 disciplinesPublished2025/01/03AuthorsMournet AM, Kellerman JK, Hamilton JL, Kleiman EMKeywordsBIPOC, LGBTQ+, Suicide, youthDOI10.1111/jcpp.14075 |
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| Toggle | The impact of race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status on early adolescent sleep disturbances for youth exposed to adverse childhood experiences. | Child abuse & neglect | Senger-Carpenter T, Voepel-Lewis T, Stoddard SA, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 abuse & neglectPublished2025/01/03AuthorsSenger-Carpenter T, Voepel-Lewis T, Stoddard SA, Zhang A, Ordway MRKeywordsAdolescence, Adverse childhood experiences, Ethnicity, Race, Sleep disturbances, Socioeconomic statusDOI10.1016/j.chiabu.2024.107236 |
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| Toggle | The brain's action-mode network. | Nature reviews. Neuroscience | Dosenbach NUF, Raichle ME, Gordon EM | 2025 | |
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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 reviews. NeurosciencePublished2025/01/02AuthorsDosenbach NUF, Raichle ME, Gordon EMKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41583-024-00895-x |
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| Toggle | Changes in Youth Mental Health Following a School Lockdown due to Violent and Firearm-Related Threats. | The Journal of school health | Hullenaar KL, Fisher BW, Zatzick DF, et al. | 2025 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalThe Journal of school healthPublished2025/01/02AuthorsHullenaar KL, Fisher BW, Zatzick DF, Rivara FPKeywordsemergency preparedness, school lockdowns, school safety, violence prevention, youth mental healthDOI10.1111/josh.13530 |
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| Toggle | Balancing Data Quality and Bias: Investigating Functional Connectivity Exclusions in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development℠ (ABCD Study) Across Quality Control Pathways. | Human brain mapping | Peverill M, Russell JD, Keding TJ, et al. | 2025 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalHuman brain mappingPublished2025/01/01AuthorsPeverill M, Russell JD, Keding TJ, Rich HM, Halvorson MA, King KM, Birn RM, Herringa RJKeywordsABCD, adolescents, missing data, motion, quality control, rs‐fMRIDOI10.1002/hbm.70094 |
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| Toggle | Police Contact, Sleep, and Mental Health in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study. | Journal of community psychology | Johnson EI, Green EC, Stewart M, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 community psychologyPublished2025/01/01AuthorsJohnson EI, Green EC, Stewart M, Coleman JNKeywordsadolescence, inequality, intersectionality, mental health, police contact, sleepDOI10.1002/jcop.23179 |
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| Toggle | The hierarchical structure and longitudinal measurement invariance of externalizing symptoms in the adolescent brain and cognitive development study. | Personality disorders | Vize CE, Ringwald WR, Perkins ER, et al. | 2025 | |
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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. JournalPersonality disordersPublished2025/01/01AuthorsVize CE, Ringwald WR, Perkins ER, Waller R, Hawes SW, Byrd ALKeywordsDOI10.1037/per0000692 |
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| Toggle | Responsible Use of Population Neuroscience Data in the ABCD: Towards Standards of Accountability and Integrity. | The European journal of neuroscience | Brown SA, Garavan H, Jernigan TL, et al. | 2025 | |
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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 European journal of neurosciencePublished2025/01/01AuthorsBrown SA, Garavan H, Jernigan TL, Tapert SF, Huber RS, Lopez D, Murray T, Dowling G, Hoffman EA, Uddin LQKeywordsDOI10.1111/ejn.16662 |
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| Toggle | Intersections of Structural State-Level Racism and Neighborhood Deprivation on Nutrition and Obesity for Black Adolescents. | The Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine | Volpe VV, Skinner OD, Del Toro J, et al. | 2024 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalThe Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent MedicinePublished2024/12/30AuthorsVolpe VV, Skinner OD, Del Toro J, Collins AN, Mejía-Bradford SCKeywordsAdolescent, Black, Deprivation, Neighborhood, Nutrition, Obesity, State, Structural racismDOI10.1016/j.jadohealth.2024.10.020 |
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| Toggle | Online social activity time predicts ADHD problems in youth from late childhood to early adolescence in the ABCD study. | European child & adolescent psychiatry | Deng H, Song K, Geng X, et al. | 2024 | |
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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 psychiatryPublished2024/12/26AuthorsDeng H, Song K, Geng X, Xu L, Zhang J, Li X, He J, Potenza MN, Zhang JKeywordsADHD problems, Longitudinal studies, Online social activity time, Random-intercept cross-lagged panel models, Social mediaDOI10.1007/s00787-024-02620-6 |
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| Toggle | Beyond the income-achievement gap: The role of individual, family, and environmental factors in cognitive resilience among low-income youth. | JCPP advances | Rakesh D, Sadikova E, McLaughlin KA | 2024 | |
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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. JournalJCPP advancesPublished2024/12/20AuthorsRakesh D, Sadikova E, McLaughlin KAKeywordsABCD study, childhood and adolescence, cognitive function, poverty, resilience, socioeconomic statusDOI10.1002/jcv2.12297 |
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| Toggle | Parents' perspectives and behaviors regarding their child's access to alcohol: Variation by race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and neighborhood. | Alcohol, clinical & experimental research | Sartor CE, Latendresse SJ, Jackson KM, et al. | 2024 | |
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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, clinical & experimental researchPublished2024/12/19AuthorsSartor CE, Latendresse SJ, Jackson KM, Steers MN, Lipperman-Kreda S, Slade T, Chung TKeywordsalcohol access, parental rules, race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, youthDOI10.1111/acer.15498 |
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| Toggle | Digital phenotyping from wearables using AI characterizes psychiatric disorders and identifies genetic associations. | Cell | Liu JJ, Borsari B, Li Y, et al. | 2024 | |
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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. JournalCellPublished2024/12/18AuthorsLiu JJ, Borsari B, Li Y, Liu SX, Gao Y, Xin X, Lou S, Jensen M, Garrido-Martín D, Verplaetse TL, Ash G, Zhang J, Girgenti MJ, Roberts W, Gerstein MKeywordsAI, GWAS, brain, deep learning, digital phenotyping, genetics, genomics, personal health, psychiatry, wearable biosensorsDOI10.1016/j.cell.2024.11.012 |
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| Toggle | Responsible research in health disparities using the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study. | Developmental cognitive neuroscience | Gonzalez MR, Cardenas-Iniguez C, Linares DE, et al. | 2024 | |
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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 neurosciencePublished2024/12/18AuthorsGonzalez MR, Cardenas-Iniguez C, Linares DE, Wonnum S, Bagot K, White EJ, Cuan A, DiMatteo S, Akiel YD, Lindsley P, Harris JC, Perez-Amparan E, Powell TD, Latino de City Heights Colch CO, Dowling G, Alkire D, Thompson WK, Murray TMKeywordsAdolescent health, Health disparities research, Responsible data use, Social determinants of healthDOI10.1016/j.dcn.2024.101497 |
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| Toggle | Family adversity and co-occurring pain, psychological, and somatic symptom trajectories from late childhood through early adolescence. | Social science & medicine (1982) | Senger-Carpenter T, Seng J, Marriott D, et al. | 2024 | |
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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. JournalSocial science & medicine (1982)Published2024/12/18AuthorsSenger-Carpenter T, Seng J, Marriott D, Herrenkohl TI, Scott EL, Chen B, Voepel-Lewis TKeywordsDOI10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117650 |
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| Toggle | Sports participation & childhood neurocognitive development. | Developmental cognitive neuroscience | Tan FM, Yu J, Goodwill AM | 2024 | |
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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 neurosciencePublished2024/12/18AuthorsTan FM, Yu J, Goodwill AMKeywordsChildhood, Cognition, Development, Neuroimaging, Sports participationDOI10.1016/j.dcn.2024.101492 |
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| Toggle | Cyberbullying Victimization among Transgender and Gender-Questioning Early Adolescents. | Academic pediatrics | Nagata JM, Balasubramanian P, Diep T, et al. | 2024 | |
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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. JournalAcademic pediatricsPublished2024/12/17AuthorsNagata JM, Balasubramanian P, Diep T, Ganson KT, Testa A, He J, Baker FCKeywordsLGBTQ+, adolescent, cyberbullying, digital media, gender minority, transgenderDOI10.1016/j.acap.2024.102624 |
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| Toggle | Do meaningful dimensions of childhood adversity exist? Data-driven evidence from two prospective cohort studies. | Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines | Chow ARW, Baldwin JR, Bowes L | 2024 | |
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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 disciplinesPublished2024/12/17AuthorsChow ARW, Baldwin JR, Bowes LKeywordsAdverse childhood experiences, adolescence, data‐driven methods, psychopathology, victimisationDOI10.1111/jcpp.14098 |
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| Toggle | Brain networks and intelligence: A graph neural network based approach to resting state fMRI data. | Medical image analysis | Thapaliya B, Akbas E, Chen J, et al. | 2024 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalMedical image analysisPublished2024/12/16AuthorsThapaliya B, Akbas E, Chen J, Sapkota R, Ray B, Suresh P, Calhoun VD, Liu JKeywordsGraph neural networks, Intelligence, Resting-state fMRI data, Static functional connectivity (sFNC)DOI10.1016/j.media.2024.103433 |
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| Toggle | Traumatic Stress Exposure as a Predictor of Dual Systems Model Development: Examining Deviant Peer Association as a Social Mediating Mechanism | Crime & Delinquency | Wojciechowski TW | 2024 | |
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Link to publication
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalCrime & DelinquencyPublished2024/12/14AuthorsWojciechowski TWKeywordsDOIhttps://doi.org/10.1177/00111287241305057 |
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| Toggle | Family criminal legal system exposure and early adolescents' pubertal development: The mediating role of family strain. | American journal of epidemiology | Del Toro J, Roettger M, Jackson DB, et al. | 2024 | |
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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. JournalAmerican journal of epidemiologyPublished2024/12/13AuthorsDel Toro J, Roettger M, Jackson DB, Wilson SKeywordsCriminal legal system, adolescence, pubertal developmentDOI10.1093/aje/kwae457 |
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| Toggle | Contextualizing the Development of Emotion Regulation in Early Adolescence: Results From the ABCD Study | The Journal of Early Adolescence | Crumly-Goodwin B & Samek DR | 2024 | |
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Link to publication
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalThe Journal of Early AdolescencePublished2024/12/12AuthorsCrumly-Goodwin B & Samek DRKeywordsDOIhttps://doi.org/10.1177/02724316241307564 |
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| Toggle | How measurement noise limits the accuracy of brain-behaviour predictions. | Nature communications | Gell M, Eickhoff SB, Omidvarnia A, et al. | 2024 | |
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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 communicationsPublished2024/12/12AuthorsGell M, Eickhoff SB, Omidvarnia A, Küppers V, Patil KR, Satterthwaite TD, Müller VI, Langner RKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41467-024-54022-6 |
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| Toggle | Neuroimaging Correlates of the NIH-Toolbox-Driven Cognitive Metrics in Children. | Journal of integrative neuroscience | Acosta-Rodriguez H, Yuan C, Bobba P, et al. | 2024 | |
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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 integrative neurosciencePublished2024/12/12AuthorsAcosta-Rodriguez H, Yuan C, Bobba P, Stephan A, Zeevi T, Malhotra A, Tran AT, Kaltenhauser S, Payabvash SKeywordsNIH toolbox, crystalized cognition, diffusion tensor imaging, fluid intelligence, functional MRIDOI10.31083/j.jin2312217 |
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| Toggle | Application of a localized morphometrics approach to imaging-derived brain phenotypes for genotype-phenotype associations in pediatric mental health and neurodevelopmental disorders. | Frontiers in big data | Dagasso G, Wilms M, MacEachern SJ, et al. | 2024 | |
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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 big dataPublished2024/12/11AuthorsDagasso G, Wilms M, MacEachern SJ, Forkert NDKeywordsGWAS, imaging genetics, localized dimensionality reduction, neurodevelopmental disorders, principal component analysisDOI10.3389/fdata.2024.1429910 |
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| Toggle | A neural network to create super-resolution MR from multiple 2D brain scans of pediatric patients. | Medical physics | Benitez-Aurioles J, Osorio EMV, Aznar MC, et al. | 2024 | |
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PubMed Record
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalMedical physicsPublished2024/12/10AuthorsBenitez-Aurioles J, Osorio EMV, Aznar MC, Van Herk M, Pan S, Sitch P, France A, Smith E, Davey AKeywordsmachine learning, pediatric oncology, super‐resolutionDOI10.1002/mp.17563 |
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| Toggle | The longitudinal association between reward processing and symptoms of video game addiction in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study. | Journal of behavioral addictions | Lopez DA, Foxe JJ, van Wijngaarden E, et al. | 2024 | |
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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 behavioral addictionsPublished2024/12/09AuthorsLopez DA, Foxe JJ, van Wijngaarden E, Thompson WK, Freedman EGKeywordsadolescent, gaming addiction, imaging, longitudinal, reward processing, video gamesDOI10.1556/2006.2024.00068 |
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| Toggle | Multifactorial influences on childhood insomnia: Genetic, socioeconomic, brain development and psychopathology insights. | Journal of affective disorders | Zhang X, Sun Y, Wang M, et al. | 2024 | |
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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 disordersPublished2024/12/09AuthorsZhang X, Sun Y, Wang M, Zhao Y, Yan J, Xiao Q, Bai H, Yao Z, Chen Y, Zhang Z, Hu Z, He C, Liu BKeywordsChildhood insomnia, Genetics, MRI, Psychopathology syndrome, SocioeconomicsDOI10.1016/j.jad.2024.12.031 |
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| Toggle | Physical Activity as a Buffer in the Association Between Perceived Ethnic-Racial Discrimination and Latinx Adolescent Mental Health | Mental Health Science | Zhang Y & Halgunseth LC | 2024 | |
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Link to publication
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalMental Health SciencePublished2024/12/05AuthorsZhang Y & Halgunseth LCKeywordsDOIhttps://doi.org/10.1002/mhs2.98 |
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| Toggle | Measurement equivalence of the Marijuana Effect Expectancies Questionnaire-Brief across sex, race/ethnicity, and their co-occurring social identities for Black, Latinx, and non-Latinx white youth in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study. | Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs | Chung T, Latendresse S, Kennelly N, et al. | 2024 | |
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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 studies on alcohol and drugsPublished2024/12/04AuthorsChung T, Latendresse S, Kennelly N, Powell M, Sartor CEKeywordscannabis, marijuana, measurement equivalence, race/ethnicity, sex, youthDOI10.15288/jsad.24-00201 |
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| Toggle | Bayesian subtyping for multi-state brain functional connectome with application on preadolescent brain cognition. | Biostatistics (Oxford, England) | Chen T, Zhao H, Tan C, et al. | 2024 | |
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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. JournalBiostatistics (Oxford, England)Published2024/12/04AuthorsChen T, Zhao H, Tan C, Constable T, Yip S, Zhao YKeywordsDirichlet process, brain connectivity, network-variate clustering, stochastic block model, subtyping, variational inferenceDOI10.1093/biostatistics/kxae045 |
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| Toggle | Examining Deviant Peer Association in Childhood as a Predictor of Marijuana Use in Early Adolescence: The Mediating Role of Dual Systems Model Constructs | International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction | Wojciechowski T | 2024 | |
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Link to publication
AbstractOne of the objectives of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (https://abcdstudy.org/) is to establish a national longitudinal cohort of 9 and 10 year olds that will be followed for 10 years in order to prospectively study the risk and protective factors influencing substance use and its consequences, examine the impact of substance use on neurocognitive, health and psychosocial outcomes, and to understand the relationship between substance use and psychopathology. This article provides an overview of the ABCD Study Substance Use Workgroup, provides the goals for the workgroup, rationale for the substance use battery, and includes details on the substance use module methods and measurement tools used during baseline, 6-month and 1-year follow-up assessment time-points. Prospective, longitudinal assessment of these substance use domains over a period of ten years in a nationwide sample of youth presents an unprecedented opportunity to further understand the timing and interactive relationships between substance use and neurocognitive, health, and psychopathology outcomes in youth living in the United States. JournalInternational Journal of Mental Health and AddictionPublished2024/12/03AuthorsWojciechowski TKeywordsDOIhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s11469-024-01424-8 |
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| Toggle | Gender diversity and daily steps: Findings from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study. | Annals of epidemiology | Nagata JM, Sui S, Kim AE, et al. | 2024 | |
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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 epidemiologyPublished2024/12/03AuthorsNagata JM, Sui S, Kim AE, Shao IY, Otmar CD, Ganson KT, Testa A, Dooley EE, Gooding HC, Baker FC, Pettee Gabriel KKeywordsAdolescent, Fitbit, Gender identity, Gender minority, LGBTQ+, Physical activity, Steps, TransgenderDOI10.1016/j.annepidem.2024.11.004 |
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| Toggle | Exploring the associations between the presence, characteristics, and biopsychosocial covariates of pain and lifetime depression in adolescents: A cross-sectional ABCD study analysis. | Journal of affective disorders | Tagliaferri SD, Nguyen J, Han LKM, et al. | 2024 | |
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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 disordersPublished2024/12/03AuthorsTagliaferri SD, Nguyen J, Han LKM, Cotton SM, Menssink J, Ratheesh A, Noel M, Schmaal LKeywordsBiomarkers, Comorbidity, Depression, PainDOI10.1016/j.jad.2024.12.025 |
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| Toggle | Multimodal neural correlates of childhood psychopathology. | eLife | Royer J, Kebets V, Piguet C, et al. | 2024 | |
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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. JournaleLifePublished2024/12/03AuthorsRoyer J, Kebets V, Piguet C, Chen J, Ooi LQR, Kirschner M, Siffedi V, Misic B, Yeo BTT, Bernhardt BCKeywordshuman, neuroscienceDOI10.7554/eLife.87992 |
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| Toggle | Syndrome-informed phenotyping identifies a polygenic background for achondroplasia-like facial variation in the general population. | Nature communications | Vanneste M, Hoskens H, Goovaerts S, et al. | 2024 | |
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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 communicationsPublished2024/12/02AuthorsVanneste M, Hoskens H, Goovaerts S, Matthews H, Devine J, Aponte JD, Cole J, Shriver M, Marazita ML, Weinberg SM, Walsh S, Richmond S, Klein OD, Spritz RA, Peeters H, Hallgrímsson B, Claes PKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41467-024-54839-1 |
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| Toggle | Prenatal Tobacco Exposure, Brain Subcortical Volumes, and Gray-White Matter Contrast. | JAMA network open | Puga TB, Doucet GE, Thiel GE, et al. | 2024 | |
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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 openPublished2024/12/02AuthorsPuga TB, Doucet GE, Thiel GE, Theye E, Dai HDKeywordsDOI10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.51786 |
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| Toggle | Race, Ethnicity, and Sleep in US Children. | JAMA network open | Wang Y, Zhao Z, Zhang Y, et al. | 2024 | |
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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 openPublished2024/12/02AuthorsWang Y, Zhao Z, Zhang Y, Yan J, Zhang MR, Jelsma E, Johnson S, Cham H, Alegría M, Yip TKeywordsDOI10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.49861 |
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| Toggle | The Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study and How We Think About Addiction. | JAMA network open | Pichardo F, Wilson S | 2024 | |
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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 openPublished2024/12/02AuthorsPichardo F, Wilson SKeywordsDOI10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.51997 |
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| Toggle | Neuroanatomical Variability and Substance Use Initiation in Late Childhood and Early Adolescence. | JAMA network open | Miller AP, Baranger DAA, Paul SE, et al. | 2024 | |
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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 openPublished2024/12/02AuthorsMiller AP, Baranger DAA, Paul SE, Garavan H, Mackey S, Tapert SF, LeBlanc KH, Agrawal A, Bogdan RKeywordsDOI10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.52027 |
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| Toggle | Dissociable Contributions of Goal-Relevant Evidence and Goal-Irrelevant Familiarity to Individual and Developmental Differences in Conflict Recognition. | Cognitive science | Weigard A, Suzuki T, Skalaban LJ, et al. | 2024 | |
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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. JournalCognitive sciencePublished2024/11/30AuthorsWeigard A, Suzuki T, Skalaban LJ, Conley M, Cohen AO, Garavan H, Heitzeg MM, Casey BJ, Sripada C, Heathcote AKeywordsDiffusion model, Evidence accumulation, Inattention, Working memory, n‐backDOI10.1111/cogs.70019 |
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| Toggle | Beyond out-of-sample: robust and generalizable multivariate neuroanatomical patterns of psychiatric problems in youth. | Molecular psychiatry | Xu B, Wang H, Dall'Aglio L, et al. | 2024 | |
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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 psychiatryPublished2024/11/30AuthorsXu B, Wang H, Dall'Aglio L, Luo M, Zhang Y, Muetzel R, Tiemeier HKeywordsDOI10.1038/s41380-024-02855-4 |
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| Toggle | Sexual orientation discrimination and eating disorder symptoms in early adolescence: a prospective cohort study. | Journal of eating disorders | Nagata JM, Diep T, Helmer CK, et al. | 2024 | |
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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 eating disordersPublished2024/11/29AuthorsNagata JM, Diep T, Helmer CK, Domingue SK, Al-Shoaibi AA, Raney JH, Ganson KT, Testa A, He J, Brindis CD, Baker FCKeywordsAdolescence, Bisexual, Discrimination, Disordered eating, Eating disorder, Gay, LGBT, LGBTQ, Lesbian, Sexual orientationDOI10.1186/s40337-024-01157-y |
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